Search results for " Process"

showing 10 items of 17204 documents

Zircon ages for a felsic volcanic rock and arc-related early Palaeozoic sediments on the margin of the Baydrag microcontinent, central Asian orogenic…

2011

Abstract Magmatic zircons from the basal part of an arc terrane in the accretionary complex NE of the Baydrag microcontinental block in central Mongolia were dated at 544 ± 7 Ma and reflect arc magmatism at the Ediacaran/Cambrian boundary. Detrital zircon ages for clastic metasediments of the adjacent Dzag zone suggest a depositional age

geographyFelsicgeography.geographical_feature_categoryPaleozoicGeochemistryGeologyVolcanic rockSedimentary depositional environmentClastic rockMagmatismGeologyEarth-Surface ProcessesZirconTerraneJournal of Asian Earth Sciences
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The Santa Ninfa Cave (Belice Valley): hydrogeochemical features and relationships with neotectonics

2020

The Santa Ninfa Cave (SNC) develops in an outcrop of Messinian gypsum, located in the heart of the zone struck by the 1968 seismic sequence of the Belice valley. It is composed of different levels of sub-horizontal galleries, the lowest of which is characterized by perennial flowing water, running along the water table. From the hydrogeological point of view, it configures as an open circuit, both inflowing and outflowing from/to neighboring aquifers. The geochemical facies of groundwater collected in the SNC is compatible with a meteoric recharge chemically interacting with evaporitic deposits. The most relevant geochemical feature is the mixing between a small tributary of sulfur water wi…

geographyFluid Geochemistrygeography.geographical_feature_categoryWater tableOutcropSettore GEO/04 - Geografia Fisica E GeomorfologiaGeochemistryGeomorphologyAquiferGroundwater rechargeStress010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesSettore GEO/08 - Geochimica E VulcanologiaNeotectonicsGeophysicsCaveTributaryGroundwater processeEarthquake source and dynamicGroundwaterGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesAnnals of Geophysics
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Non-explosive, dome-forming eruptions at Mt. Taranaki, New Zealand

2012

Abstract Volcanic domes may be emplaced rapidly and with few hazardous consequences, even at the summit of large stratovolcanoes. In this study the most recent activity of Mt. Taranaki in New Zealand is shown to have been a passive effusion of a c. 5.9 million m3 lava dome with minor associated explosions and little syn-eruptive hazard. This event, the Sisters eruption, appears to have been unrecorded by local indigenous populations but likely occurred between A.D. 1785 and 1820. The magma erupted is chemically distinct from the preceding A.D. 1755 Tahurangi eruption. Based on breakdown of hornblende crystal rims, the Sisters magma was probably only four days outside the hornblende stabilit…

geographyLateral eruptiongeography.geographical_feature_categoryResurgent domeGeochemistryLava domeengineering.materialDome (geology)VolcanoMagmaengineeringStratovolcanoGeologySeismologyEarth-Surface ProcessesHornblendeGeomorphology
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Assessing dye-tracer technique for rill flow velocity measurements

2018

Abstract Rill erosion is considered one of the most important processes affecting soil because of the large amount of soil loss. The rill network acts as sediment source and is able to transport both rill flow-detached particles and those delivered from the interrill areas. Small flow depth in a rill and steep slope values of its bed affect significantly flow hydraulics. When rill flow velocity is measured using a dye-tracing method, the mean velocity is calculated by multiplying the measured surface velocity of the leading edge of the tracer plume by a correction factor. The main uncertainty of the dye-tracing technique stands in the relationship between mean and surface flow velocity. In …

geographyLeading edgegeography.geographical_feature_categoryCorrection factorDye methodHydraulics0208 environmental biotechnologyFlow (psychology)Soil science02 engineering and technologyDarcy–Weisbach equation020801 environmental engineeringPlumelaw.inventionRillFlow velocityFlow resistanceFlow velocitylawTRACERRill flowSoil erosionSettore AGR/08 - Idraulica Agraria E Sistemazioni Idraulico-ForestaliGeologyEarth-Surface Processes
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Numerical study of silicon crystal ridge growth

2014

Abstract The size of the ridge-like protrusions appearing on the external surface of dislocation-free 〈 100 〉 silicon crystals grown from a melt was studied theoretically. According to existing models the growth of the ridges is caused by the presence of { 111 } crystal planes at the crystal–melt interface. They affect the height of triple phase line, free surface orientation and the crystal growth angle. A numerical 2-dimensional model was proposed for the calculation of the size of the crystal ridges. The model included the effect of the undercooling of the crystal–melt interface on the crystal growth angle. The numerical model estimated the effect of the ridge size on the free surface at…

geographyMaterials sciencegeography.geographical_feature_categorySiliconCondensed matter physicsPhysics::Opticschemistry.chemical_elementCrystal growthCondensed Matter Physicslaw.inventionInorganic ChemistryMonocrystalline siliconCrystalCrystallographychemistryPhase linelawRidgeCondensed Matter::SuperconductivityMaterials ChemistrySupercoolingCzochralski processJournal of Crystal Growth
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Palaeomagnetism of the central Cuban Cretaceous Arc sequences and geodynamic implications

