Search results for "Geology"

showing 10 items of 6012 documents

Morphology, internal structure and genesis of the Burtnieks drumlin field, Northern Vidzeme, Latvia

1997

Abstract The Burtnieks drumlin field is one of the largest in the Baltic countries. It occupies a broad and uneven bedrock macrodepression. The uneven distribution of drumlins is related to the relief of the bedrock surface. Needle-shaped drumlinoids occur in the proximal part of the drumlin field, and they gradually merge into typical drumlin forms downglacier. This morphologic change reflects the differences in their genesis as suggested by internal structure. The cores of drumlins consist mainly of glaciotectonically deformed Pleistocene sediment and, in some places, also weakly cemented, dislocated Middle Devonian sandstone. All of them are folded into linear anticlines trending paralle…

geographyPaleontologygeography.geographical_feature_categoryPleistoceneStratigraphyBedrockDrumlinAnticlineMorphologic changeGeologyMerge (version control)DevonianGeologySedimentary Geology
researchProduct

StalAge – an algorithm especially designed for construction of speleothem age models

2012

geographyPaleontologygeography.geographical_feature_categorySpeleothemGeologyEarth-Surface ProcessesQuaternary International
researchProduct

The Devonian Stratigraphic Succession and Evolution of the Baltic Sedimentary Basin

2014

Facies analysis, biostratigraphic and taphonomic studies, a re-evaluation of signatures of worldwide events, and a new mathematical model of the Baltic sedimentary basin (BSB) have together enabled a better understanding to be gained of the development of the Devonian basins in the Baltic area. We have established four stages of basin evolution: (a) remnant basin stage (Lochkovian); (b) shallow epeiric basin stage, with mainly siliciclastic sedimentation (Pragian–early Frasnian); (c) shallow epeiric basin stage, with mainly carbonate sedimentation (Frasnian); and (d) infilling stage of the progressively narrowing shallow epeiric basin, with mixed sedimentation (Famennian).

geographyPaleontologygeography.geographical_feature_categoryStage (stratigraphy)Basin modellingFaciesLithostratigraphySiliciclasticSedimentary basinStructural basinDevonianGeology
researchProduct

Complex-forming properties of peat humic acids from a raised bog profiles

2013

Abstract Humic substances (HS) belong to the most powerful complex-forming agents, significantly affecting major and trace element speciation in natural environment. Several authors have focused on humic–metal interactions, using differing methods and comparing humic substances on different sources. However, the intrinsic differences among the HS of different origin and the impact of humification degree on the complex formation between humic substances and metals have not received the necessary attention until now. The aim of this study is to determine the Cu(II) complexing capacity and stability constants of Cu(II) complexes of humic acids (HA) isolated from two well-characterized raised b…

geographyPeatgeography.geographical_feature_categoryMetal ions in aqueous solutionchemistry.chemical_elementcomplex mixturesCopperHumusIon selective electrodeMetalchemistryGeochemistry and PetrologyStability constants of complexesvisual_artEnvironmental chemistryvisual_art.visual_art_mediumEconomic GeologyBogJournal of Geochemical Exploration
researchProduct

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
researchProduct

The Wadi Onib Mafic-Ultramafic Complex: A Neoproterozoic Supra-Subduction Zone Ophiolite in the Northern Red Sea Hills of the Sudan

2004

Publisher Summary The Wadi Onib mafic–ultramafic complex represents the best preserved, though tectonically dismembered, Neoproterozoic (Pan-African) ophiolite in the northern Red Sea Hills of the Sudan. Arabian–Nubian shield (ANS) is the northern continuation of the Mozambique belt and, together, they have been referred to as the East African Orogen (EAO). The Wadi Onib mafic—ultramafic complex constitutes one of the best preserved, though tectonically fragmented, ophiolitic sequence within the ANS and makes up the major part of the prominent, southwest to northeast oriented Onib–Sol Hamed suture. An improved understanding of the composition and history of this complex has important region…

geographyPillow lavageography.geographical_feature_categoryUltramafic rockFaciesGeochemistrySuture (geology)MaficMozambique BeltOphioliteGeologyWadi
researchProduct

Quantifying the P-T-t conditions of north-south Lhasa terrane accretion: new insight into the pre-Himalayan architecture of the Tibetan plateau

2014

An integrated field, petrological and geochronological study of the Basong Tso region of south-eastern Tibet has constrained the timing and P–T conditions of north–south Lhasa terrane accretion and provides new insight into the tectonothermal evolution of the Tibetan plateau. Two distinct high-grade metamorphic belts are recognized in the region: a southern belt (the Basong Tso complex) that consists of sheared schist and orthogneiss; and a northern belt (the Zhala complex) that comprises paragneiss and granite. Combined pseudosection modelling and U–Pb geochronology of monazite and zircon indicates that the Basong Tso complex records peak metamorphic conditions of 9 ± 0.5 kbar and 690 ± 25…

geographyPlateaugeography.geographical_feature_categoryMetamorphic rockGeochemistrySchistMetamorphismGeologyOverprintingGeochemistry and PetrologyGeochronologyGeomorphologyGeologyZirconTerraneJournal of Metamorphic Geology
researchProduct

Development of topography in 3-D continental-collision models

2015

Understanding the formation and evolution of high mountain belts, such as the Himalayas and the adjacent Tibetan Plateau, has been the focus of many tectonic and numerical models. Here we employ 3-D numerical simulations to investigate the role that subduction, collision, and indentation play on lithosphere dynamics at convergent margins, and to analyze the conditions under which large topographic plateaus can form in an integrated lithospheric and upper mantle-scale model. Distinct dynamics are obtained for the oceanic subduction side (trench retreat, slab rollback) and the continental-collision side (trench advance, slab detachment, topographic uplift, lateral extrusion). We show that sla…

geographyPlateaugeography.geographical_feature_categorySubductionContinental collisionSlab pullFront (oceanography)GeophysicsGeochemistry and PetrologyLithosphereTrenchSlabGeomorphologyGeologyGeochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems
researchProduct

Subduction of the Nazca Ridge and the Inca Plateau: Insights into the formation of ore deposits in Peru

2005

A large number of ore deposits that formed in the Peruvian Andes during the Miocene (15-5 Ma) are related to the subduction of the Nazea plate beneath the South American plate. Here we show that the spatial and temporal distribution of these deposits correspond with the arrival of relatively buoyant topographic anomalies, namely the Nazca Ridge in central Peru and the now-consumed Inca Plateau in northern Peru, at the subduction zone. Plate reconstruction shows a rapid metallogenic response to the arrival of the topographic anomalies at the subduction trench. This is indicated by clusters of ore deposits situated within the proximity of the laterally migrating zones of ridge subduction. It …

geographyPlateaugeography.geographical_feature_categorySubductionGeochemistryTectonicsGeophysicsSpace and Planetary ScienceGeochemistry and PetrologyTrenchEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)South American PlatePlate reconstructionRidge (meteorology)GeomorphologyGeologyEarth and Planetary Science Letters
researchProduct

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
researchProduct