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  • Other Sources  (120)
  • Elsevier  (106)
  • Cambridge University Press  (8)
  • University of Miami - Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science  (6)
  • 2000-2004  (120)
  • 2002  (120)
  • 1
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    Elsevier
    In:  Amsterdam, 530 pp., Elsevier, vol. 37, no. XVI:, pp. 227-235, (ISBN 0231-12739-1 hb, 0231127383 pb)
    Publication Date: 2002
    Keywords: Seismics (controlled source seismology) ; Applied geophysics ; Wave propagation ; Waves ; Textbook of geophysics ; Acoustics ; Fluids ; High frequency ... ; Kirchoff ; seismic Migration ; Layers ; Channel waves
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  • 2
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    Elsevier
    In:  Amsterdam, 628 pp., Elsevier, vol. 31, no. 1, pp. 1-40, (ISBN 0-691-01019-6)
    Publication Date: 2002
    Keywords: Textbook of geophysics ; Inversion ; instability ; well-posed ; ill-posed ; problems ; Least-squares ; Backus ; Gilbert ; Non-linear effects ; regularization ; potential ; Electromagnetic methods/phenomena ; Seismology ; Gram ; Schmidt ; Singular value decomposition ; Lanczos ; Green's function ; Tikhonov ; potential ; methods ; Seismics (controlled source seismology) ; Gravimetry, Gravitation ; Geomagnetics ; Textbook of mathematics ; seismic Migration
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  • 3
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    Elsevier
    In:  Amsterdam, 360 pp., Elsevier, vol. 26, no. 22, pp. 662-664, (ISBN 0-470-87000-1 (HB), ISBN 0-470-87001-X (PB))
    Publication Date: 2002
    Description: The vertical seismic profile, acquired with an array of 3C receivers and either a single source or several arranged in a multi-component configuration, provides an ideal high fidelity calibration tool for seismic projects involved in the application of seismic anisotropy. This book catalogues the majority of specialized tools necessary to work with P-P, P-S and S-S data from such Vertical seismic profiling surveys at the acquisition design, processing and interpretation stages. In particular, it discusses 3C, 4C, 6C and 9C Vertical seismic profiling, marine and land surveys with near and multiple offsets (walkways), azimuths (walkarounds) or a combination of both. These are considered for TIH or TIV flavours of seismic anisotropy arising from cracks, fractures, sedimentary layering, and shales. The anisotropic adaptation of familiar seismic methods for velocity analysis and inversion, reflected amplitude interpretation, are given together with more multi-component specific algorithms based upon the principles dictated by the vector convolutional model. Thus, multi-component methods are described that provide tests and compensation for source or receiver vector fidelity, tool rotation correction, layer stripping, near-surface correction, wavefield separation, and the Alford rotation with its variants. The work will be of interest to geophysicists involved in research or the application of seismic anisotropy using multi-component seismic. CONTENTS 1. Introduction. 2. Anisotropic replacement media. 3. Fundamentals of seismic anisotropy analysis. 4. Pre-requisites for near-offset Vertical seismic profiling analysis. 5. Anisotropy analysis from near-offset Vertical seismic profiling I - symmetry and uniformity. 6. Anisotropy analysis from far-offset Vertical seismic profiling II - asymmetry and non-uniformity. 7. Multiple-offset Vertical seismic profiling - kinematics. 8. Multiple-offset Vertical seismic profiling - dynamics. 9. The road ahead. Appendix - shear-wave birefringence analysis.
    Keywords: Applied geophysics ; Seismics (controlled source seismology) ; Vertical seismic profiling ; Anisotropy ; Textbook of geophysics
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  • 4
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    Elsevier
    In:  Amsterdam, 300 pp., Elsevier, vol. 4, no. 1, pp. 1-40, (ISBN 0-691-01019-6)
    Publication Date: 2002
    Keywords: Stress ; Tectonics ; Modelling ; Fluids ; Two-dimensional ; percolation ; cracks and fractures (.NE. fracturing) ; Fracture ; Three ; Gorges ; China ; Discrete / Distinct Element Method ; permeability ; Rock mechanics
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  • 5
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    Elsevier
    In:  International Journal of Solids and Structures, 39 (13-14). pp. 3337-3357.
