Search results for "NICS"

showing 10 items of 15025 documents

How to make a transverse triple junction—New evidence for the assemblage of Gondwana along the Kaoko-Damara belts, Namibia

2016

T-shaped orogenic triple junctions between mobile belts usually form in two unrelated stages by subsequent and oblique continental collisions separated by a significant time span. Besides these “oblique triple junctions”, another type, named “transverse triple junctions”, may exist. Such junctions are created by a more complex mechanism of partly contemporaneous convergence of three cratons in a restricted time frame, involving strike slip. The Neoproterozoic–Cambrian Kaoko-Damara junction between the Rio de la Plata, Congo, and Kalahari cratons in Namibia is an example of such a transverse orogenic triple junction, formed by at least four subsequent but partly related deformation events. I…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_category010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesPlutonTriple junctionTransform faultGeology010502 geochemistry & geophysicsStrike-slip tectonics01 natural sciencesGondwanaPaleontologyCratonSinistral and dextralShear zoneGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesGeology
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Slab-triggered wet upwellings produce large volumes of melt: Insights into the destruction of the North China Craton

2018

Abstract Cratons have remained stable for billions of years, despite of ongoing mantle convection and plate tectonics. The North China Craton (NCC), however, is abnormal, as it has experienced a destruction event during the Mesozoic and Cenozoic which was accompanied by extensive magmatism. Several lines of evidence suggest that the (Paleo-)Pacific plate played an important role in this event. Yet, the geodynamic link between subduction and craton destruction remains poorly understood, and it is unclear why there is no systematic spatial and temporal variation of magmatism related to subduction. Here, we perform 2-D petrological-thermomechanical simulations to investigate the influence of s…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_category010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesSubductionEarth scienceGeochemistry010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesMantle (geology)CratonPlate tectonicsGeophysicsMantle convectionLithosphereAsthenosphereTransition zoneGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface ProcessesTectonophysics
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Cretaceous tectonic evolution of the Sava-Klepa Massif, Republic of North Macedonia – Results from calcite twin based automated paleostress analysis

2019

Abstract The Sava-Klepa Massif represents an approximately 5 × 2 km sized fault-bounded block of dominantly basaltic rocks located within the Sava-Zone, an important suture zone between the Eurasian (Europe) and Gondwana (Adria) continental plates in the Balkans. Its nature and tectonic evolution is controversial: It is either interpreted as a remnant of the youngest Tethyan oceanic realm left behind after the main closure in the Late Jurassic or as the delimiter of a diffuse tectonic boundary between Adria and Europe, which had already collided in the Late Jurassic and was dominantly controlled by transtensional tectonics during Cretaceous times. In order to strengthen one or the other mod…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_category010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesSubductionMetamorphic rockTranstensionMassif010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesCretaceousPlate tectonicsPaleontologyGeophysicsBasement (geology)Suture (geology)Geology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface ProcessesTectonophysics
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A free plate surface and weak oceanic crust produce single-sided subduction on Earth

2012

[1] Earth’s lithosphere is characterized by the relative movement of almost rigid plates as part of global mantle convection. Subduction zones on present-day Earth are strongly asymmetric features composed of an overriding plate above a subducting plate that sinks into the mantle. While global self-consistent numerical models of mantle convection have reproduced some aspects of plate tectonics, the assumptions behind these models do not allow for realistic single-sided subduction. Here we demonstrate that the asymmetry of subduction results from two major features of terrestrial plates: (1) the presence of a free deformable upper surface and (2) the presence of weak hydrated crust atop subd…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_category010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesVolcanic arcSubductionMid-ocean ridgeGeophysics010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesPlate tectonicsGeophysicsMantle convectionBack-arc basinLithosphereGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesConvergent boundaryGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesGeophysical Research Letters
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Temporal loudness weights in background noise: Data and models

2019

Previous studies consistently showed that human listeners primarily consider the beginning of a time-varying sound when judging its overall loudness, and place less weight on subsequent temporal portions. However, all experiments studying this primacy effect in temporal loudness weights presented the target sound in quiet. Here, we compared temporal weights when the target sound was either presented in quiet or in a continuous background noise, and for a variation in the level of the target sound across a range of 60 dB. The target sound was a time-varying narrowband noise, the background noise was a continuous bandpass-filtered noise. In all conditions, we observed the expected primacy eff…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryAcoustics and UltrasonicsAcousticsLoudnessBackground noiseNoiseArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)QUIETRange (statistics)Exponential decayNarrowband noiseSound (geography)MathematicsThe Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
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On the Rifting Dynamics of Plate Divergence and Magma Accumulation at Oceanic Ridge Axes

