Search results for "geog"

showing 10 items of 13905 documents

Effects of different boundary conditions and palaeotopographies on the onshore response of tsunamis in a numerical model – A case study from western …

2016

Abstract Hydrodynamic numerical models are essential in modern tsunami hazard assessment. They allow the economical simulation of possible tsunami scenarios for areas at risk and provide reliable and detailed insights into local onshore dynamics. This is especially true when simulations are calibrated with field traces of past tsunami inundation events. Following this approach, the current study focuses on palaeotsunami events indicated by sedimentary and geomorphological field traces in the northern Gulf of Kyparissia (NW Greece). Based on three different digital elevation models (DEM) – reflecting the recent and two palaeotopographies – various tsunami wave constellations according to the…

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesGeologyCrustNumerical modelsAquatic ScienceHazard analysis010502 geochemistry & geophysicsOceanography01 natural sciencesField (geography)Current (stream)Boundary value problemDigital elevation modelGeologySeismology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesLandfallContinental Shelf Research
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Targeted delivery of hydrogen for the bioremediation of aquifers contaminated by dissolved chlorinated compounds.

2019

Dihydrogen (H2) gas injection is a promising option to enhance the reductive biodehalogenation of contaminants in groundwater. However, it is challenging to ensure its targeted delivery at the right places in plumes, and for the long times required for bioremediation. In this paper, the ability of surfactant foam to retain H2 in the saturated zone and to enhance its release in the dissolved form was compared to traditional biosparging. H2 gas was injected, either alone, or as foam, in a 2D saturated cell packed with glass beads. This cell was continuously flushed with deoxygenated water to mimic aquifer circulation, and H2 was studied both in terms of gas distribution in the cell and dissol…

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesGroundwater flowHalogenationHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisGroundwater remediationAquifer010501 environmental sciencesToxicology01 natural sciencesDiffusionSurface-Active AgentsBioremediationDissolutionGroundwaterComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS0105 earth and related environmental sciencesgeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryChemistryWaterGeneral MedicinePollution6. Clean waterPlumeBiodegradation Environmental13. Climate actionReagentEnvironmental chemistry[PHYS.ASTR]Physics [physics]/Astrophysics [astro-ph]GroundwaterWater Pollutants ChemicalHydrogenEnvironmental pollution (Barking, Essex : 1987)
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What is in our seas? Assessing anthropogenic litter on the seafloor of the central Mediterranean Sea

2020

Abstract Abundance, composition, and distribution of macro-litter found on the seafloor of the Strait of Sicily between 10 and 800 m depth has been studied using data collected by bottom trawl surveys MEDITS from 2015 to 2019. Three waste categories based on the items use were considered: single-use, fishing-related and generic-use. Over 600 sampling sites, just 14% of these were litter-free. The five-years average density of seafloor litter was 79.6 items/km2 and ranged between 46.8 in 2019 and 118.1 items/km2 in 2015. The predominant waste type was plastic (58% of all items). Regardless of material type, single-use items were a dominant (60% of items) and widespread (79% of hauls) fractio…

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisFishing010501 environmental sciencesFishing-related litterPlasticToxicologySpatial distribution01 natural sciencesMediterranean seaBaselineMediterranean SeaAnimalsSicily0105 earth and related environmental sciencesSingle-use litterWaste ProductsMaterial typeGeneral MedicinePollutionSeafloor spreadingStrait of SicilyEnvironmental scienceBaseline Fishing-related litter Plastics Single-use litter Strait of SicilyPhysical geographyPlasticsEnvironmental Monitoring
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Recreational noise pollution of traditional festivals reduces the juvenile productivity of an avian urban bioindicator.

