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  • 2020-2024  (4)
  • 1990-1994  (2)
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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Anaesthesia 45 (1990), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1365-2044
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Medicine
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
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    London : Periodicals Archive Online (PAO)
    Journal of historical geography. 17:2 (1991:Apr.) 208 
    ISSN: 0305-7488
    Topics: Geography
    Description / Table of Contents: Shorter Notices
    Notes: Reviews
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2024-02-14
    Description: Machine learning covers a large set of algorithms that can be trained to identify patterns in data. Thanks to the increase in the amount of data and computing power available, it has become pervasive across scientific disciplines. We first highlight why machine learning is needed in marine ecology. Then we provide a quick primer on machine learning techniques and vocabulary. We built a database of & SIM;1000 publications that implement such techniques to analyse marine ecology data. For various data types (images, optical spectra, acoustics, omics, geolocations, biogeochemical profiles, and satellite imagery), we present a historical perspective on applications that proved influential, can serve as templates for new work, or represent the diversity of approaches. Then, we illustrate how machine learning can be used to better understand ecological systems, by combining various sources of marine data. Through this coverage of the literature, we demonstrate an increase in the proportion of marine ecology studies that use machine learning, the pervasiveness of images as a data source, the dominance of machine learning for classification-type problems, and a shift towards deep learning for all data types. This overview is meant to guide researchers who wish to apply machine learning methods to their marine datasets.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2023-08-09
    Description: East Antarctica is the keystone to Gondwana and is fundamental to the understanding of continental breakup and the distribution of continents since the Jurassic, with further implications for the formation of today’s oceans and ice sheets and evolution of climate. Analysis of multiple geophysical datasets in East Antarctica, including radio-echo sounding, potential fields and seismic datasets have revealed the distribution of sedimentary basins within East Antarctica. Differences in the morphology and orientation of sedimentary basins define lithospheric domains separated by basement-dominated regions. The basement highs are defined by multiscale linear features evident in gravity, bed topography and seismic tomography models. These boundaries, we suggest, indicate the margins of former continental blocks that were assembled in the Precambrian to form East Antarctica. Rheological contrasts at block margins controlled later deformation during Phanerozoic extension. First, the formation of variably-oriented sedimentary basins in the Devonian to Triassic is consistent with reactivation of prior architecture and the distribution of major basin-dominated regions is indicative of differences in lithospheric rheology and composition - warmer and compositionally more fertile lithosphere is prone to subsidence. Second, the basement highs are aligned with key features of Gondwana breakup in the Jurassic to Eocene including the Africa-Madagascar-Sri Lanka triple junction, the Kerguelen Plateau, the George V fracture zone of Australian-Antarctic basin and the Macquarie Ridge. We suggest that the differential lithospheric structure of East Antarctica including mantle, crust and basins led to the localisation of these features and fundamentally controlled the geometry of Gondwana breakup.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2023-07-10
    Description: Comprenhending Antarctic coastal regions is fundamental to our understanding of the dynamic responses of the Antarctic ice sheet to ocean and climate warming.. These coastal regions contain multiple potential tipping points for the Antarctic Ice Sheet in a warming world, which must be better understood to predict the future magnitude and rates of global sea-level rise in a more robust fashion. The Antarctic Ice Sheet constitutes the largest uncertainty in future sea-level projections. 50 years of aereogeophysical observations have led to significant advances in our knowledge of bed topography and basal conditions and itheir influence on ice sheet dynamics. primarily in the interior of Antarctica Howevver, the critical coastal regions where the West and East Antarctic ice sheets meet the ocean and that are the sites of current and future change remain in many places insufficiently surveyed and understood.Here we present a new international initiative RINGS that aims to provide the first comprehensive pan-Antarctic wide coverage of the Antarctic coast mainly via new coordinated aerogeophysical campaigns. Together with an overview of the current multidisciplinary understanding of the Antarctic coastal regions, we present a new ensemble analysis of published datasets to present data coverage and knowledge gaps, and their regional distribution is discussed in the context of present ice-sheet dynamics and potential future change Finally, we identify outstanding science priorities and discuss protocols for new airborne surveys to develop a novel comprehensive dataset of Antarctic grounding zones (the main RING) and both landward and seaward RINGS all-around Antarctica.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2023-09-29
    Description: East Antarctica is the least understood continent involved in the assembly of Gondwana, a key stage in the global supercontinent cycle. Thick crust stretches from Dronning Maud Land to the Gamburtsev Subglacial Mountains, suggesting that the Kuunga Orogen, formed during the collision of India and East Antarctica during Gondwana assembly, had a significant impact on the Precambrian lithosphere of parts of interior East Antarctica. Geological and geophysical research has revealed key aspects of the collisional East African-Antarctic Orogen and the subduction-related Ross Orogen along the paleo-Pacific margin of Gondwana. However, the paths and architecture of these different orogens in the entirely ice sheet covered and remote interior of East Antarctica have remained more difficult to investigate, making it even more challenging to link subduction and collisional processes leading to Gondwana assembly and growth. Here we present a new satellite-conformed aeromagnetic anomaly compilation that includes data recently collected between the interior of Dronning Maud Land and South Pole, together with airborne and satellite gravity imaging and seismological and geological constraints that provide tantalising new views into different crustal provinces, cratons and orogens in interior East Antarctica. We propose that a suture zone, partially exposed in the Shackleton Range, may cross the continent linking major fault systems imaged in the Gamburtsev Province and Princess Elisabeth Land. By superimposing our geophysical layers on a new plate tectonic reconstruction, we explore the potential evolution of accretionary and collisional stages in East Antarctica during the assembly of Gondwana from Edicaran to Cambrian times.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
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