GLORIA

GEOMAR Library Ocean Research Information Access

feed icon rss

Your email was sent successfully. Check your inbox.

An error occurred while sending the email. Please try again.

Proceed reservation?

Export
  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Geophysical prospecting 35 (1987), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1365-2478
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: Since the important contributions of Dürbaum and Dix, 30 years ago, velocity profile estimation procedures on horizontally layered and vertically heterogeneous media from seismic probing data have been based largely on hyperbolic moveout models and RMS and stacking velocity concepts. Re-examination of the fundamentals reveals that quantitative velocity heterogeneity and canonical valocity profiles have been implicit factors for moveout modelling and for profile inversion in the use of the Dix procedure. Heterogeneity h is the ratio (and vRMS the geometric or harmonic mean) of the path-average and time-average velocities for a raypath or, in a more restricted sense, for the normal ray belonging to a velocity profile. The canonical profile for a given velocity profile or profile segment is a moveout-equivalent monotonically increasing ramp-like profile.The ramp or constant gradient in depth is the simplest velocity profile approximator which can explicitly accommodate velocity heterogeneity. A ramp model structure is detailed which facilitates moveout simulation and model parameter estimation, and the parametric effects are explored. The horizontal offset range is quantified for which this model can give good moveout approximations.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    International journal of earth sciences 76 (1987), S. 233-243 
    ISSN: 1437-3262
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Description / Table of Contents: Abstract In the context of Gondwana North Victoria Land forms the Antarctic conjugate terrain to the East Australian Lachlan Fold Belt, where the distinction between S- and I-type granitoids was first worked out (Chappell &White 1974). Thus the area was considered a good testing ground for the hypothesis when the German Antarctic North Victoria Land Expedition (Ganovex) resumed fieldwork there in 1979/80. It was known at that time that there existed a Cambro/Ordovician and a Devonian/Carboniferous granitoid generation, which, in analogy to Australia, were taken to be related to two different orogenetic events. Our geological, petrographical and geochemical investigations, together with radiometric age dating, revealed that this is true only for the older granite generation. The younger generation is in fact anorogenic. At the same time, it became obvious that the S- and I-type classification did not completely fit the observed field data. At this pointPitcher's (1982) subdivision of the I-types into a »Cordilleran« and a »Caledonian« suite offered a solution to account for the observed irregularities. At about the same time, plate tectonic models based on evidence independent from the granite classification were developed for this part of the active Gondwana margin. This offers the opportunity to crosscheck the tectonic environment derived from the granite classification: The characteristics of the older, Cambro/Ordovician granitoids allow a perfect accommodation in the model of an active margin above a subduction zone as derived from other evidence. For the younger (Devonian/Carboniferous) granitoids, however, the postulated tectonic setting (post-collisional uplift and faulting) could not be verified in North Victoria Land. It is concluded thatPitchers classification is applicable in its petrographic and geochemical aspects but that the tectonic environment postulated for the production of »Caledonian« I-type granitoids may not be the same in all investigated areas.
    Abstract: Résumé Dans le contexte du Gondwana, la Terre Victoria est le pendant antarctique de la zone plissée de Lachlan, en Australie Orientale, où la distinction entre granites S et I a été établie pour la première fois (Chappel &White 1974). C'est pourquoi la vérification de cette hypothèse a été portée au programme de l'expédition allemande à la Terre Victoria en 1979–80 (Ganovex). On connaissait à cette époque l'existence d'une génération cambro-ordovicienne et d'une génération dévono-carbonifère de granitoÏdes qui, par analogie avec l'Australie, avaient été rapportées à deux événements orogéniques différents. Nos investigations géologiques, pétrologiques, géochimiques et géochronologiques montrent que cette conclusion n'est vraie que pour les granites de la première génération. La seconde génération est, en fait, anorogénique. Il s'est avéré en mÊme temps que la répartition en types S et I ne correspond pas exactement aux observations de terrain. Par contre, la distinction introduite parPitcher (1982) parmi les granites I entre une série »de Cordillère« et une série »Calédonienne« peut expliquer les irrégularités que nous observons. Environ à cette époque, des modèles géodynamiques basés sur des considérations indépendantes de la classification des granites ont été proposés pour cette partie de la marge active du Gondwana. Ces modèles permettent de recouper les considérations sur l'environnement tectonique des granites, déduites de leur classification: Les caractères des granitoÏdes anciens, cambro-ordoviciens, s'accordent parfaitement au modèle d'une marge active surmontant une subduction. Par contre, pour les granitoÏdes jeunes, dévono-carbonifères, la situation tectonique postulée (soulèvement et fracturation post-collision) n'a pas pu Être confirmée sur la Terre Victoria. En conclusion, la classification dePitcher est applicable dans ses aspects pétrographiques et géochimiques, mais l'environnement tectonique qui préside à la formation de granitoÏdes de type »Calédonien I« n'est pas nécessairement le mÊme dans toutes les régions étudiées.
