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  • Elsevier  (130,580)
  • 1970-1974  (116,473)
  • 1955-1959  (14,107)
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  • 1
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    Elsevier
    In:  Advances in Carbohydrate Chemistry, 14 . pp. 63-134.
    Publication Date: 2021-05-27
    Description: This chapter discusses the Maillard reaction. Results of the many investigations into the mechanism of the Maillard reaction support one of two main theories. The first assumes the formation of glycosylamines that undergo the Amadori (or, for ketoses, the Heyns) rearrangement. The 1-amino-l-deoxyketose derivative (or 2-amino-2-de- oxyaldose derivative) formed may be dehydrated and cyclized to form furan derivatives, or it may enolize. In either case, intermediates that are readily transformed into brown compounds are formed. A third possibility is for the deoxy sugar derivative to react with more amino acid to form colored products. The many workers who have supported this mechanism found also that optimum conditions for occurrence of the Maillard reaction are (1) fairly low water content, (2) a pH of 7 to 10, and (3) a high temperature. Nevertheless, some reaction occurs under conditions far removed from these, but in the absence of moisture there is no reaction. The formation of an acyclic Schiff base as an initial step is not very likely, since replacement of the aldose by salicylaldehyde caused only a very small loss of amino groups. The second theory of the mechanism of the browning reaction is of recent origin and maintains that the browning reaction and the Maillard reaction are separate and distinct. Browning, according to this school of thought, is due to the effect of pH on the sugar and can occur over a wide range of pH, whereas the Maillard reaction proceeds only in alkaline media.
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2021-04-15
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2021-04-15
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2021-04-15
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  • 5
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    Elsevier
    In:  Deep-Sea Research , 20 . pp. 107-108.
    Publication Date: 2020-11-16
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  • 6
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    Elsevier
    In:  Deep-Sea Research, 4 . pp. 105-115.
    Publication Date: 2020-11-09
    Description: Fourteen instances of whales entangled in submarine cables are reported. Ten entanglements occured off the Pacific coast of Central and South America. Six cases occured in about 500 fathoms, with 620 fathoms the maximum depth reported. Five entanglements occured in the period, Februray-March-April. All whales positively identified were sperm whales. The submarine cable was generally wrapped around jaw and often around the flukes and fins. The cable was rarely broken but always badly mauled. The entanglements often occured near former repairs where there is a chance for extra slack cable on the bottom. Two photographs of a sperm whale entangled in a cable and one photograph of a whale-jaw entangled in a cable are presented. It is concluded that sperm whales often swim alog the sea floor in depths as grat as 620 fathoms. It is suggested that the whales become entangled while swimming along with their jaw plowing through the sediment in search of food. It is possible that the whales attack tangled masses of slack cable mistaking them for items of food.
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  • 7
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    Elsevier
    In:  Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 37 (9). pp. 2173-2190.
    Publication Date: 2019-03-07
    Description: Two thousand and twenty well-characterized coral specimens from 17 localities have been analyzed for Sr. Seventy-three genera and subgenera, mostly hermatypic scleractinians, are represented. For some genera, specimens living in surface reef environments are compared with those from 18.3 m depths on the same reefs. Growth rates for some species have also been measured at these depths at one of the sampling sites. Skeletal strontium for a given genus decreases with increasing water temperature, a relationship which previously eluded detection. Aragonite deposited by corals living on the reef at a depth of 18.3 m contains more strontium than the skeletal aragonite of the same coral genera from shallow-water, surface environments. Quantitative treatment of the data for Acropora, one of the most abundant and widely distributed of the reef-building corals, suggests that the observed strontium variations may reflect variations in the rate of skeletal calcification, rather than direct dependence upon temperature or water depth. There is evidence for ‘species effects’, apparently unrelated to growth rate differences, in that certain coral genera are consistently enriched or depleted in skeletal strontium content relative to other genera living in the same reef environments under identical ambient conditions. Temperature, salinity, water depth, seawater composition, and/or other such parameters may in part determine the levels of trace element concentration in carbonates deposited by corals and other marine invertebrates, but it would appear that these variables more directly affect physiological processes which in turn control skeletal chemistry.
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  • 8
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    Elsevier
    In:  Deep Sea Research and Oceanographic Abstracts, 21 (1). pp. 37-46.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-08
    Description: When determining vertical velocity spectra from temperature time series and the mean vertical temperature gradient, restrictions may arise friom the existence of fine-structre. Phillips (1971) and Garrett and Munk (1971_ have shown that the fine-structure contamination of internal gravity wave spectra can be written as a function of some statistical properties of the internal wave field and the vertical wave number spectrum of the fine-structure. A consistent set of current and temperature data was obtained during an experiment at Site D to study this problem. The wave number spectrum of the vertical temperature fine-structure and the apparent frequently spectrum of internal waves are determined from these data. In contrast to the asasumptions in the above models, our fine-structure data imply a wave number spectrum proportional to (wave number)−3 in the range which is important here. Using the above set of data, a model is suggested to describe the effect of fine-structure on vertical velocity spectra computed with the mean vertical temperature gradient. It indicates a maximum fine-structure contamination of the true frequency spectrum of internal gravity waves in the middle of the internal wave band, with less contamination at low and high frequencies.
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  • 9
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    Elsevier
    In:  Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 17 (2). pp. 397-407.
    Publication Date: 2017-02-14
    Description: Volcanic ash layers, which represent the products of volcanic activity within the ocean basins, are common in sedimentary cores taken near Cobb Seamount and on the actively spreading Gorda and Juan de Fuca Ridges. Petrographic and chemical analyses of the glass shards from these deposits have revealed that they are unaltered and are as chemically representative of local volcanic events as are the glassy margins of fresh pillow basalts recovered from the same areas. The presence of unhydrated glass shards in samples as old as 3.8 my is in direct conflict with published hydration rates of both terrestrial and submarine volcanic glasses. A study of a sequence of ash layers from Cobb Seamount, which spans in time much of the Seamount's history, indicates that the volcanic products from Cobb Seamount have had alkaline affinities and that its eruptions have been becoming progressively enriched in Al2O3. Recent experimental petrological evidence and the data on the chemical compositions of Cobb Seamount and the adjacent Juan de Fuca Ridge magmas are in agreement with the hypothesis that magmas are being generated at progressively greater depths beneath Cobb Seamount as it migrates away from the Juan de Fuca Ridge.
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  • 10
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    Elsevier
    In:  Deep Sea Research and Oceanographic Abstracts, 18 (2). pp. 179-191.
    Publication Date: 2016-09-22
    Description: A study is described which attempts to obtain information about the vertical correlation of ocean currents at frequencies higher than inertial. Current velocity and temperature data for sensor separations of 4–12 m were taken with a mooring at ‘Site D’. The coherence and phase spectra for velocity component pairs reveals that motions are rotational at low frequencies. A cut-off frequency exists above which coherence drops to low values. The limiting frequency coincides with the minimum Väisälä frequency of the total water column. These cross-spectral properties support the assumption that the motion in this frequency range is governed by internal wave dynamics. The coherence and phase spectra of temperature pairs indicate that a field of temperature structure is superimposed on the mean field which is weakly correlated to the field of motion.
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