Search results for "Geology"

showing 10 items of 6012 documents

Inversion of gravity anomalies over spreading oceanic ridges

2005

Abstract Models of spreading ocean ridges are derived by Bayesian gravity inversion with geophysical and geodynamic a priori information. The aim is to investigate the influence of spreading rate, plate dynamics and tectonic framework on crust and upper mantle structure by comparing the Mid Atlantic Ridge (MAR), the Indian Ocean Ridge (IND) and the East Pacific Rise (PAC). They differ in mean spreading rate, dynamic settings, as attached slabs, and plume interaction. Topography or bathymetry, gravity, isostasy, seismology and geology, etc. are averaged along the ridges and guide the construction of initial 2D models, including features as mean plumes, i.e. averaged along the ridge. This is …

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categorySlab pullMid-ocean ridgeGeophysicsMid-Atlantic RidgeGravity anomalySeafloor spreadingGeophysicsRidge pushRidgeLithosphereGeologyEarth-Surface ProcessesJournal of Geodynamics
researchProduct

New evidence for the form and extent of the Pernicana Fault System (Mt. Etna) from structural and soil–gas surveying

1998

A multidisciplinary study based on structural and soil–gas surveys was carried out in order to investigate the relationship between soil CO2 degassing and the tectonic setting of the lower northeastern flank of Mt. Etna volcano. The results show that anomalous soil CO2 emissions occur mainly along faults trending WNW–ESE and also where these faults intersect the other main fault set (trending NE–SW) that displaces the study area. In particular, anomalies in CO2 degassing were revealed both along the Pernicana Fault and along another fault (Fiumefreddo Fault) which may represent the prolongation of the former towards the Ionian Sea coast. In the areas where these structures show evident surf…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categorySoil gasActive faultAseismic creepFault (geology)TectonicsGeophysicsVolcanoGeochemistry and PetrologyAlluviumShear zoneSeismologyGeologyJournal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research
researchProduct

Interaction between the deep fluids and the shallow groundwaters on Vulcano island (Italy)

2001

The aim of this work is to study the interactions processes between the fluids of deep origin and the shallow groundwaters of the Vulcano Porto area. During 1995, 13 well waters were sampled three times (May, July and November) and analysed for major and some minor elements (B, Br and NH4) and for dissolved gases. The close relationship of these waters with the deep magmatic source is highlighted by the composition of the dissolved gases. Furthermore, the areal distribution of dissolved species is controlled mainly by the gas fluxes from depth and by the presence of a deeper thermal aquifer. The distribution of major anomalies in the parameters measured in the groundwaters, in fact, overlap…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categorySoil gasGaseGeochemistryMineralogyAquiferBromineFumaroleNitrogen compoundsSettore GEO/08 - Geochimica E VulcanologiaGeophysicsMediterranean seaFlux (metallurgy)VolcanoGeochemistry and PetrologyGroundwaterGroundwaterGeologyWater wellBoron
researchProduct

Trace elements mobility in soils from the active hydrothermal area of Nisyros (Greece)

2014

Nisyros Island, Greece, is a stratovolcano known for its intense hydrothermal activity. On June 2013, during a multidisciplinary field campaign, soil samples were collected in the caldera area to determinate the main mineralogical paragenesis and to investigate the distribution of trace elements concentrations and the possible relationship to the contribution of deep originated fluids. Soil samples were analysed with XRD and for the chemical composition of their leachable (deionized water) and near total (microwave digestion) fraction both for major and trace elements. All data were compared to a local background soil. The results allow to divide the samples in 2 groups: Lakki Plain and Ste…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categorySoil testvolatile elementslcsh:QC801-809Trace elementtrace elements Greece hydrothermal emissions biomonitoringMineralogyvolcanoeslcsh:QC851-999Hydrothermal circulationSettore GEO/08 - Geochimica E Vulcanologialcsh:Geophysics. Cosmic physicsGeophysicsVolcanoSoil waterCalderalcsh:Meteorology. ClimatologyVolatilesChemical compositionfumarolic gasesGeology
researchProduct

Experiments for testing soil texture effects on flow resistance in mobile bed rills

2018

Abstract In this paper a recently theoretically deduced rill flow resistance equation, based on a power-velocity profile, was tested experimentally on plots of varying slopes and soil texture in which mobile bed rills are incised. Measurements of flow velocity, water depth, cross section area, wetted perimeter and bed slope conducted in rill reaches incised on experimental plots, having different slope values (9, 14, 22, 24 and 26%) and soil texture (clay fraction ranging from 42 to 73%), and literature data were used to calibrate the flow resistance equation. In particular, the relationship between the velocity profile parameter Γ, the channel slope, the flow Froude number and texture frac…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categorySoil textureRill hydraulic0208 environmental biotechnologyFlow (psychology)Soil science02 engineering and technologyPlot measurement020801 environmental engineeringRillWetted perimetersymbols.namesakeVelocity profileFlow resistanceFlow velocitySoil textureSoil waterSoil erosionFroude numbersymbolsSettore AGR/08 - Idraulica Agraria E Sistemazioni Idraulico-ForestaliTexture (crystalline)GeologyEarth-Surface ProcessesCATENA
researchProduct

