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  • 1
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of The Marine Biological Association of The United Kingdom, 72 (2). pp. 417-434.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-17
    Description: The upper bathyal sea-pen Kophobelemnon stelliferum extends to depths of about 1600 m in the Porcupine Seabight, to the south-west of Ireland, but is rare below about 1150 m. Photographic data suggest that the species attains numerical abundances of more than 2 m−2and a wet weight biomass of at least 4 g m−2. The highest densities, however, do not necessarily correspond to the highest biomass values since there is a clear depth-related change in population structure. The largest sea-pens are restricted to the deeper parts of the bathymetric range of the species. There is also a marked change in the growth form at a total colony length of about 250 mm, with larger colonies having relatively more polyps than smaller ones. The sexes are separate in Kophobelemnon stelliferum and the sex ratio of colonies is about 1:1. The maximum oocyte diameter is about 800 μm, but there is no evidence of seasonal reproduction by this pennatulid in the Porcupine Seabight.
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  • 2
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 72 (02). p. 271.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-16
    Description: Age and growth were estimated in the European squid, Loligo vulgaris, by examining growth increments in the statoliths of 203 specimens collected from off the French Mediterranean coast. Length and increment data were analyzed assuming that the increments were formed daily. The relationships between age and length showed that: growth rate varied considerably among individuals; growth was double exponential; the squids grew on average to 240 mm ML at 240 d from hatching, with a maximum of 350 mm at 240 d; the life span is probably about one year.
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  • 3
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 72 (03). p. 543.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-16
    Description: Some of the limits to the use of serology to identify prey species in the digestive tracts of cephalopods have been evaluated. Cuttlefish, Sepia officinalis, were given meals of krill slurry (Euphausia superba). Protein extracts of contents from four regions of the digestive tract, stomach, caecum, digestive gland and intestine, were tested for prey antigenicity. Digestion times (loss of antigenicity) ranged from 1 to 8 h depending on sampling site. Stomach and caecum emptied rapidly, but meal antigenicity persisted longer in the digestive gland. The Sepia experiments provide a basis for interpretation of results from natural predation by cephalopods).
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  • 4
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 72 (02). pp. 281-291.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-16
    Description: Samples of female lllex argentinus were taken from the catch of a Japanese squid jigging vessel on the Patagonian Shelf during March 1986. Morphometrics of the somatic and reproductive organ systems and the histological structure of the mantle in relation to maturation were examined. The data suggest that growth and maturation occur simultaneously during most of the time that lllex argentinus females are on the feeding grounds. In a squid of a ‘standard’ mantle length the whole body mass increases relative to mantle length during maturation and growth of the reproductive organs. This is accompanied by a small but significant decrease in the relative mass of the mantle, head and viscera whilst the mass of the digestive gland remains constant. Although mantle mass of a ‘standard’ female squid decreases relative to mantle length with maturity this is not associated with degeneration of the mantle muscles. Energy and nutrient resources for maturation are apparently derived from the squid's food, not from reserves, and during the course of maturation there is an increasing shift of emphasis from somatic growth to production of gonad and accessory reproductive organs.
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  • 5
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 72 (02). pp. 301-311.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-16
    Description: The timing of spawning and recruitment in the squid Loligo forbesi in Scottish waters is described on the basis of data from three sources: monthly samples of squid caught by commercial trawls (1986–1988), egg masses found by fishermen (1987–1991), and statistical data on animals caught by research trawls (1978–1987). Spawning females were present in samples from December to June, with peak spawning occurring in March. Most records of egg masses were from these months, but eggs were also found in August and September. These results suggest that there is an extended spawning season. Small squid (≤100 mm dorsal mantle length) were rarely present in commercial samples, but were recorded in research samples almost all year round. Thus there appears to be more or less continuous recruitment into the catchable population. The results of the present study are consistent with published data from other parts of the geographic range in that there is a regular seasonal peak in spawning, and spawning adults disappear from the population in summer. Further interpretation of the life-cycle of this species is not justified on the basis of current knowledge, and more information is needed on migrations, geographical variation, and lifespan in Loligo forbesi.
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  • 6
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 72 (04). p. 861.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-16
    Description: Cephalopod remains from the stomachs of a Risso's dolphin (Grampus griseus Cuvier, 1812, Cetacea) entangled in a fishing net off the Ligurian coast (central Mediterranean Sea) include squids Ancistroteuthis lichtensteini, Histioteuthis bonnellii, H. reversa and Todarodes sagittatus and the sepiolid Heteroteuthis dispar. All these cephalopods live in oceanic water including water over the steep continental slope where Risso's dolphin is frequently sighted. Histioteuthis reversa contributed 78% of the cephalopods by number, 81% of the wet weight and 73% of the dry weight and calorific value. The total calorific value of the cephalopods represented by lower beaks was 17,300 kj.
