Search results for "Geomorphology"

showing 10 items of 395 documents

Stages in the compaction of peat; examples from the Stephanian and Permian of the Massif Central, France

1987

Thick coal seams in the intramontane basins of the Massif Central allow a detailed study of peat/coal compaction. Three stages of compaction can be detected. Stage 1—occurred during the deposition of the peat. Coal beds which thicken and dip away from penecontemporaneous sandstones suggest rapid compaction. Stage 2—compaction of peat related to overburden pressure in some cases resulted in the formation of lakes over peat beds. The thickness of the lacustrine deposits may give an indication of the amount of compaction that took place. One possibility is that the early compaction was related to the progradation of siliciclastics over the peat. Stage 3—occurred after the organic sediment achi…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryPeatPermianbusiness.industryGeochemistryCompactionCoal miningGeologyMassifClastic rockCoalProgradationbusinessGeomorphologyGeologyJournal of the Geological Society
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Students' field research extends knowledge of origin of a UNESCO World Heritage site in Germany

2003

In 1992, as part of field-based course work with the Earth science department of the Universitat Minz, students began to investigate the structures of oil shale basins located in the Sprendlinger Horst, a horst-type block forming the northeastern shoulder of the Tertiary Upper Rhine Graben in southwestern Germany (figure 1). The Sprendlinger Horst is mainly built up by Hercynian or pre-Hercynian basement, Permian sediments, and volcanic rocks, as well as by several Tertiary alkali basalts and rare Cretaceous trachytes. In 1992, it was unknown whether the oil shale basins were of tectonic, volcanic, or even of impact origin.

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryPermianGeochemistryCretaceousVolcanic rockGrabenTectonicsBasement (geology)General Earth and Planetary SciencesHorstGeomorphologyOil shaleGeologyEos, Transactions American Geophysical Union
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Surface expression of eastern Mediterranean slab dynamics: Neogene topographic and structural evolution of the southwest margin of the Central Anatol…

2012

[1] The southwest margin of the Central Anatolian Plateau has experienced multiple phases of topographic growth, including the formation of localized highs prior to the Late Miocene that were later affected by wholesale uplift of the plateau margin. Our new biostratigraphic data limit the age of uplifted marine sediments at the southwest plateau margin at 1.5 km elevation to <7.17 Ma, and regional lithostratigraphic correlations imply that the age is <6.7 Ma. Single-grain CA-TIMS U-Pb zircon analyses from a reworked ash within the marine sediments yield dates as young as 10.6 Ma, indicating a maximum age that is consistent with the biostratigraphy. Our structural measurements within the upl…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryPlateauInversion (geology)BiostratigraphyFault (geology)Late MioceneNeogenePaleontologyGeophysicsGeochemistry and PetrologyLithosphereSlabGeomorphologyGeologyTectonics
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Tectonic beheading of fluvial valleys in the Maestrat grabens (eastern Spain): Insights into slip rates of Pleistocene extensional faults

2013

Abstract Interaction between faulting and landscape evolution in regions of active tectonics allows us to use subtle geomorphological markers for estimating fault slip rates. Geomorphic features of two valleys connected with the bottom of the Alcala de Xivert graben, at the Maestrat graben system (eastern Spain), suggest that they correspond to the lowest segments of ancient valleys whose original heads were located at the axis of the neighbouring Irta range. They were beheaded owing to displacement of the Torreblanca and Irta faults during a period of active extensional faulting in Middle Pleistocene times. These faults produced a negative inversion of the relief, sinking a narrow graben (…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryPleistoceneFluvialActive faultSlip (materials science)Fault (geology)GrabenHorst and grabenTectonicsGeophysicsGeomorphologyGeologyEarth-Surface ProcessesTectonophysics
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Vertical movements in NE Sicily and its offshore: Outcome of tectonic uplift during the last 125 ky

2013

New data in the coastal area between Acquedolci and Patti (northeastern Sicily, Italy) have been collected to calculate vertical tectonic rates in a key sector between the Kabilian-Calabrian and the Sicilian-Maghrebian chain. The comparison among marine geology data (multibeam and seismic reflection profiles) on the continental shelf-slope system and the radiocarbon ages on geomorphological markers collected during a coastal survey, provided new stratigraphic, geomorphological and biological data, contributing to the knowledge of the geological evolution of this sector for the last 125 ky.This coastal area is framed between two main structural features active during the Pleistocene in north…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryPleistoceneHoloceneLast Glacial MaximumSettore GEO/02 - Geologia Stratigrafica E SedimentologicaSettore GEO/03 - Geologia StrutturaleSettore GEO/04 - Geografia Fisica E GeomorfologiaMarine geologyLast Glacial MaximumFault (geology)Last Interglaciallaw.inventionTectonicsTectonic upliftlawRelative Sea level changeUplift rateLate Quaternary depositional sequenceRadiocarbon datingGeomorphologyGeologyHoloceneEarth-Surface Processes
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Palaeogeographical relationships between Alpine and Jura glaciers during the two last Pleistocene glaciations