    Notes: Zusammenfassung Im Gondwana Rahmen bildet Nord Victoria Land das antarktische Pendant zur ostaustralischen Lachlan Mobilzone, wo die Einteilung von Graniten in S- und I-Typen entwickelt wurde (Chappell &White 1974). Deshalb war eine überprüfung dieser neu entwickelten Hypothese eines der Arbeitsziele, als die deutschen Nord Victoria Land Expeditionen (Ganovex) dort 1979 ihre Arbeiten aufnahmen. An den bekannten zwei Granitgenerationen der Region wurden geologische, petrographische und geochemische Untersuchungen sowie Altersbestimmungen durchgeführt, deren Ergebnisse sich folgenderma\en zusammenfassen lassen. Die ältere, kambro-ordovizische Granitfolge steht, analog zur Situation in Australien, in enger Beziehung zu einer bedeutenden Orogenese, während sich zur jüngeren, devonisch-karbonischen Suite kein zugehöriges tektonisches Ereignis finden lie\. Dies steht im Gegensatz zur Situation in Australien/Tasmanien. Die S- und I-Typ Klassifikation, auf Nord Victoria Land angewendet, weist ähnliche Widersprüche auf, wie siePitcher (1982) zur Aufteilung der I-Typen in »kordillere« und »kaledonische« Sippen führten. Plattentektonische Modelle, die in den letzten Jahren für diese Region am mobilen Rand Gondwanas unabhängig von der Granitklassifikation nach geologischen und tektonischen Kriterien entwickelt wurden, erlauben es, die vonPitcher entwickelten tektonischen Bildungsmilieus für verschiedene Granit-Typen zu überprüfen: Die Charakteristiken der älteren (kambro-ordovizischen) Granite erlauben ein widerspruchsloses Einfügen in das aus anderen Kriterien abgeleitete Bild eines aktiven Kontinentalrandes über einer Subduktionszone. Für die jüngeren (devonisch-karbonischen) Granite dagegen, die im Charakter den »kaledonischen« I-TypenPitchers entsprechen, sind die für deren Bildung postulierten Vorgänge, nämlich Hebung und Dehnung nach einer Kollision, in Nord Victoria Land nicht erkennbar. Demnach erscheint zwar die KlassifikationPitchers sinnvoll, da sie in ihrer petrographisch-geochemischen Charakterisierung nachvollziehbar ist, aber das abgeleitete tektonische Milieu für die Bildung der »kaledonischen« Typen bedarf einer weiteren überprüfung.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 3
    Publication Date: 2011-09-29
    Description: SUMMARY We propose a class of spherical wavelet bases for the analysis of geophysical models and for the tomographic inversion of global seismic data. Its multiresolution character allows for modelling with an effective spatial resolution that varies with position within the Earth. Our procedure is numerically efficient and can be implemented with parallel computing. We discuss two possible types of discrete wavelet transforms in the angular dimension of the cubed sphere. We describe benefits and drawbacks of these constructions and apply them to analyse the information in two published seismic wave speed models of the mantle, using the statistics of wavelet coefficients across scales. The localization and sparsity properties of wavelet bases allow finding a sparse solution to inverse problems by iterative minimization of a combination of the ℓ 2 norm of the data residuals and the ℓ 1 norm of the model wavelet coefficients. By validation with realistic synthetic experiments we illustrate the likely gains from our new approach in future inversions of finite-frequency seismic data.