2021

Noise is a pollutant of emergent concern for ecologists and conservation biologists. Recreational noise pollution, especially unpredictable and intermittent sounds, and its effects on wildlife and biodiversity have been poorly studied. Researchers have paid very little attention to the effect of noisy traditional festivals (fireworks and powder-guns). This study aimed to explore the effect of these recreational activities on the juvenile productivity of an urban avian bioindicator: the house sparrow. We studied five pairs of localities in the Valencia Region (E Spain) with noisy traditional festivals. Each pair was composed of one locality with festivals during the breeding season and the c…

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisWildlifeBiodiversity010501 environmental sciencesToxicology01 natural sciencesbiology.animalSeasonal breederJuvenileAnimalsHumansHouse sparrowRecreation0105 earth and related environmental sciencesHolidaysSparrowbiologyEnvironmental BiomarkersSARS-CoV-2FireworksCOVID-19General MedicineEcologíaCensusPollutionFisheryPlant BreedingGeographyProductivity (ecology)Communicable Disease ControlRecreational noiseNoiseSparrowsEnvironmental pollution (Barking, Essex : 1987)
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Channel forms recovery in an ephemeral river after gravel mining (Palancia River, Eastern Spain)

2017

[EN] During the 1970s, the Palancia River was intensively affected by gravel mining instream. This activity completely destroyed the fluvial forms, devastating the original wandering pattern. At the end of the 1980s, gravel mining ceased and the river started a process of recovery, only altered by several clearing operations. The aim of this work is to describe these processes of change, analyzing the river's morphosedimentary conditions through a GIS analysis of aerial photographs previous to, simultaneous with, and subsequent to the intense gravel mining activity. Results explain the current difficulties of some ephemeral rivers to recover their original forms, because of the sediment and…

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesHidrologiaFluvial010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesEphemeral riversSedimentsRiver trajectoriesClearing0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface ProcessesHydrologygeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryLand useEphemeral keySedimentIncisionChannelizedCurrent (stream)Gravel miningLand use changesChannel (geography)GeologyChannel forms
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Comparing flow resistance law for fixed and mobile bed rills

2019

Rills caused by run-off concentration on erodible hillslopes have very irregular profiles and cross-section shapes. Rill erosion directly depends on the hydraulics of flow in the rills, which may differ greatly from hydraulics of flow in larger and regular channels. 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 (ranging from 9% to 26%) in which mobile and fixed bed rills were incised. Initially, measurements of flow velocity, water depth, cross-section area, wetted perimeter, and bed slope, carried out in 320 reaches of mobile bed rills and in 165 reaches of fixed rills, …

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesHydraulicsfixed bedFlow (psychology)0207 environmental engineering02 engineering and technology01 natural scienceslaw.inventionWetted perimetersymbols.namesakelawFroude numberSettore AGR/08 - Idraulica Agraria E Sistemazioni Idraulico-Forestalirill hydraulic020701 environmental engineering0105 earth and related environmental sciencesWater Science and Technologygeographysoil erosiongeography.geographical_feature_categoryrill flowplot measurementRillFlow conditionsFlow velocitymobile bedsymbolsflow resistanceSediment transportGeologyHydrological Processes
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New insights on secondary minerals from Italian sulfuric acid caves

2018

Sulfuric acid minerals are important clues to identify the speleogenetic phases of hypogene caves. Italy hosts ~25% of the known worldwide sulfuric acid speleogenetic (SAS) systems, including the famous well-studied Frasassi, Monte Cucco, and Acquasanta Terme caves. Nevertheless, other underground environments have been analyzed, and interesting mineralogical assemblages were found associated with peculiar geomorphological features such as cupolas, replacement pockets, feeders, sulfuric notches, and sub-horizontal levels. In this paper, we focused on 15 cave systems located along the Apennine Chain, in Apulia, in Sicily, and in Sardinia, where copious SAS minerals were observed. Some of the…