Accurate measurement of volcanic SO2flux: Determination of plume transport speed and integrated SO2concentration with a single device

2005

[1] Ground-based measurements of volcanic sulfur dioxide fluxes are important indicators of volcanic activity, with application in hazard assessment, and understanding the impacts of volcanic emissions upon the environment and climate. These data are obtained by making traverses underneath the volcanic plume a few kilometers from source with an ultraviolet spectrometer, measuring integrated SO2 concentrations across the plume's cross section, and multiplying by the plume's transport speed. However, plume velocities are usually derived from ground-based anemometers, located many kilometers from the traverse route and hundreds of meters below plume altitude, complicating the experimental desi…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categorySpectrometerGeophysicsGeodesyWind speedPlumeGeophysicsAltitudeFlux (metallurgy)VolcanoGeochemistry and PetrologyAnemometerGeologyZenithGeochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems
researchProduct

Soil and fumarole gases of Mount Etna: geochemistry and relations with volcanic activity

1998

Abstract Between 1993 and 1996, gas samples were collected on Mt. Etna volcano from both high- and low-temperature fumaroles and from soils in areas of anomalous degassing located on the flanks of the volcanic edifice. The chemical composition of all the emitted gases is consistent with their magmatic origin. During their transport to the surface, they would undergo shallow mixing processes, mostly with air. Locally, as in the case of a point in the lower southwestern flank of the volcano (P39), very high contents of He and CH4 indicate that deep gases mainly interact with ground waters and also with a hydrocarbon reservoir. The isotopic composition of carbon in CO2 from these gases also su…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryStable isotope ratioGeochemistryMineralogyMethaneHydrothermal circulationFumarolechemistry.chemical_compoundGeophysicsVolcanoImpact craterchemistryGeochemistry and PetrologySoil waterChemical compositionGeologyJournal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research
researchProduct

CO 2 output and δ 13 C(CO 2 ) from Mount Etna as indicators of degassing of shallow asthenosphere

1997

An estimated average CO2 output from Etna's summit craters in the range of 13±3 Mt/a has recently been determined from the measured SO2 output and measured CO2/SO2 molar ratios. To this amount the CO2 output emitted diffusely from the soil (≈ 1 Mt/a) and the amount of CO2 dissolved in Etna's aquifers (≈ 0.25 Mt/a) must be added. Data on the solubility of CO2 in Etnean magmas at high temperature and pressure allow the volume of magma involved in the release of such an amount of this gas to be estimated. This volume of magma (≈ 0.7 km3/a) is approximately 20 times greater than the volume of magma erupted annually during the period 1971–1995. On the basis of C-isotopic data of CO2 collected in…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryStable isotope ratioMineralogyAquiferchemistry.chemical_compoundImpact craterVolume (thermodynamics)VolcanochemistryGeochemistry and PetrologyAsthenosphereMagmaCarbon dioxideGeologyBulletin of Volcanology
researchProduct

A continuous high-resolution dust record for the reconstruction of wind systems in central Europe (Eifel, Western Germany) over the past 133 ka

2009

[1] The last glacial cycle in Central Europe is dominated by processes of aeolian dust transport and accumulation. These dust deposits are preserved in soils and lake sediments and provide detailed information about the climate variability during cold and dry periods. Especially the transitions from warm into cold periods are characterized by turbulent climate conditions. The main problems of terrestrial paleoclimate reconstructions are the completeness of the core material and a sampling resolution. To detect single dust storms we use a particle detection method, which allows high resolution, sub-annual analyses of sediment structures in undisturbed samples. The ELSA (Eifel Laminated Sedim…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryStack (geology)SedimentStormGeophysicsOceanographyDust stormPaleoclimatologyPeriod (geology)General Earth and Planetary SciencesAeolian processesGlacial periodPhysical geographyGeologyGeophysical Research Letters
researchProduct

Late Archaean foreland basin deposits, Belingwe greenstone belt, Zimbabwe

2001

Abstract The c. 2.65 Ga old sedimentary Cheshire Formation of the Belingwe greenstone belt (BDB), central Zimbabwe, has been studied in detail for the first time to shed some light on the much debated evolution of this classical belt. The Cheshire Formation rests sharply on a mafic volcanic unit (Zeederbergs Formation) and comprises a basal, eastward-sloping carbonate ramp sequence built of shallowing-upward, metre-scale sedimentary cycles. The cycles strongly resemble Proterozoic and Phanerozoic carbonate cycles and might have formed by small-scale eustatic sea level changes. The top of the carbonate ramp is represented by a karst surface. The carbonates are overlain by and grade laterally…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryStratigraphyArcheanGeochemistryGeologyGreenstone beltSedimentary basinVolcanic rockFaciesSiliciclasticSedimentary rockPetrologyForeland basinGeologySedimentary Geology
researchProduct