2009

Abstract A detailed palaeomagnetic study of Cretaceous age volcanic and sedimentary arc rocks from central Cuba has been carried out. Samples from 32 sites (12 localities) were subjected to detailed demagnetisation experiments. Nineteen sites from the Los Paso, Matagua, Provincial and Cabaiguan Formations yielded high unblocking temperature, dual polarity directions of magnetisation which pass the fold tests with confidence levels of 95% or more and are considered to be primary in origin. The palaeomagnetic inclinations are equivalent to palaeolatitudes of 9°N for the Aptian, 18°N for the Albian. A synfolding remanence identified in 5 sites from the younger Hilario Formation indicates a lat…

geographyPaleomagnetismgeography.geographical_feature_categoryAptianVolcanic arcNorth American PlateFold (geology)Strike-slip tectonicsCretaceousPaleontologyGeophysicsClockwiseGeologyEarth-Surface ProcessesTectonophysics
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Evidence of a recent input of magmatic gases into the quiescent volcanic edifice of Panarea, Aeolian Islands, Italy

2004

- Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia, Osservatorio Vesuviano, Naples, Italy. - Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia, Sezione di Palermo, Palermo, Italy. - Dipartimento Chimica e Fisica della Terra ed Applicazioni, Palermo, Italy.

geographyPaleontologyGeophysicsgeography.geographical_feature_categoryMediterranean seaVolcanoImpact craterGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesAeolian processesGeologySeismologyWest mediterraneanGeophysical Research Letters
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StalAge – an algorithm especially designed for construction of speleothem age models

2012

geographyPaleontologygeography.geographical_feature_categorySpeleothemGeologyEarth-Surface ProcessesQuaternary International
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Acoustic detection of neutrinos in bedrock

2019

We propose to utilize bedrock as a medium for acoustic detection of particle showers following interactions of ultra-high energy neutrinos. With the density of rock three-times larger and the speed of sound four-times larger compared to water, the amplitude of the generated bipolar pressure pulse in rock should be larger by an order of magnitude. Our preliminary simulations confirm that prediction. Higher density of rock also guarantees higher interaction rate for neutrinos. A noticeably longer attenuation length in rock reduces signal dissipation. The Pyh\"asalmi mine has a unique infrastructure and rock conditions to test this idea and, if successful, extend it to a full-size experiment.

geographyPhysics - Instrumentation and Detectorsgeography.geographical_feature_categoryBedrockPhysicsQC1-999neutriinotAttenuation lengthFOS: Physical sciencesGeophysicsInstrumentation and Detectors (physics.ins-det)DissipationHigh Energy Physics - ExperimentPhysics::GeophysicsHigh Energy Physics - Experiment (hep-ex)AmplitudeilmaisimetkallioperäSpeed of soundNeutrinoAstrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for AstrophysicsInstrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics (astro-ph.IM)Order of magnitudeEnergy (signal processing)Geology
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Pattern and rate of post-20 ka vertical tectonic motion around the Capo Vaticano Promontory (W Calabria, Italy) based on offshore geomorphological in…

2014

The magnitude and rate of Late Pleistocene-Holocene vertical tectonic movements offshore of the Capo Vaticano Promontory (western Calabria, southern Italy) have been measured on the basis of the present-day depth variations of the edges of submerged depositional terraces (and associated abrasion platforms) that formed below the storm-wave base, during the sea level stillstand of the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). These depositional features, represented by submerged prograding wedges and an associated terrace-shaped upper boundary, have been identified in high-resolution seismic reflection profiles acquired along the continental shelf and the upper slope of the promontory, and are referred to …

geographyPromontorygeography.geographical_feature_categoryPleistoceneSettore GEO/02 - Geologia Stratigrafica E SedimentologicaContinental shelfSettore GEO/03 - Geologia StrutturaleAbrasion platformInfralittoral Prograding Wedge; Abrasion platform; Last Glacial MaximumCalabriaCapo Vaticano Calabria Infralittoral Prograding Wedge; Abrasion platform; Last Glacial Maximum Vertical movementsLast Glacial MaximumCapo Vaticano Calabria Infralittoral Prograding WedgeCapo VaticanoVertical movementsSedimentary depositional environmentTectonicsLast Glacial Maximum Vertical movementsGeomorphologyGeologyHoloceneSea levelEarth-Surface Processes
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