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesHypogeneQH301-705.5cave minerals speleothem sulfuric acid cave secondary mineralsSettore GEO/04 - Geografia Fisica E GeomorfologiahypogeneGeochemistrySpeleothem010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundCavesulfuric acid caverising watersBiology (General)speleothem0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface Processescave mineralsgeographyCave sulfateSettore GEO/06 - MineralogiaQE1-996.5geography.geographical_feature_categorycave sulfatesSulfuric acidRising waterGeologyhypogene rising waters Apennine Chain mineralogy cave sulfateschemistryApennine Chainmineralogysecondary mineralsGeologyInternational Journal of Speleology
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Reaction path models of magmatic gas scrubbing

2016

Gas-water-rock reactions taking place within volcano-hosted hydrothermal systems scrub reactive, water-soluble species (sulfur, halogens) from the magmatic gas phase, and as such play a major control on the composition of surface gas manifestations. A number of quantitative models of magmatic gas scrubbing have been proposed in the past, but no systematic comparison of model results with observations from natural systems has been carried out, to date. Here, we present the results of novel numerical simulations, in which we initialized models of hydrothermal gas-water-rock at conditions relevant to Icelandic volcanism. We focus on Iceland as an example of a "wet" volcanic region where scrubb…

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesIcelandMineralogychemistry.chemical_elementVolcanism010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesHydrothermal circulationGas phaseHydrothermal systemGeochemistry and PetrologyReaction path0105 earth and related environmental sciencesgeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEQ3/6GeologyGas emissionsGas-water-rock interactionSulfurMagmatic gas scrubbing; Gas-water-rock interaction; EQ3/6; Hydrothermal systems; IcelandMagmatic gas scrubbingSettore GEO/08 - Geochimica E VulcanologiachemistryVolcano13. Climate actionGeologyData scrubbing
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High time resolution fluctuations in volcanic carbon dioxide degassing from Mount Etna

2014

Abstract We report here on the first record of carbon dioxide gas emission rates from a volcano, captured at ≈ 1 Hz. These data were acquired with a novel technique, based on the integration of UV camera observations (to measure SO2 emission rates) and field portable gas analyser readings of plume CO2/SO2 ratios. Our measurements were performedat the North East crater of Mount Etna, southern Italy, and the data reveal strong variability in CO2 emissions over timescales of tens to hundreds of seconds, spanning two orders of magnitude. This carries importantimplications for attempts to constrain global volcanic CO2 release to the atmosphere, and will lead to an increased insight into short te…

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesLagPlume imagingInduced seismicity010502 geochemistry & geophysicsAtmospheric sciencesPassive degassing01 natural sciencesAtmospherechemistry.chemical_compoundImpact craterGeochemistry and Petrology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesCarbon dioxide; Passive degassing; Plume imaging; Volcanic remote sensing; Volcano seismology; Geophysics; Geochemistry and PetrologyBasaltgeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryVolcano seismologyPlumeVolcanic remote sensingGeophysicsVolcanochemistryCarbon dioxide13. Climate actionCarbon dioxideCarbon dioxide; Passive degassing; Plume imaging; Volcanic remote sensing; Volcano seismology; Geochemistry and Petrology; GeophysicsSeismologyGeology
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Half a century of forest cover change along the Latvian-Russian border captured by object-based image analysis of Corona and Landsat TM/OLI data

2020

Abstract After 1991, major events, such as the collapse of socialism and the transition to market economies, caused land use change across the former USSR and affected forests in particular. However, major land use changes may have occurred already during Soviet rule, but those are largely unknown and difficult to map for large areas because 30-m Landsat data is not available prior to the 1980s. Our goal was to analyze the rates and determinants of forest cover change from 1967 to 2015 along the Latvian-Russian border, and to develop an object-based image analysis approach to compare forest cover based on declassified Corona spy satellite images from 1967 with that derived from Landsat 5 TM…

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesLand usebusiness.industryIntensive farming0208 environmental biotechnologySoil ScienceGeology02 engineering and technologyLand cover01 natural sciences020801 environmental engineeringGeographyAgricultureAfforestationLand use land-use change and forestryPhysical geographyComputers in Earth SciencesAgricultural productivityScale (map)business0105 earth and related environmental sciencesRemote sensingRemote Sensing of Environment
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