Search results for "Crust"

showing 10 items of 599 documents

Intrusion of granitic magma into the continental crust facilitated by magma pulsing and dike‐diapir interactions: Numerical simulations

2016

Dikegeographygeography.geographical_feature_category010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesContinental crustMagma chamberGeophysicsDiapir010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesIntrusionGeophysicsGeochemistry and PetrologyMagmaMagmatismPetrologyGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesTectonics
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Fluid reservoirs in the crust and mechanical coupling between the upper and lower crust

2004

An important observation associated with seismic activity on the Nagamachi-Rifu Fault is the existence of tabular, fluid rich zones at mid-crustal levels. These zones resemble the “bright spots” seen in many seismic images of the crust worldwide. The aim of this paper is to develop the mechanical foundations for the formation of such zones. To do so requires an understanding of the distribution of pore fluid pressure in a deforming crust. In a hydrostatically stressed porous material, the pore fluid pressure should equal the mean stress in order to keep the pores from collapsing. Past discussions of this subject imply very high pore fluid pressures, two to three times lithostatic. Considera…

Dilatantgeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryGeologyCrustGeophysicsFault (geology)Classification of discontinuitiesDiscontinuity (geotechnical engineering)Space and Planetary ScienceShear zonePorous mediumPetrologyGeothermal gradientGeologyEarth, Planets and Space
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CONSTRUCTING, BOOTSTRAPPING, AND COMPARING MORPHOMETRIC AND PHYLOGENETIC TREES: A CASE STUDY OF NEW WORLD MONKEYS (PLATYRRHINI, PRIMATES)

2005

Morphometric data sets are often phenetically analyzed by using various kinds of spatial, metric, or nonmetric multivariate analyses. Such methods produce results that are difficult to compare directly with molecular or morphological phylogenetic hypotheses, which are usually expressed by using nonspatial tree representations. Therefore, it is useful in a comparative approach to analyze, and above all to visualize, morphometric pairwise relationships as tree structures. For this purpose, several additive or ultrametric methods exist, which often return different topologies for the same data set. Objective criteria are thus needed to identify the tree-building algorithm (or algorithm family)…

EcologyPhylogenetic treebusiness.industryBootstrappingZoologyPattern recognitionBiologyTree (data structure)Tree structurePhylogeneticsMetric (mathematics)GeneticsAnimal Science and ZoologyPairwise comparisonArtificial intelligenceProcrustes analysisbusinessEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape ConservationJournal of Mammalogy
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Feeding habits of the spotted flounder Citharus linguatula off the eastern coast of Spain

1994

The composition of the diet of Citharus linguatula (L.) off the coast of the Gulf of Valencia, Spain, was determined between October 1989 and October 1990. The percentage of empty stomachs remained constant throughout the year, except for the period August to September, when a maximum was recorded coinciding with the reproductive period. Crustaceans (Mysidacea and Decapoda) and teleosts constituted the main prey. The composition of the prey ingested varied with predator size; small specimens contained a greater number of mysids in their stomachs, while decapods and fishes were more abundant in the stomachs of larger specimens. Diets varied seasonally: mysids were more important during autum…

EcologybiologyDecapodaMysidaceaFlounderAquatic Sciencebiology.organism_classificationCrustaceanPredationFisheryReproductive periodCitharus linguatulaPredatorEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMarine Biology
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Diel vertical movements of zooplankton in lake La Cruz (Cuenca, Spain)

2000

The study of diel vertical movements of zooplankton in a small meromictic karstic lake (lake La Cruz), presenting highly stratified waters, was performed using two different methodologies: (i) samples were taken along the vertical profile and were compared at different hours in a diel cycle; (ii) some plankton traps were located at different depths, covering different periods of time, to catch organisms going upwards and downwards. The main subject of this study has been the vertical movements affecting rotifers since they were dominant in the zooplankton of this lake, but we have also included the results obtained for other zooplankton groups. The results indicate an almost general movemen…

EcologybiologyEcologyDiurnal temperature variationAquatic SciencePlanktonbiology.organism_classificationPopulation densityCrustaceanZooplanktonPredationOceanographyEnvironmental scienceHypolimnionDiel vertical migrationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Plankton Research
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Surface glycoproteins in copepods: potential signals for mate recognition

1994

The mechanism male copepods use to recognize mates is not well understood. Both chemical and mechanical cues have been implicated, but the relative importance of these is not known. This lack of knowledge is despite the belief that mate recognition has a critical role in maintaining reproductive isolation of many species and influences the direction of evolution. Glycoproteins are used as mating signals by a number of aquatic organisms including rotifers, ciliates, and algae. We have developed techniques for selectively probing surface glycoproteins in zooplankton using fluorescently labeled lectins. We examined surface glycoproteins on the urosomes of several species of marine and freshwat…

Ecologyved/biologyved/biology.organism_classification_rank.speciesZoologyReproductive isolationBiologybiology.organism_classificationZooplanktonCrustaceanAlgaePheromoneGonoporeMatingAcartia tonsa
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Is activated hemocyanin instead of phenoloxidase involved in immune response in woodlice?