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  • 7
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 72 (04). p. 849.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-16
    Description: The stomach contents of 235 specimens of the squid Sthenoteuthis oualaniensis (4·3–36·5 cm mantle length, ML) were examined. A detailed list of 60 species of prey, comprising young and adult squid, is given together with their frequency of occurrence and proportional contribution. The size and number of each food item was investigated. Three ontogenetic size-groups of S. oualaniensis were distinguished: I, fry and young (4–10 cm ML), micronektonic epipelagic plankton-eaters; II, transient critical size group (10–15 cm ML), converting from feeding on planktonic crustaceans and fish larvae to myctophid fishes; III, medium-sized (adult) nyctoepipelagic nektonic predators (15–36·5 cm ML), feeding primarily on myctophids and secondarily on squid. Myctophids (genera Symbolophorus, Myctophum and Hygophum) were the most abundant prey in the diet of adult S. oualaniensis from different parts of its distribution.
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  • 8
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 72 (02). p. 293.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-16
    Description: Samples of male Illex argentinus were taken from the catch of a Japanese squid jigging vessel on the Patagonian Shelf during March 1986 and an analysis was carried out on the morphometrics of the somatic and reproductive organ systems in relation to maturation. The data show that growth and maturation occurred simultaneously during most of the time that Illex argentinus males were on the feeding grounds over the southern Patagonian Shelf. In a squid of a ‘standard’ mantle length the whole body mass increased relative to mantle length during maturation and this could be attributed to the increase in mass of the reproductive and accessory reproductive organs. During maturation the mantle and digestive gland mass showed no significant change relative to mantle length. The mass of the head increased and the mass of the viscera decreased relative to mantle length. In male Illex argentinus, as in the female, the energy and nutrient resources for maturation are derived from the squid's food and during the course of maturation there is an increasing shift of emphasis from somatic growth to production of gonad and accessory reproductive organs. The proportional investment of body mass in reproductive and accessory reproductive organs predicted for a fully mature male Illex argentinus was less than half that of the female.
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Print ISSN: 0022-1120
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
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  • 11
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: We investigate the swirling flow of liquid metal in an axisymmetric cavity of arbitrary profile, generated by a rotating magnetic field. In addition to the primary swirling motion, a recirculation is generated by the Bodewadt-like boundary layers on the inclined sides of the cavity. As in the classic problem of ‘ spin-up ’ in a cylinder, this secondary flow has a dominating effect over the distribution of angular momentum. It is shown that, in the inviscid core, the angular momentum is independent of z, the axial coordinate, and that the applied body force is balanced by the Coriolis force. The bulk of the streamlines pass through both the core and the boundary layer, picking up energy in one region and losing it in the other. By matching the angular momentum and recirculating mass flux in the core to that in the boundary layer, a single governing equation is established for the swirl distribution. This second-order ordinary differential equation is valid for any axisymmetric shape, but is solved here for two cases; those of flow in a truncated cylinder and in a hemisphere. The former of these is compared with previously published experimental data, and with a full numerical simulation. Finally, we extend some of these ideas to buoyancy-driven flow. Here we take advantage of the analogy between centrifugal and thermally stratified flows to model natural convection of liquid metal in a cavity. © 1992, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 12
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: Long-term variability in the ocean's thermohaline circulation has attracted considerable attention recently in the context of past and future climate change. Drastic circulation changes are documented in paleoceanographic data and have been simulated by general circulation models of the ocean. The mechanism of spontaneous, abrupt changes in thermohaline circulation is studied here in an idealized context, using a two-dimensional Boussinesq fluid in a rectangular container, over 5 decades of Rayleigh number. When such a fluid is forced with a specified distribution of temperature and salinity at the surface — symmetric about a vertical axis - it attains a stable two-cell circulation, with the same symmetry. On the other hand, replacement of the specified salinity surface condition with an appropriate symmetric salt-flux condition leads to loss of stability of the symmetric circulation and gives rise to a new, asymmetric state. The extent of asymmetry depends on the magnitude of the thermal Rayleigh number, Ra, and on the strength of the salinity flux, γ. An approximate stability curve in the γ-Ra space, dividing the symmetric from the asymmetric states, is obtained numerically, and the entire range of asymmetric flows, from very slight dominance of one cell to its complete annihilation of the other cell, is explored. The physical mechanism of the pitchfork bifurcation from symmetric to asymmetric states is outlined. The effects of three other parameters of the problem are also discussed, along with implications of our results for glaciation cycles of the geological past and for interdecadal oscillations of the present ocean-atmosphere system. © 1992, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 13
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: This paper defines the linearized problem of free-surface flow past a shallow two-dimensional body in terms of complex variables and provides an asymptotic solution for the Froude number tending to zero. The simple case of flow past a rectangular box with a triangular extension in front is worked out as an example. The low-Froude-number solution for ‘ double-body ’ flow in a fully infinite fluid past the same box with its reflection in the upper half-plane is also calculated. The upstream free-surface height for the linear solution is compared to the equivalent free-surface height for the double-body flow. Experimental results for this body are also presented and compared. © 1992, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 14