1995

Rifting dynamics at spreading axes is governed by two processes: the large-scale plate divergence and the local magma accumulation in the crust-mantle transition layer. Both evolve simultaneously. A model is developed particularly for the situation in Iceland where a well studied rifting episode occurred in the Krafla volcanic system 1975–1984. Both the divergence and the buoyant rise of magma create tensile deviatoric stress in the axial region, but while divergence generates an altogether extensional stress field, uprising of buoyant melt produces tension only near the axis but compression of the sides. The buoyant rise is driven by the differential pressure gradient in rock and melt. The…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryBuoyancyMid-ocean ridgeCrustGeophysicsGeodynamicsengineering.materialMantle (geology)Stress (mechanics)Stress fieldStress relaxationengineeringPetrologyGeology
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Speciation and interactions of plutonium with humic substances and kaolinite in aquifer systems

2007

Abstract The speciation of plutonium (Pu) in contact with humic substances (HS) and kaolinite has been performed in aquifer systems. Mainly the redox behavior, complexation, and sorption of plutonium are discussed here. The redox behavior of Pu(VI) in contact with HS was studied and it was found that Pu(VI) is reduced to Pu(III) and Pu(IV) within a couple of weeks. The complexation constants (log  β LC ) of Pu(III) and Pu(IV) with HS have been determined by means of the ultrafiltration method. Furthermore, the sorption of Pu(III) and Pu(IV) onto kaolinite has been investigated as a function of pH by batch experiments under aerobic and anaerobic conditions.

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryChemistryMechanical Engineeringmedia_common.quotation_subjectMetals and AlloysUltrafiltrationchemistry.chemical_elementAquiferSorptionRedoxPlutoniumSpeciationMechanics of MaterialsMaterials ChemistryKaoliniteNuclear chemistrymedia_commonJournal of Alloys and Compounds
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Tectonics and seismicity of the Tindari Fault System, southern Italy: Crustal deformations at the transition between ongoing contractional and extens…

2006

[1] The Tindari Fault System (southern Tyrrhenian Sea, Italy) is a regional zone of brittle deformation located at the transition between ongoing contractional and extensional crustal compartments and lying above the western edge of a narrow subducting slab. Onshore structural data, an offshore seismic reflection profile, and earthquake data are analyzed to constrain the present geometry of the Tindari Fault System and its tectonic evolution since Neogene, including the present seismicity. Results show that this zone of deformation consists of a broad NNW trending system of faults including sets of right-lateral, left-lateral, and extensional faults as well as early strike-slip faults rewor…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryContext (language use)Structural basinInduced seismicityFault (geology)NeogeneTectonicsGeophysicsGeochemistry and PetrologySlabSubmarine pipelineSeismologyGeologyTectonics
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Fluid escape structures in the north Sicily continental margin

2014

Abstract High resolution and multichannel seismic profiles coupled with multibeam echosounder (seafloor relief) data, acquired along the northern Sicily continental margin (southern Tyrrhenian Sea), document the occurrence of mound and pockmark features, revealing fluid escape processes. Along this margin, morphology of the high-gradient continental slope is irregular due to the presence of structural highs, slope failures and canyons, and is interrupted by flat areas at a mean depth of 1500 m. Seismostratigraphic analysis tools and methods were used to identify fluid escape structures and to work out a classification on the basis of their morpho-acoustic characteristics. The detailed 3D ba…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryContinental shelfStratigraphyPockmarkClathrate hydrateContinental marginGeologyOceanographyBathymetric chartSeafloor spreadingTectonicsPore water pressureGeophysicsContinental marginPockmarkEconomic GeologyFluid escapePetrologyGeomorphologyGeologyMoundGas hydratesMarine and Petroleum Geology
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The effects of post-orogenic extension on different scales: an example from the Apennine-Maghrebide fold-and-thrust belt, SW Sicily

2003

Many structures produced under one single deformation regime, namely extensional, contractional or strike-slip, exhibit remarkable geometrical analogies when analysed at different scales. By contrast, field examples that illustrate the scale effects on structures resulting from superimposed deformations, which were produced under different tectonic regimes, are rare. Yet the change from contraction to extension is known to occur often in the most thickened portions of the continental crust. The Apennine–Maghrebide fold-and-thrust belt of Sicily shows many examples of post-orogenic extensional deformations. Composite structures, resulting from late normal faults that offset folds and thrusts…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryDeformation (mechanics)Continental crustGeologyPost-orogenic extension; Apennine-Maghrebide System; SicilyApennine-Maghrebide SystemExtensional definitionTectonicsPost-orogenic extensionExtension (metaphysics)Fold and thrust beltScale effectsSicilyGeologySeismologyTerra Nova
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