Search results for "Processe"

showing 10 items of 3955 documents

Assessment of the mobility of selected elements in bioleached mining waste from Zloty Stok (Poland)

2017

Different bioleaching processes were applied to mining wastes deposited in the highly polluted post-industrial region - Lower Silesia in Poland. The chemical characterization of the wastes before and after bioleaching processes was performed. The characterisation was based on the distribution of selected elements (Fe, Mn, As, Co, Cr, Cu and Ni) between operationally-defined phases. The phases were defined using a six-step extraction procedure optimised according to the properties of the studied mining wastes. The fractionation and total content of elements in wastes before and after various bioleaching treatments were studied using ICP MS (Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry)and FA…

bioleaching processesarsenicsequential extractionmining wastesEnvironmental Engineering and Management Journal
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Gulf of Maine shells reveal changes in seawater temperature seasonality during the Medieval Climate Anomaly and the Little Ice Age

2011

article i nfo In this study, we use subannually resolved oxygen isotope values of fossil (dead-collected) and modern (live- caught) bivalve shells (Arctica islandica L.) from the northwestern Atlantic (Gulf of Maine, USA) to reconstruct past seasonal changes in seawater temperature. Our results indicate decreased seasonal temperature amplitude of about 1.6 °C (or ∼21%) during Medieval times (ca. AD 1033-1062) compared to shells from the early Little Ice Age (ca. AD 1321-1391) and during the late 19th century (AD 1864-1886). Additionally, seasonal oxygen isotope data suggest that summers were cooler and winters were warmer in the Gulf of Maine during the 11th century compared to summers and …

biologyAnomaly (natural sciences)PaleontologyStratification (water)Climate changeSeasonalityOceanographybiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseIsotopes of oxygenOceanographySclerochronologymedicineSeawaterArctica islandicaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeologyEarth-Surface ProcessesPalaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
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The community of Cystoseira brachycarpa J. Agardh emend. Giaccone (Fucales, Phaeophyceae) in a shallow hydrothermal vent area of the Aeolian Islands …

2014

A Cystoseira brachycarpa community from a vent area off Panarea Island (Italy) was investigated in two sites at different pH values. At low pH, species richness and coverage were low and the community displayed a reduced reproductive capacity. Conversely, at normal pH, dense canopies of fertile C. brachycarpa were found.

biologyCystoseira brachycarpaEcologyOcean acidificationPlant Sciencebiology.organism_classificationAeolian Islands Cystoseira brachycarpa community ocean acidification shallow hydrothermal vents Tyrrhenian SeaEnvironmental scienceAeolian processesReproductive capacitySpecies richnessFucalesEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsHydrothermal vent
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Comparative sclerochronology of modern and mid-Pliocene (c. 3.5Ma) Aequipecten opercularis (Mollusca, Bivalvia): an insight into past and future clim…

2009

Records of environment contained within the accretionarily deposited tissues of fossil organisms afford a means of detailed reconstruction of past climates and hence of rigorous testing of numerical climate models. We identify the environmental factors controlling oxygen and carbon stable-isotopic composition, and microgrowth-increment size, in the shell of modern examples of the Queen Scallop, Aequipecten opercularis. This understanding is then applied in interpretation of data from mid-Pliocene A. opercularis from eastern England. On the basis of oxygen-isotope evidence we conclude that winter minimum seafloor temperature was similar to present values (typically 6–7 °C) in the adjacent so…

biologyGlobal warmingPaleontologyClimate changeOceanographybiology.organism_classificationSeafloor spreadingAequipectenGulf StreamOceanographySclerochronologyPaleoclimatologyClimate modelEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeologyEarth-Surface ProcessesPalaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
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Coralline algal growth-increment widths archive North Atlantic climate variability

2011

Over the past decade coralline algae have increasingly been used as archives of paleoclimate information. Encrusting coralline algae, which deposit annual growth increments in a high Mg-calcite skeleton, are amongst the longest-lived shallow marine organisms. In fact, a live-collected plant has recently been shown to have lived for at least 850 years based on radiometric dating. While a number of investigations have successfully used geochemical information of coralline algal skeletons to reconstruct sea surface temperatures, less attention has been paid to employ growth increment widths as a temperature proxy. Here we explore the relationship between growth and environmental parameters in …

biologyPaleontologyCoralline algaeOceanographybiology.organism_classificationSubarctic climateOceanographyAtlantic Equatorial modeSclerochronologyPaleoclimatologyAtlantic multidecadal oscillationDendrochronologyRegime shiftEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeologyEarth-Surface ProcessesPalaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
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Eurhomalea exalbida (Bivalvia): A reliable recorder of climate in southern South America?