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: Experiments have been carried out on a vertical jet of helium issuing into a co-flow of air at a fixed exit velocity ratio of 2.0. At all the experimental conditions studied, the flow exhibits a strong self-excited periodicity. The natural frequency behaviour of the jet, the underlying flow structure, and the transition to turbulence have been studied over a wide range of flow conditions. The experiments were conducted in a variable-pressure facility which made it possible to vary the Reynolds number and Richardson number independently. A stroboscopic schlieren system was used for flow visualization and single-component laser-Doppler anemometry was used to measure the axial component of velocity. The flow exhibits several interesting features. The presence of co-flow eliminates the random meandering typical of buoyant plumes in a quiescent environment. The periodicity of the helium jet under high-Richardson-number conditions is striking. Under these conditions transition to turbulence consists of a rapid but highly structured and repeatable breakdown and intermingling of jet and free-stream fluid. At Ri = 1.6 the three-dimensional structure of the flow is seen to repeat from cycle to cycle. The point of transition moves closer to the jet exit as either the Reynolds number or the Richardson number increases. The wavelength of the longitudinal instability increases with Richardson number. At low Richardson numbers, the natural frequency scales on an inertial timescale, rx= D/U] where D is the jet diameter and ZTj is the mean jet exit velocity. At high Richardson number, the natural frequency scales on a buoyancy timescale, r2= [pjD/g(po0—p where g is the gravitational acceleration and pj and pmare the jet and free-stream densities respectively. The transition from one flow regime to another occurs over a narrow range of Richardson numbers from 0.7 to 1. A buoyancy Strouhal number is used to correlate the high-Richardson-number frequency behaviour. © 1992, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 15
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: New power spectra computed from LDA measurements of the fluctuating u and v-velocity signals in a turbulent channel flow with and without drag-reducing polymer (polyethylene oxide) injection are presented. LDA data rates were sufficiently high to reconstruct the simultaneous time-dependent u and ν velocity signals along with the time-dependent Reynolds stress signal. Time-averaged statistics of the turbulent flow are presented in conjunction with the power spectral measurements which show a dramatic reduction in both the v-velocity fluctuations and Reynolds stress fluctuations throughout the channel over all frequencies. There is also a redistribution of energy in the ν velocity fluctuations from high frequencies to low frequencies throughout the channel. Different injection conditions were examined; different polymer concentrations were injected at different flow rates such that the total amount of polymer in the channel remained constant. For certain polymer concentrations, ‘Large’ negative Reynolds stress, —〈υν〉/υt2≈ —0.2, was measured in the near-wall region. In addition, there is a marked difference in the u-velocity spectra and the Reynolds stress spectra close to the wall for the different injection conditions. © 1992, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 16
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: The nonlinear evolution of high-frequency disturbances in high-Reynolds-number Stokes layers is studied. The disturbances are composed of a two-dimensional wave (2a, 0) of magnitude 8, and a pair of oblique waves (a, ±ft) of magnitude e, where a, B are the streamwise and spanwise wavenumbers respectively. We assume that ft = y/3oc so that the waves form a resonant triad when they are nearly neutral. It is shown that the growth rate of the disturbance is controlled by nonlinear interactions inside ‘critical layers’. In order for there to be a nonlinear feedback mechanism between the two-dimensional and the three-dimensional waves, the former is required to have a smaller magnitude than the latter, namely 8 ~ 0(e*). The timescale of the nonlinear evolution is 0(e~4). As in Goldstein & Lee (1992), the amplitude equations turn out to be significantly different from those of Raetz (1959), Craik (1971) and Smith & Stewart (1987) in two respects. Firstly, they are integro-differential equations, i.e. the local growth rate depends on the whole history of the evolution. Secondly the back reaction of the oblique waves on the two-dimensional wave is represented by two cubic terms and one quartic term, rather than by one quadratic term. Our numerical investigations show that the amplitudes of the two and three-dimensional waves can develop a finite-time singularity, a result of some importance. The structure of the finite-time singularity is identified, and it is found that the two-dimensional wave has a ‘more singular’ structure than the three-dimensional waves. The finite-time singularity implies that explosive growth is induced by nonlinear effects. We suggest that this nonlinear blow-up of high-frequency disturbances is related to the bursting phenomena observed in oscillatory Stokes layers and can lead to transition to turbulence. © 1992, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 17
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: The nonlinear resonant-triad interaction, proposed by Raetz (1959), Craik (1971), and others for a Blasius boundary layer, is analysed here for an adverse-pressure-gradient boundary layer. We assume that the adverse pressure gradient is in some sense weak and, therefore, that the instability growth rate is small. This ensures that there is a well-defined critical layer located somewhere within the flow and that the nonlinear interaction is effectively confined to that layer. The initial interaction is of the parametric resonance type, even when the modal amplitudes are all of the same order. This means that the oblique instability waves exhibit faster than exponential growth and that the growth rate of the two-dimensional mode remains linear. However, the interaction and the resulting growth rates become fully coupled, once oblique-mode amplitudes become sufficiently large, but the coupling terms are now quartic, rather than quadratic as in the Craik (1971) analysis. More importantly, however, new nonlinear interactions, which were not present in the Craik-type analyses, now come into play. These interactions eventually have a dominant effect on the instability wave development. © 1992, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 18