1992

Abstract Two main moraine complexes are usually defined in the northwestern Alpine piedmont: the External Moraine Complex (EMC) dated to the penultimate glaciation (“Riss” sensu lato) and the Internal Moraine Complex (IMC) dated to the last glaciation (“Wurm”). Until recently the prevalent concept was that these two complexes had been built by glaciers originating in the central Alpine zone. This paper presents a new palaeogeographical diagram, based on mapping and petrographical studies of these two moraine complexes, and especially on the relationships between Alpine and Jura tills. We reach the following conclusions. 1. (1) The Jura glaciers were independent of the Alpine glaciers during…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryPleistocenePaleontologyAlpine climateGlacierOceanographyPaleontologyMoraineGlacial periodGeomorphologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeologyEarth-Surface ProcessesPalaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
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On the formation of maars

1973

The Pleistocene maars in the Eifel region of Germany, and Massif Central in France, formed when fissures opened at the bottom of older valleys allowing stream water to pour down them and come into contact with rising magma. The resulting phreato-magmatic eruptions gave rise to both base surge and air-fall deposits. Spalling of wall rock at depth enlarged the fissure into an eruption chamber. Subsidence along a ring fault into the eruption chamber accounts for the larger crater cut into the country rocks. The volume relationship between the crater excavated, the ejected pyroclastic debris of the rim and the volume below the floor of the crater, indicates that the volume of the maar ejecta is…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryPyroclastic rockDebrisMaarDiatremeImpact craterGeochemistry and PetrologyMagmaPetrologyEjectaGeomorphologyGeologyWall rockBulletin Volcanologique
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Kinematic and sedimentological evolution of the Manyara Rift in northern Tanzania, East Africa

2005

We describe the stratigraphical/sedimentological and structural evolution of the Manyara Rift in the Tanzania Divergence Zone, East Africa. The rift-related Manyara Beds on the shoaling side of the Manyara Rift were deposited between &lt;1.7 and 0.4 Ma and can be separated into a lacustrine lower member and a fluvial upper member. The transition from lacustrine to fluvial sedimentation at ∼ 0.7 Ma appears to be related to a southward shift of major rift faulting. Fault geometry and the kinematics of the faults are consistent with major faulting during NE/E-directed extension. There is also evidence for other extensional directions including radial extension, which might be caused by magmati…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryRiftArcheanFluvialGeologyShoaling and schoolingFault (geology)CratonPaleontologyEast African RiftSedimentologyGeomorphologyGeologyGeological Magazine
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Fault-controlled Soil CO2 Degassing and Shallow Magma Bodies: Summit and Lower East Rift of Kilauea Volcano (Hawaii), 1997

2006

Soil CO2 flux measurements were carried out along traverses across mapped faults and eruptive fissures on the summit and the lower East Rift Zone of Kilauea volcano. Anomalous levels of soil degassing were found for 44 of the tectonic structures and 47 of the eruptive fissures intercepted by the surveyed profiles. This result contrasts with what was recently observed on Mt. Etna, where most of the surveyed faults were associated with anomalous soil degassing. The difference is probably related to the differences in the state of activity at the time when soil gas measurements were made: Kilauea was erupting, whereas Mt. Etna was quiescent although in a pre-eruptive stage. Unlike Mt. Etna, fl…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryRiftSoil CO2 Kilauea volcanic degassing tectonic structures geochemical surveyingSoil gasMagma chamberFault (geology)TectonicsGeophysicsVolcanoGeochemistry and PetrologyMagmaRift zonePetrologyGeomorphologyGeologyPure and Applied Geophysics
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Ash resuspension related to the 2011–2012 Cordón Caulle eruption, Chile, in a rural community of Patagonia, Argentina

2017

Abstract The 2011–2012 Cordon Caulle eruption emitted about 1 km3 of rhyodacitic tephra. Dominant westerly winds in the region caused most of the primary tephra to deposit in neighboring Argentina. In addition to the impact of widespread dispersal and fallout of primary tephra during the eruption, Argentina was also significantly affected by remobilization of the primary ash even several years after the climactic phase of the eruption. In this mixed methods study, we combine aspects of natural and social sciences to characterize the ash resuspension events associated with the 2011–2012 Cordon Caulle deposits and assess the impacts on the Argentinian farming community of Ingeniero Jacobacci …

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categorySeasonal distribution010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesRural communitySteppeWesterlies010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesDeposition (geology)GeophysicsVolcano13. Climate actionGeochemistry and Petrologyddc:550Biological dispersalPhysical geographyTephraGeomorphologyGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciences
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