2012

Abstract Due to the lack of suitable high-resolution archives, regional and continental-scale climate dynamics of southern South America are not well understood. Shells of the long-lived, shallow-marine bivalve mollusk, Eurhomalea exalbida (Dillwyn), are likely to contain information on the past water temperatures. As yet, however, no rigorous calibration study has been presented so that growth history traits and the reliability of shell oxygen isotope-based temperature estimates remain unknown. Shell growth patterns and oxygen isotope ratios of four young specimens of E. exalbida from the Falkland Islands (Southwest Atlantic) were analyzed and cross-calibrated with environmental parameters…

biologyPaleontologyOceanographyBivalviabiology.organism_classificationAnnual growth %Isotopes of oxygenLatitudechemistry.chemical_compoundOceanographychemistryPaleoclimatologyCarbonateDominance (ecology)Eurhomalea exalbidaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeologyEarth-Surface ProcessesPalaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
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Unique growth pattern of Metoposaurus diagnosticus krasiejowensis (Amphibia, Temnospondyli) from the Upper Triassic of Krasiejów, Poland

2013

Morphology and bone histology of femora, tibiae, and fibulae of the temnospondyl Metoposaurus diagnosticus krasiejowensis from the Upper Triassic locality of Krasiejow (Poland) are studied for the first time. The growth pattern of Metoposaurus as preserved in a small growth series of femora, shows a regular alternating sequence of fast and slow growth phases, which are interpreted as representing zones and annuli. The slow growth phases (annuli) of the inner and outer cortex as well as those of different specimens are of a regular broad thickness. Such broad annuli are so far unknown for any vertebrate and make the growth pattern for Metoposaurus unique. These slow growth phases always cont…

biologyPaleontologyTemnospondyliVertebrateDutuitosaurusMetoposaurusOceanographybiology.organism_classificationSlow growthPaleontologyFemur lengthbiology.animalAestivationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEarth-Surface ProcessesPalaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
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The unique skeleton of siliceous sponges (Porifera; Hexactinellida and Demospongiae) that evolved first from the Urmetazoa during the Proterozoic: a …

2007

Abstract. Sponges (phylum Porifera) had been considered as an enigmatic phylum, prior to the analysis of their genetic repertoire/tool kit. Already with the isolation of the first adhesion molecule, galectin, it became clear that the sequences of the sponge cell surface receptors and those of the molecules forming the intracellular signal transduction pathways, triggered by them, share high similarity to those identified in other metazoan phyla. These studies demonstrated that all metazoan phyla, including the Porifera, originate from one common ancestor, the Urmetazoa. The sponges evolved during a time prior to the Ediacaran-Cambrian boundary (542 million years ago (myr)). They appeared du…

biologyPhylum[SDU.OCEAN] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Ocean Atmospherelcsh:QE1-996.5lcsh:Lifemyrbiology.organism_classification[SDU.ASTR] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Astrophysics [astro-ph][SDU.ENVI] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Continental interfaces environmentSuberites domunculaIntracellular signal transductionlcsh:GeologySpongelcsh:QH501-531Body planSponge spiculeEvolutionary biology[PHYS.ASTR.CO] Physics [physics]/Astrophysics [astro-ph]/Cosmology and Extra-Galactic Astrophysics [astro-ph.CO]lcsh:QH540-549.5Botany[SDU.STU] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Scienceslcsh:EcologyLiving fossilEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEarth-Surface Processes
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Magnetostratigraphy and biostratigraphy of the Carnian/Norian boundary interval from the Pizzo Mondello section (Sicani Mountains, Sicily)

2001

The 146.5 m-thick Upper Triassic limestone section at Pizzo Mondello in the Sicani Mountains of western Sicily is characterized by high quality of exposure, accessibility, and stratigraphic continuity. Magnetostratigraphic results delineate 12 normal and reverse polarity magnetozones, labelled successively from the base upwards as PM1n, PM1r, PM6n, PM6r. The Carnian/Norian boundary, based on conodont biostratigraphy, falls somewhere in the PM3n to PM5n interval which corresponds to the E14n to E16n magnetozone interval in the Newark reference sequence of polarity reversals. Comparison of magnetobiostratigraphic data from the Newark basin, Pizzo Mondello and other Late Triassic marine sectio…

biologySedimentary GeologyPaleontologyBiostratigraphyStructural basinOceanographybiology.organism_classificationPaleontologySection (archaeology)ConodontSouthern HemisphereEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMagnetostratigraphyGeologyEarth-Surface ProcessesPalaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
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Unraveling the origin of the Late Triassic multitaxic bone accumulation at Krasiejów (S Poland) by diagenetic analysis

2012

Abstract A study of aquatic and terrestrial vertebrate remains from a bonebed in the Late Triassic continental succession near Krasiejow (S Poland) shows it was deposited by a single catastrophic event, perhaps a flood. Hardparts of Metoposaurus, Paleorhinus, and Stagonolepis show sedimentary infill and geochemical evidence for early diagenesis at different times and in different microenvironments. The infills in the aquatic animal bones (sediment, pyrite and calcite) show deposition in a freshwater environment, while those in the terrestrial Stagonolepis remains (mainly barite) point to an arid terrestial environment. The trace element content of the remains, together with the absence of a…

biologyTrace elementPaleontologySedimentMetoposaurusOceanographyPaleorhinusbiology.organism_classificationDeposition (geology)DiagenesisPaleontologySedimentary rockStagonolepisEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeologyEarth-Surface ProcessesPalaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
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