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: The investigation focuses on solitary-wave solutions of an approximate pseudo-differential equation governing the unidirectional propagation of long waves in a two-fluid system where the lower fluid with greater density is infinitely deep and the interface is subject to capillarity. The validity of this model equation is shown to depend on the assumption that T/g(ρ2-ρ1)h2 ≫ 1, where T is the interfacial surface tension, ρ2 − ρ1 the difference between the densities of the fluids and h the undisturbed thickness of the upper layer. Various properties of solitary waves are demonstrated. For example, they have oscillatory outskirts and their velocities of translation are less than the minimum velocity of infinitesimal waves. Also, they realise respective minima of an invariant functional for fixed values of another such functional, being in consequence orbitally stable. Explicit non-trivial solutions of the equation in question are unavailable, but an existence theory is presented covering both periodic and solitary waves of permanent form. © 1992, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 19
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: Experiments are described which demonstrate higher-order Bragg resonant interactions between linear gravity waves and doubly sinusoidal beds. These higherorder effects, which include harmonic and subharmonic Bragg reflections, have been observed by making very precise measurements in a wave tank. Subharmonic reflection was found to be very large, even for small bottom undulation amplitudes. The experimental data are compared with the predictions of a numerical model based on the full potential theory of linear waves. © 1992, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 20
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: The late stages of transition, from the Λ-vortex stage up to turbulence, are investigated by postprocessing data from a direct numerical simulation of the complete K-type transition process in plane channel flow at a Reynolds number of 5000 (based on channel half-width and laminar centreline velocity). The deterministic roll-up of the high-shear layer that forms around the Λ-vortices is examined in detail. The new vortices arising from this process are visualized by plotting three-dimensional surfaces of constant pressure. Five vortices are observed, with one of these developing into a strong hairpin-shaped vortex. Interactions between the different vortices, and between the two channel halves, are found to be important. In the very last stage of transition second-generation shear layers are observed to form and roll up into new vortices. It is postulated that at this stage a sustainable mechanism of wall-bounded turbulence exists in an elementary form. The features which are locally present include high wall shear, sublayer streaks, ejections and sweeps. Large-scale energetic vortices are found to be an important part of the mechanism by which the turbulence spreads to other spanwise positions. The generality of the findings are discussed with reference to data from simulations of H-type and mixed-type transition. © 1992, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 21
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: The dynamic interaction between a rigid porous structure (porosity Φ) and its saturating fluid is studied. From the microscopic conservation laws and constitutive relations, macroscopic equations are derived. An averaging technique proposed and discussed by for example Levy, Auriault and Burridge & Keller is used, from which we reformulate the theory by Johnson, Koplik & Dashen. The macroscopic equations then serve to describe the high-frequency behaviour of an oscillating fluid within a porous sample. This behaviour may be characterized by the length parameter A and by the tortuosity parameter α. It is shown that A and α, which describe an oscillatory flow behaviour, may be evaluated on the basis of steady potential flow theory. Numerical results are then presented for several pore geometries, and for these geometries, the steady-state permeability k0is computed numerically also. The parameter 8αk0/ϕA2, first introduced by Johnson et al., is then evaluated and appears to be weakly dependent on pore geometry. This implies that for many porous media the dynamic interaction is described by an approximate scaling function. New experimental data, concerning oscillating flows through several porous media, are presented. Within limits of accuracy, these data are in agreement with the approximate scaling function. © 1992, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 22
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: The motion of buoyant transient cavities with non-condensible contents is investigated numerically using a boundary-integral method. The bubble contents are described by an adiabatic gas law. Motion is considered in the neighbourhood of a rigid boundary, in an axisymmetric geometry. We investigate whether the noncondensible contents will resist the formation of jets. It is found that jets form upon collapse and, in general, completely penetrate the bubble before it rebounds, but circumstances are identified under which the non-spherical bubble will rebound prior to this occurrence. In these cases the bulk of the jet growth occurs upon rebound. Furthermore, the interaction between the buoyancy force causing jet formation upwards, and the Bjerknes attraction of the rigid boundary causing jet formation towards it, is investigated and general principles discussed which allow the behaviour to be interpreted. The concept of the Kelvin impulse is utilized. © 1992, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 23