    Print ISSN: 0956-540X
    Electronic ISSN: 1365-246X
    Topics: Geosciences
    Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Deutsche Geophysikalische Gesellschaft (DGG) and the Royal Astronomical Society (RAS).
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 4
    Publication Date: 2011-05-21
    Description: ABSTRACT Riffle-pool sequences are a common feature of gravel-bed rivers. However, mechanisms of their generation and maintenance are still not fully understood. In this study a monitoring approach similar to the one of Andrews (1979 and 1982) is employed. It focuses on analysing cross-sectional and longitudinal channel geometry of a large floodplain river (Vereinigte Mulde, Sachsen-Anhalt, Germany) with a high temporal and spatial resolution, in order to conclude from stage-dependant morphometric changes to riffle and pool maintaining processes. In accordance with Richards (1976a), Andrews (1979 and 1982) among others, pool cross sections of the Mulde River are narrow and riffle cross sections are wide suggesting that they should rather be addressed as two general types of channel cross-sections than solely as bedforms. At high flows, riffles and pools in the study reaches changed in length and height but not in position. Pools were scoured and riffles aggraded, a development which was reversed during receding flows below the threshold of 0.4·Q bf (40% bankfull discharge). An index for the longitudinal amplitude of riffle-pool sequences, the bed undulation intensity or bedform amplitude, is introduced and proved to be highly significant as a form parameter, its first derivative as a process parameter. The process of pool scour and riffle fill is addressed as bedform maintenance or bedform accentuation. It is indicated by increasing longitudinal bed amplitudes. According to the observed dynamics of bed amplitudes, maintenance of riffle-pool sequences lags behind discharge peaks. Maximum bed amplitudes may be reached with a delay of several days after peak discharges. Increasing bed undulation intensity is interpreted to indicate bed mobility. Post-flood decrease of the bed undulation intensity indicates a retrograde phase when transport from pools to riffles has ceased and bed mobility is restricted to riffle tails and heads of pools. This type of transport behaviour is referred to as disconnected mobility. The comparison of two river reaches, one with undisturbed sediment supply, the other with sediment deficit, suggests that high bed undulation intensity values at low flows indicate sediment deficit and potentially channel degrading conditions. It is more generally hypothesised that channel bed undulations constitute a major component of form roughness and that increased bed amplitudes are an important feature of channel bed adjustment to sediment deficit be it temporally during late floods or permanently due to a supply limitation of bedload. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
    Print ISSN: 0197-9337
    Electronic ISSN: 1096-9837
    Topics: Geography , Geosciences
    Published by Wiley-Blackwell
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 5
    Publication Date: 2013-05-19
    Description: The asymmetric unit of the title compound, 2C18H12O4·C2H6OS·2H2O, consists of four crystallographically independent molecules of 5-(naphthalen-1-yl)isophthalic acid, two dimethyl sulfoxide and four water molecules. The dihedral angles formed by the the planes of the aromatic fragments of the organic molecules range from 57.4 (1) to 59.1 (1)°. In the crystal, multiple O—H...O hydrogen bonds link the water molecules with the carbonyl and sulfoxide groups, giving rise to double ribbons along the b-axis direction.
    Electronic ISSN: 1600-5368
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Geosciences
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 6
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    International Union of Crystallography (IUC)
    Publication Date: 2013-06-09
    Description: In the title compound, C15H11N, the mean planes of the aromatic moieties are inclined to one another by 72.9 (1)°. The crystal is stabilized by π–π stacking interactions between the pyridine rings of inversion-related molecules, with a centroid–centroid distance of 3.772 (2) Å. In addition, C—H...π contacts involving an α-C—H group of the pyridine ring and the nonsubstituted ring of the naphthalene unit are observed, giving rise to a herringbone-type supramolecular architecture of the naphthalene moiety being contained in the molecule.