2008

In the Common woodlouse Porcellio scaber (Crustacea: Isopoda: Oniscidea), experimental immune challenge did not induce the expression of pro-phenoloxidase that, in most other invertebrates studied thus far, can be activated into phenoloxidase via an activation cascade upon immune challenge. Instead, Porcellio hemocyanin proved to exhibit catecholoxidase activity upon activation. However, none of the activating factors known from other invertebrates other than SDS-treatment resulted in activation of hemocyanin into a functional phenoloxidase in vitro. The distinct characteristics of isopod hemocyanin are reflected by the quaternary structure of the hemocyanin dodecamers that differs from tha…

ElectrophoresisHemocytesWoodlouseProtein subunitmedicine.medical_treatmentImmunologyGene ExpressionIsopodaImmune systemPhenolsmedicineAnimalsPhylogenyEnzyme PrecursorsPorcellio scaberbiologyEcologyMonophenol MonooxygenaseReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain ReactionSodium Dodecyl SulfateHemocyaninHydrogen-Ion Concentrationbiology.organism_classificationCrustaceanMicroscopy ElectronProtein SubunitsSpectrometry FluorescencePorcellioBiochemistrySpectrophotometryImmune SystemHemocyaninsOxidation-ReductionCatechol OxidaseDevelopmental BiologyIsopodaDevelopmental and comparative immunology
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Multi O- and S-isotopes as tracers of black crusts formation under volcanic and non-volcanic atmospheric conditions in Sicily (Italy)

2020

International audience; The deterioration of monument or building stone materials is mostly due to the growth of black crusts that cause blackening and disaggregation of the exposed surface. This study reports on new oxygen (δ17O, δ18O and Δ17O) and sulphur (δ33S, δ34S, δ36S, Δ33S and Δ36S) isotopic analyses of black crust sulphates formed on building stones in Sicily (Southern Italy). The measurements are used to identify the possible influence of volcanic emissions on black crust formation. Black crusts were mostly sampled on carbonate stone substrate in different locations subject to various sulphur emission sources (marine, anthropogenic and volcanic). Unlike atmospheric sulphate aeroso…

Environmental Engineering010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesδ18OGeochemistrychemistry.chemical_elementΔ17O anomaly010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesIsotopes of oxygenchemistry.chemical_compoundδ34SEnvironmental Chemistryskin and connective tissue diseasesWaste Management and DisposalSettore GEO/09 -Georis. Miner.e Appl.Mineral.-Petrogr. per l'Ambi.ed i B.Cult.0105 earth and related environmental sciences[PHYS.PHYS.PHYS-AO-PH]Physics [physics]/Physics [physics]/Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics [physics.ao-ph]Volcanic emissiongeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryintegumentary systemfood and beveragesCrustSulphur isotopePollutionSulfurOxygen isotopeDeposition (aerosol physics)chemistryVolcanoBlack crust13. Climate actionCarbonateGeologyStone degradation
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Contribution of raindrop impact to the change of soil physical properties and water erosion under semi-arid rainfalls

2017

Soil erosion by water is a three-phase process that consists of detachment of soil particles from the soil mass, transportation of detached particles either by raindrop impact or surface water flow, and sedimentation. Detachment by raindrops is a key component of the soil erosion process. However, little information is available on the role of raindrop impact on soil losses in the semi-arid regions where vegetation cover is often poor and does not protect the soil from rainfall. The objective of this study is to determine the contribution of raindrop impact to changes in soil physical properties and soil losses in a semiarid weakly-aggregated agricultural soil. Soil losses were measured und…

Environmental EngineeringWater erosionRunoffSoil science010501 environmental sciencesAggregate stability01 natural sciencesVegetation coverSoil lossCrust formationEnvironmental ChemistrySemi-arid regionWaste Management and Disposal0105 earth and related environmental sciencesHydrologyInfiltration rate04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesBodemfysica en LandbeheerInfiltration (HVAC)PollutionAridBulk densitySoil Physics and Land Management040103 agronomy & agriculture0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesSurface runoffSurface waterGeology
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The architecture and Neogene to Recent evolution of the W Calabrian continental margin: an upper plate perspective to the Ionian subduction system (C…

2010

The western Calabria continental margin forms the transition between the Pliocene to Recent Marsili spreading center and continental Calabria, all parts of the upper plate of the Ionian subduction zone. Integrating high-resolution and crustal seismic images constrained by gravity modeling, we provide a detailed reconstruction of the architecture of the margin and develop a new scheme for its Miocene to present evolution. This time span encompasses the continent-continent collision between Africa and Eurasia, subsequent orogenic collapse and rifting apart between the two continental masses, and the Pliocene to Recent emplacement of oceanic crust in the Vavilov and Marsili basins. The crust o…

Extensional faultSubductionSettore GEO/02 - Geologia Stratigrafica E SedimentologicaSettore GEO/03 - Geologia StrutturaleCrustW Calabria continental marginNeogeneGeophysicsContinental marginGeochemistry and PetrologyOceanic crustThrust faultTyrrhenian BasinSynclineIonian subduction zoneSeismologyGeology
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