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: Progressive radial cross-waves in a deep, periphractic wavetank are investigated on the assumption that the vertical component of the capillary force vanishes at the wavemaker. For a cylindrical wavemaker, the envelope of the radial cross-wave is shown to obey an evolution equation that differs from the cubic Schrödinger equation only in the presence of a factor 1/R in the cubic term, where R is a slow radial variable. Weak, linear damping is incorporated, and the transition conditions at which the directly forced concentric wave loses stability to a parametrically forced cross-wave are obtained. The cylindrical problem is used to develop an asymptotic approximation to the corresponding problem for a spherical wavemaker. The theory is compared with the experiments of Tatsuno, Inoue & Okabe (1969). The theoretical predictions of resonant wavenumbers are consistent with their data, but the corresponding predictions of wavemaker amplitudes, on the assumption of linear damping that is confined to an inextensible (fully contaminated) free-surface boundary layer, are an order of magnitude smaller than those observed by Tatsuno et al. (1969). This underprediction of the transition amplitudes may be due to nonlinear phenomena — in particular, nonlinear effects at the contact line and ‘undersurface flows’ (Taneda 1991) – that are not comprehended by the theoretical model. © 1992, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 24
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: The operation of an expansion tube is investigated with particular attention given to the test flow disturbances which have limited their utility in the past. Theoretical bounds for the duration of uniform test flow are first explored using one-dimensional ideal-gas relations, together with shock-tube boundary-layer entrainment effects. It is seen that test flow duration is limited either by the arrival of the downstream edge of the test-gas unsteady expansion or by the arrival of the upstream edge of this expansion after it has been reflected from the driver-test gas interface. These bounds are seen to be in good agreement with measurements made with large driver-gas expansion ratios. For small expansion ratios additional disturbances are observed in the test gas. Similar disturbances are also observed in the driver gas. It is postulated that these disturbances first appear in the driver gas and are transmitted into the test gas before the test gas is expanded. These disturbances remain with the test gas as it is expanded and subsequently produce unsteady conditions at the test section. Theoretical calculations for the range of frequencies which occur in the test gas before the expansion are obtained by modelling the disturbances as acoustic waves. It is shown that only the high-frequency components of the disturbances in the driver gas can penetrate the driver-test gas interface and this provides a mechanism for suppressing disturbances in the test gas. Additional analytical calculations for the shift in frequency produced as an acoustic wave traverses an unsteady expansion are also presented and it is shown that all frequencies of a given acoustic wave mode converge to one frequency. This focusing of frequencies is seen to occur in three different facilities. © 1992, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 25
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: A spectral collocation and matrix eigenvalue method is used to study the linear stability of the trailing line vortex model of Batchelor. For both the inviscid and viscous stability problem, the entire unstable region in the swirl/axial wavenumber parameter space is mapped out for various azimuthal wavenumbers m. In the inviscid case, the non-axisymmetric perturbation with azimuthal wavenumber m = 1 has an unstable region of larger extent than any other, with an unusual two-lobed structure; also, the location and numerical value of the maximum disturbance growth rate previously reported for this case are shown to be incorrect. Exploiting the increasingly localized structure of perturbation eigenfunctions allows accurate results to be obtained up to values of m more than 3 orders of magnitude larger than previously, and the results for the most unstable mode are in excellent agreement with the asymptotic theory of Leibovich & Stewartson. A viscous analysis of these fundamentally inviscid modes reveals that the critical Reynolds number at which instability first occurs increases as 0(m2) for m 〉 1, and finds the critical values of swirl and wavenumber, which approach limiting values as m→. In the viscous case, the instabilities for m — 0 and 1 recently reported by Khorrami are found via a simplified numerical approach and the entire unstable region for each of these modes is mapped out over a wide range of Reynolds numbers. The critical Reynolds numbers for these modes are found to be 322.42 and 17.527, respectively, the latter having been unreported previously. The instabilities persist in the limit of large Reynolds number, with corresponding disturbance growth rates decreasing roughly as l/i?e. In addition to the primary mode, a new family of long-wave viscous instabilities is found for the m — 1 case. © 1992, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 26
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: The stability of a boundary layer on a heated flat plate is investigated in the linear regime. The flow is shown to be unstable to longitudinal vortex structures which develop in a non-parallel manner in the streamwise direction. Solutions of the nonparallel equations are obtained numerically at 0(1) values of the appropriate stability parameter, i.e. the Grashof number. We investigate the particular cases in which instability is induced by localized or distributed wall roughness or nonuniform wall heating. The case when the vortices are induced by free-stream disturbances is also considered. We then investigate the high-Grashof-number limit and the fastest growing mode. The fastest growing mode is found to be governed by a quasi-parallel theory and occurs at high wavenumbers. The wavenumber and growth rate of the fastest growing mode are found in closed form. At low wavenumbers the vortex instability is shown to be closely related to Tollmein-Schlichting waves; the effect of wall heating or cooling on the latter type of instability is discussed. © 1992, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 27
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: The problem of convection driven by radial buoyancy in a rotating cylindrical annulus with conical end surfaces represents one of the basic models of rotating fluid dynamics with applications to convection in planets and stars. Although only two-dimensional equations govern the flow in the limit of high rotation rates, a surprising variety of different states of motion can be found. In this paper earlier numerical work is extended by the consideration of rigid boundary conditions at the cylindrical walls and by a study of spatially modulated convection. Of particular interest is the case of curved conical end surfaces which appears to promote the formation of separate cylindrical convection layers. © 1992, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 28
