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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2023-05-12
    Keywords: Area/locality; Conductivity, average; Heat flow; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; Method comment; Number; Sample, optional label/labor no; Temperature gradient
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 28 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 2
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Honza, Eiichi; Inoue, E; Ishihara, Takemi (2007): Geological investigation of Japan and Southern Kurle Trench and slope areas GH76-2 Cruise April-June 1976. Geological Survey of Japan, Kawasaki-shi, 7, 127 pp, https://www.gsj.jp/en/publications/cruise-rep/cruise07.html
    Publication Date: 2023-08-28
    Description: The cores and dredges described in this report were taken on the GH76-2 Expedition in March-May, 1976 by the Geological Survey of Japan from the R/V Hakurei Maru. A total of 47 cores and dredges sites have been visited. The survey covered the whole of the Pacific side of the Tohoku Arc, the southern part of the Kurile Arc and the northern margin of the Izu-Ogasawara (Bonin) Arc. The surveyed area covered the continental shelves, slopes, trenches and Pacific basin along the trenches.
    Keywords: Comment; Deposit type; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Description; Dredge; DRG; Elevation of event; Event label; GH76-2; GH76-2-D144; GH76-2-D148; GH76-2-D152; GH76-2-D154; Hakurei-Maru (1974); Identification; Latitude of event; Longitude of event; NOAA and MMS Marine Minerals Geochemical Database; NOAA-MMS; Optional event label; Pacific Ocean; Position; Quantity of deposit; Sediment type; Size; Station 441; Station 446; Station 453; Station 456; Substrate type; Visual description
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 59 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2020-11-11
    Description: A new version of the World Digital Magnetic Anomaly Map, released last summer, gives greater insight into the structure and history of Earth's crust and upper mantle.
    Description: Published
    Description: 1A. Geomagnetismo e Paleomagnetismo
    Description: N/A or not JCR
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2021-04-20
    Description: The study of the statistical properties of ocean magnetic anomalies could be very important to get obtain new understanding about on plate tectonics, especially about the past properties of the lithospheric oceanic plates. Here we analyse ocean magnetic anomaly data at global scale in both time and space and prove the Laplace statistical distribution of marine magnetic anomalies. We provide a physical explanation of this statistical distribution of marine magnetic anomalies using a test with synthetic data, and investigate their behaviour during the Cretaceous Normal Superchron. A further comparison of our results with those provided by two global models of the lithospheric magnetic field, heavily based on satellite data, provides new evidence of an intrinsic limit of these global models, and confirms the need to include more near-surface magnetic data to better constrain these magnetic models, in particular over oceanic regions.
    Description: Published
    Description: 28-35
    Description: 1A. Geomagnetismo e Paleomagnetismo
    Description: JCR Journal
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2001. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Geophysical Research 106, no. B8 (2001): 16145–16161, doi:10.1029/2001JB000373.
    Description: Recently discovered megamullions on the seafloor have been interpreted to be the exhumed footwalls of long-lived detachment faults operating near the ends of spreading segments in slow spreading crust. We conducted five submersible dives on one of these features just east of the rift valley in the Mid-Atlantic Ridge at 26°35′N and obtained visual, rock sample, gravity, and heat flow data along a transect from the breakaway zone (where the fault is interpreted to have first nucleated in ∼2.0–2.2 Ma crust) westward to near the termination (∼0.7 Ma). Our observations are consistent with the detachment fault hypothesis and show the following features. In the breakaway zone, faulted and steeply backtilted basaltic blocks suggest rotation above a deeper shear zone; the youngest normal faults in this sequence are interpreted to have evolved into the long-lived detachment fault. In younger crust the interpreted detachment surface rises as monotonously flat seafloor in a pair of broad, gently sloping domes that formed simultaneously along isochrons and are now thinly covered by sediment. The detachment surface is locally littered with basaltic debris that may have been clipped from the hanging wall. The domes coincide with a gravity high that continues along isochrons within the spreading segment. Modeling of on-bottom gravity measurements and recovery of serpentinites imply that mantle rises steeply and is exposed within ∼7 km west of the breakaway but that rocks with intermediate densities prevail farther west. Within ∼5 km of the termination, small volcanic cones appear on the detachment surface, indicating melt input into the footwall. We interpret the megamullion to have developed during a phase of limited magmatism in the spreading segment, with mantle being exhumed by the detachment fault 〈0.5 m.y. after its initiation. Increasing magmatism may eventually have weakened the lithosphere and facilitated propagation of a rift that terminated slip on the detachment fault progressively between ∼1.3 m.y. and 0.7 m.y. Identifiable but low-amplitude magnetic anomalies over the megamullion indicate that it incorporates a magmatic component. We infer that much of the footwall is composed of variably serpentinized peridotite intruded by plutons and dikes.
    Description: B. Tucholke's research was supported by NSF grant OCE-9503561 and by an award from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Endowed Fund for Innovative Research and the Henry Bryant Bigelow Chair in Oceanography at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. G. Hirth acknowledges support by NSF grant OCE-9907244.
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 6
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    [s.l.] : Macmillian Magazines Ltd.
    Nature 404 (2000), S. 145-150 
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] The West Antarctic rift system is the result of late Mesozoic and Cenozoic extension between East and West Antarctica, and represents one of the largest active continental rift systems on Earth. But the timing and magnitude of the plate motions leading to the development of this rift system ...
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 7
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Astrophysics and space science 43 (1976), S. 199-211 
    ISSN: 1572-946X
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Physics
    Notes: Abstract Within the framework of the quasi-linear approximation, the hybrid diffusion process due to the bounce-drift resonance interaction between trapped particles and low-frequency field fluctuations is examined. The diffusion coefficients obtained, which are valid for particles with large pitch angles, cover the previous results in a few limiting cases. In general, the diffusion coefficients depend strongly on the spatial structure of the power spectrum along field lines, as well as the frequency dependence. The relative importance of the radial diffusion and field-aligned acceleration for ringcurrent particles is discussed. It is shown that the field-aligned acceleration exceeds the inward penetration of the particles near the plasmapause.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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