    Electronic ISSN: 1600-5368
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Geosciences
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 7
    Publication Date: 2011-08-05
    Description: Crystal Growth & Design DOI: 10.1021/cg200352u
    Print ISSN: 1528-7483
    Electronic ISSN: 1528-7505
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Geosciences , Physics
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 8
    Publication Date: 2013-05-09
    Description: Measurements of trace metal ratios in foraminiferal calcite are routinely used to reconstruct paleoceanographic conditions. Analyses using solution-based inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) require dissolution of the entire foraminifer shell. The potential exists for contamination from adherent clays, mineralized coatings, and other diagenetic components that confound the biogenic trace metal signal. We present results from a cleaning experiment on fossil specimens of the planktic foraminifer Orbulina universa that were cracked into several shell fragments and subjected to different cleaning protocols. We use LA-ICP-MS depth profiling to evaluate the effects of reductive, oxidative, and chelating (DTPA) cleaning protocols on shell Mg/Ca and Ba/Ca ratios. Using the natural pattern of intrashell Mg/Ca heterogeneity exhibited by O. universa , we demonstrate that reductive and oxidative cleaning can dissolve shell calcite from available surfaces, although intrashell Mg/Ca minima and maxima are unaffected. High-resolution depth profiles can be used to identify areas of heterogeneous intrashell Ba/Ca, which can be excluded from computations of whole-shell Ba/Ca. The size and density of shell pores plays a major role in the degree of contamination from sedimentary material. We demonstrate an approach for computing whole-shell Me/Ca ratios from LA-ICP-MS depth profiles that accounts for potential contamination and diagenetic overprinting.
    Electronic ISSN: 1525-2027
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Geosciences , Physics
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 9
    Publication Date: 2013-10-03
    Description: The temporal and magmatic evolution of central Snake River Plain (SRP; Idaho, USA) olivine tholeiites erupted within the past 4 m.y. is evaluated here. This investigation correlates and merges both geochemical and paleomagnetic measurements to constrain the volcanic history recovered from the 340 m Regional Aquifer Systems Analysis (RASA) test well located near Wendell, Idaho. Only a handful of studies have accomplished this task of shedding light on the chemical stratigraphy of the SRP and the petrogenesis of basalts with depth, and therefore through time. Paleomagnetic relationships suggest that time breaks between individual lava flows represent a few years to decades, time breaks between flow groups represent at least a couple of hundred years or possibly much longer, while significant hiatuses in volcanism, revealed by thick sediment packages or polarity reversals (both are evidenced in this well), are inferred to last thousands to tens of thousands of years. Major element geochemistry from 52 basaltic lava flows demonstrates near primitive compositions (i.e., ~10 wt% MgO) and tholeiitic iron enrichment trends, similar to lavas from the eastern SRP. Trace element concentrations are similar to those of ocean island basalts, with enriched Ba and Pb, and light rare earth element (REE)/heavy REE ratios similar to those of many Neogene volcanics of the western Cordillera. When combined, we identify a total of 11 flow groups, which we also classify as fractionation or recharge on the basis of decreasing or increasing MgO weight percent with depth. Taking into consideration these trends, we review the potential recharge, fractionation, and assimilation processes that characterize much of SRP olivine tholeiite, and conclude that assimilation, in combination with fractional crystallization, is the dominant petrogenesis for the basalts in the central SRP. Although fractionation of Wendell parent magmas was accompanied by assimilation of crustal material, this could not have been assimilation of ancient cratonic crust. The geochemical cycles observed in this well are inferred to represent fractionation and recharge of basaltic magma from a series of sill-like layered mafic intrusions located in the middle crust, similar to what has been proposed for the processes that control the eruptive history of basalts in the eastern SRP.
    Electronic ISSN: 1553-040X
    Topics: Geosciences
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 10
    Publication Date: 2013-10-02
    Description: Crystal Growth & Design DOI: 10.1021/cg4010714
    Print ISSN: 1528-7483
    Electronic ISSN: 1528-7505
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Geosciences , Physics
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
Close ⊗
This website uses cookies and the analysis tool Matomo. More information can be found here...