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: The disturbance wave pattern produced from a harmonic point source in a compressible flat-plate boundary layer is computed using linear stability theory and the direct numerical integration approach. Receptivity coefficients are computed for a wide band of least-stable spanwise modes generated at the source, which are followed in the streamwise direction in order to study the wave-interference pattern. The effect of boundary-layer growth on the development of linear waves is determined by using the method of multiple scales. Results are presented for Mach numbers of 0, 2 and 7. It is found that disturbances spread in wedge-shaped regions behind the source and the wedge angle decreases with Mach number. The lateral spreading angle for the instability waves turns out to be quite close to the angle found experimentally for lateral contamination of turbulence. It is found that, owing to wave cancellation, the computed maximum disturbance amplitude is significantly lower than that obtained by following the most-amplified single normal mode. © 1992, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 29
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: The hydrodynamic equations describing the fluid motion in a narrow cell and in a porous medium become identical in the limit of infinite height-to-width ratio (Hele-Shaw limit) in the first and zero permeability in the second case. The properties of the convection onset are, however, indistinguishable from an experimental point of view away from these limits. For realistic (rigid, impermeable) boundary conditions the critical Rayleigh number, the critical wavenumber and in the case of a Hopf bifurcation additionally the critical frequency are derived in both cases for a binary fluid mixture. For the porous medium the assumption of zero permeability is usually a very good approximation. The ćritical values for the porous medium are compared to those of the narrow cell for different height-to-width ratios and the connection with experiments is discussed. © 1992, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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  • 30
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Print ISSN: 0022-1120
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  • 31
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: Myxomycetes (plasmodial slime moulds) are best known from temperate and boreal forests, where they are commonly found in association with decaying coarse woody debris and leaf litter on the forest floor (Martin & Alexopoulos 1969). There have been only a few reports of myxomycetes from either the continent of Antarctica or the subantarctic islands. In what apparently represents the first record of a myxomycete from the south polar region, Horak (1966) described a new species, Diderma antarcticolum Horak, from material collected on the Antarctic Peninsula (64°53′S, 62°53′W). Later, Ing & Smith (1980,1983) reported Didymium dubium Rost., Lamproderma arcyrioides (Sommerf.) Rost., Stemonitopsis (Comatricha) subcaespitosa (Peck) Nann.- Brem. and Diderma niveum (Rost.) Macbr. from South Georgia (54–55°S, 36–38°W). They also indicated that the latter species was known from Signy Island, South Orkney Islands (60°43′S, 45°36′W) and the Antarctic Peninsula (65°16′S, 64°08′W) as well as South Georgia.
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  • 32
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: Temperatures within soil and plant habitats on Signy Island in the maritime Antarctic were measured during 1987. Four sites were monitored using minithermistors attached to a data logging system. Three main periods within the annual temperature cycle were identified. In spring/summer (November–March) there was much inter-day variation in maximum temperatures, but minimum daily temperatures were always close to 0°C. However, there were very few freeze-thaw cycles extending below the −0.5°C threshold during this period, and those that occurred were not severe. It is considered that freeze-thaw cycling is unlikely to be a significant factor in organism survival during summer. All sites showed a long period of relatively mild subzero temperatures during autumn (March–May). This may be of importance in promoting cold-hardiness of organisms living in these ecosystems before the decline to lower winter temperatures. Minimum winter temperatures varied markedly between sites; lowest temperatures occurring in areas where there was little insulating snow cover. Within site temperature variation was generally small, confirming the validity of the use of small numbers of probes to monitor environmental temperatures in such habitats.
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  • 33
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: The Cretaceous period is often regarded as one of "greenhouse" warmth, with perhaps its acme occurring in the late Albian stage (100 Ma ago). However, it is now apparent that, even at this time, there were significant meridional temperature gradients and distinct temperate biotas in the highest latitude regions. This is particularly so in the Southern Hemisphere, where an extensive Albian fossil record from Antarctica, Australia and New Zealand has revealed the presence of austral floras and faunas. With the recent improvements in stratigraphical correlations, it has become possible to trace the later Cretaceous palaeoenvironmental record in the Antarctic Peninsula region. Unfortunately, resolution of the early Late Cretaceous (Cenomanian–Coniacian stages) is still imprecise; there are some indications of strongly differentiated palynological assemblages, but studies of both macrofaunas and palaeotemperature estimates are incomplete. By the Santonian–Campanian, high-latitude biotas are well developed in the James Ross Island region and their enhancement through the final stages of the Cretaceous can be linked to a phase of global cooling. The persistence of low diversity temperate communities in high latitude regions may be of considerable ecological and evolutionary significance. For example, there is evidence to suggest that these communities may have been more resistant to mass extinction events; they may also have been important source regions for replacement taxa that arose after such events.
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  • 34
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: The first fossils from Antarctica were collected from Seymour Island in December 1892, during the voyage of the Jason under Captain C.A. Larsen. The Swedish South Polar Expedition of 1901–1903, led by Otto Nordenskjöld, proved that there were extensive deposits of fossiliferous Cretaceous and Tertiary sedimentary rock in the James Ross Island area. This was confirmed by later geological mapping (Bibby 1966). Subsequent investigations have led to the establishment of various lithostratigraphic schemes (e.g. Ineson et al. 1986), and interpretation of the sedimentary history in terms of basin evolution (Elliot 1988, Macdonald et al. 1988). Unfortunately, different names have been proposed for the depositional basin, with consequent confusion. The purpose of this note is to review previous usage and propose a new consistent nomenclature for the sedimentary basins east of the Antarctic Peninsula.
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  • 35
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: Two new U-Pb zircon ages from the area immediately west of Denman Glacier in Antarctica show that its geological history differs from that of the Obruchev Hills and Bunger Hills, to the east of the glacier. A crystallization age of 516.0 ± 1.5 Ma for syenite is by far the youngest primary age reported for this region, whereas tonalitic orthogneiss from Cape Charcot, the oldest known local rock, was derived by the high-grade metamorphism and deformation at 2889 ± 9 Ma of a 3003 ± 8 Ma igneous precursor. Both major populations of zircon in this rock lost Pb at 500–600 Ma. Although the Sm-Nd characteristics of the entire region resemble those of the Albany Mobile Belt of Western Australia, the Sm-Nd systematics of the felsic gneisses and plutonics are too old to allow direct correlation with the rocks of the Naturaliste Block (Western Australia), a potential key element for Gondwana reconstruction. However, the possibility exists that there is an indirect relationship between the Naturaliste Block and the region immediately west of Denman Glacier.
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    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: Stable carbon and oxygen isotopic relations have been analysed in brachiopod, gastropod, and bivalve fossils from the La Meseta Formation (Eocene-?early Oligocene), Seymour (Marambio) Island, West Antarctica. The results indicate a shift in δ13C by 6 permil beginning in the middle part of the Unit II of the formation. This shift may imply a change from a largely stratified to a vigorously mixed ocean. Such an interpretation is corroborated by changes in the elemental proportions in the shell material. Alternatively, the carbon isotopic shift may be regarded as reflecting a change in the local depositional enviornment. Such an interpretation agrees with isotopic data from the Weddell Sea, which do not confirm the pattern observed in the La Meseta Formation. In any event, the oxygen isotopic curve does not decline parallel to the carbon curve and may thus imply a considerable climatic cooling event. This effect is so profound that it might be interpreted as evidence for glaciation, especially when taking into account the fact that this phenomenon coincides with the well-known cooling trend throughout the Eocene. If this interpretation is correct, the hypothesized Glaciation may possibly be correlated with the Polonez Glaciation, the largest Cenozoic glaciation known in the Antarctic Peninsula sector. Alternatively, it may be regarded as a local phenomenon, predating development of the icesheet.
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  • 38
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: The Bunger Hills were covered by the Antarctic Ice Sheet during the last glaciation. During deglaciation the ice sheet margin collapsed into the marine inlets and the sea entered the oasis before 7.7 ka BP. Raised beaches occur widely below 8.5 m and indicate uplift at 1.4 m ka−1 during the middle and late Holocene. After the coastal inlets were formed, the Edisto Ice Tongue and Apfels Glacier still impinged on land margins in the west of the oasis. Two sets of marginal moraines were formed; the Older Edisto Moraines after 6.2 ka BP and the Younger Edisto Moraines during the last few centuries. The margins of the Antarctic Ice Sheet and Apfels Glacier in the south have maintained their present positions since at least 5.6 ka BP and probably 10 ka BP.
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  • 39
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: Southern elephant seals (Mirounga leonina) are among the most proficient of mammalian divers and are a major component of the Antarctic food web. Yet little is known of their movements or interaction with their oceanic environment. Specially designed satellite-link data loggers allowed us to visualize the 3-D movements of elephant seals as they swam rapidly from South Georgia to distant (up to 2650 km) areas of Antarctic continental shelf. One seal dived continuously to the sea bed in one small area for a month, implying consumption of benthic prey. Dives here were shorter even though average swimming velocity was lower. It is suggested that the physiological requirements of feeding and digestion reduced the aerobic dive limit. Long distance travel to relocatable hydrographic or topographical features, such as shelf breaks, may allow large predators to locate prey more consistently than from mid-ocean searches.
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  • 40
  • 41
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
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  • 42
  • 43
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: Ethanol extractable polyols and sugars from the dominant cryptogams of the Windmill Islands, Wilkes Land, East Antarctica, were characterized and quantified by gas liquid chromatography. Arabitol, ribitol and mannitol were the major low molecular weight carbohydrates extracted from all eight species of lichen analysed. Total extractable carbohydrate levels (20–60 mg g−1 dry weight) were comparable to those for temperate lichens. Extracts of four common bryophyte species were dominated by sucrose, glucose and fructose; little polyhydric alcohol was detected except in the liverwort Cephaloziella exiliflora which contained a substantial proportion of mannitol. Total carbohydrate levels in the bryophytes (9–60 mg g−1 dry weight) were comparable to those in lichens. The compositions of eight species of algae varied considerably. Prasiola crispa, Desmococcus vulgaris and Schizogonium murale possessed sorbitol as their main constituent and had extractable carbohydrate contents comparable to those found in bryophytes on a dry weight or chlorophyll a content basis. The one snow alga with comparable carbohydrate levels, Mesotaenium berggrenii, contained sucrose, glucose, glycerol and a number of unidentified compounds. The remaining four species (Oscillatoria sp., Chloromonas sp.1 and Chlorosarcina sp. 2 and Chlamydomonas pseudopulsatilla) did not accumulate comparable levels of sugars and polyols. Though the levels of these compounds were much lower in the Windmill Islands lichens than in maritime Antarctic species, their content with respect to water content (0.7–7 molal) was well above that at which cold acclimated plants accumulate these compounds (c. 100–500 millimolal), and which provide cryoprotection in vitro. In the case of the bryophytes and algae, however, the in vivo content was generally 〈 100 millimolal.
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  • 44
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
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  • 45
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    Cambridge University Press
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
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  • 46
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
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  • 47
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: Icefish (Champsocephalus) were taken as bycatch during krill fishing operations from a research vessel. The data indicate that the bycatch of fish in the commercial krill fishery may be significant in some areas of the South Georgia shelf. The problem is thought to be least in open ocean krill fishing.
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  • 48
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: One year ago, at the Bremerhaven Colloquium, we celebrated the end of BIOMASS. Its primary and inspiring goal had been to reach a “deeper understanding” of the structure and functioning of the Antarctic Marine Ecosystem as a basis for the future management of potential living resources. Fifteen years of intense studies in the Southern Ocean have produced a great wealth of information and some increase in understanding. We are now far more cautious before making sweeping statements on Southern Ocean productivity. We doubt that the question, “How much krill is in the Southern Ocean?” can ever be answered. Instead, we think in terms of regional stocks and of their production rates; we are interested in the fluxes between the compartments of the ecosystem and we consider variability more important than averages and steady rates.
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  • 49
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: This paper describes the results of seismic refraction investigations of the upper crustal structure in the area of Deception Island, West Antarctica, which were made during the Polish Antarctic Geodynamical Expeditions in 1979-80 and 1987-88. In the caldera and immediate vicinity of Deception Island a layer of unconsolidated and poorly consolidated young sediments of 1.9–2.2 km s−1 P-wave velocity was found. Velocities of 4.1–4.3 km s−1 were found in the depth interval from 0.6–1.3 to about 3 km. Lateral differences in upper crustal structure between the south-eastern and western sectors were identified. In the region between Deception and Livingston islands an inclined boundary with a velocity of about 6.1 km s−1 occurs. A deep fault zone dividing crustal blocks beneath Deception Island is associated with a prominent volcanic line within Bransfield Strait extending between Deception and Bridgeman islands.
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  • 50
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: The diurnal vertical distribution and abundance of fish larvae was studied by net samples in the 265 m deep fjord of Cumberland East Bay, South Georgia. In early spring the six most abundant species of fish larvae in the upper 200 m of the water column were Champsocephalus gunnari, Lepidonotothen nudifrons, Pseudochaenichthys georgianus, Chaenocephalus aceratus, Parachaenichthys' georgianus and Electrona antarctica. In summer, the larvae of C. gunnari, Gobionotothen gibberifrons, Lepidonotothen larseni and Trematomus hansoni were most abundant, and the majority were found in the upper 140 m of the water column, with greatest densities in the top 2m. During both seasons most species showed some evidence of diurnal vertical migration. A distinct pattern was found for C. gunnari in summer; they were at 0–20 m during the day and 60–100 m at midnight. Net avoidance by the larvae of most species was greater before sunset in early spring, and during all periods of daylight in summer, than at other times of day.
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