    Publication Date: 2018-04-24
    Description: Two modes of decrease in load bearing capacity of granular materials are discussed in view of experimental results. Both relate to the fact that frictional materials exhibit nonassociated plastic flow and they undergo considerable volume changes, either contraction or dilation. One mode consists of the instability that may occur in certain regions of stress space and potentially result in liquefaction of the granular material. It is the fact that loading of contracting soil (resulting in large plastic strains) can occur under decreasing stresses that may lead to unstable behavior under undrained conditions. As long as the soil remains drained, it will remain stable in the region of potential instability. The other mode is initiated by localization of plastic strains and subsequent development of shear bands, which in granular materials is followed by a decrease in load bearing capacity. These two modes are mutually exclusive and they occur for different loading and material conditions as discussed here on the basis of experimental observations.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 6
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    Elsevier
    In:  Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, 115 (3-4). pp. 411-435.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-17
    Description: Volcanology has been in the past and in many respects remains a subject dominated by pure research grounded in the earth sciences. Over the past 30 years a paradigm shift has occurred in hazard assessment which has been aided by significant changes in the social theory of natural hazards and the first-hand experience gained in the 1990s by volcanologists working on projects conceived during the International Decade for Natural Disaster Reduction (IDNDR). Today much greater stress is placed on human vulnerability, the potential for marginalisation of disadvantaged individuals and social groups, and the requirement to make applied volcanology sensitive to the characteristics of local demography, economy, culture and politics. During the IDNDR a methodology, broadly similar to environmental impact analysis, has emerged as the preferred method for studying human vulnerability and risk assessment in volcanically active regions. The characteristics of this new methodology are discussed and the progress which has been made in innovating it on the European Union laboratory volcanoes located in western Europe is reviewed. Furnas (São Miguel, Azores) and Vesuvius in Italy are used as detailed case studies.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2017-07-18
    Description: In order to explain biological zonation, shore height above the ordnance level is frequently used as an indicator of the abiotic gradient in intertidal ecosystems. This is based on the implicit assumption that shore height is directly correlated with inundation frequency and/or duration. Despite the importance of inundation for tidal ecosystems, measurements have rarely been taken directly by measuring inundation at the site of investigation. We measured mean high tide (MHT) and flooding frequency at three sites on the Dutch Barrier Island of Schiermonnikoog. To assess the scale dependence, we compared local measurements with the estimated inundation frequencies based on the official tide gauge (OTG) farther away. Locally measured MHT water levels differed among sites and were consistently higher than estimated MHT water levels. With this data, we subsequently estimated the inundation frequency of vegetation plots from our measurements and correlated it with species distribution. In a logistic regression inundation frequency accounted for twice the variance in explaining the dominance of three salt marsh species than shore height. The discrepancy in annual inundation frequency of the vegetation between sites was ≦300% for a given shore height. Within each site replicated estimates of inundation frequency proved to be consistent (scale 10–50 m). Estimated and measured inundation frequencies thus reliably correlated at a small-scale (tens of metres), but not at a larger scale (hundreds of metres to kilometres). If inundation frequency is used as an explanatory variable, it will therefore be advisable to consider the spatial heterogeneity of the measurements, in particular if different sites are to be compared. We give mean inundation frequencies of three dominant salt marsh species (Elymus athericus, Festuca rubra, Artemisia maritima) measured over 1 year.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 8
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    Elsevier
    In:  Russian Geology and Geophysics, 43 (7). pp. 599-604.
    Publication Date: 2017-12-11
    Description: A geographically related database called MAGIC has been developed, using GIS (Geographic Information System) technology, for MArine Gas seeps and seep IndiCators. A complementary bibliographic database (GASREF) stores details of related publications. The databases include data relating to natural seabed gas seeps and features such as pockmarks, cold seep communities, and methane-derived carbonates which are known to be found in association with seeps. The databases are compiled from published reports (so far restricted to those written in English), and users are able to interrogate the system for specified features from user-defined areas.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2017-05-05
    Description: The Catalina Schist (California) contains an amphibolite-grade (0.8–1.1 GPa; 640–750 jC) melange unit consisting of mafic and ultramafic blocks in high-Mg, schistose melange matrix with varying modal proportions of talc, chlorite, anthophyllite, calcic-amphibole, enstatite, and minor phases including zircon, rutile, apatite, spinel, and Fe–Ni sulfides. This melange unit is interpreted as a kilometer-scale zone of tectonic and metasomatic mixing formed within a juvenile subduction zone, the study of which may yield insight into chemical mixing processes at greater depths in subduction zones. Relationships among the major and trace element compositions of the mafic and ultramafic blocks in the melange, the rinds developed at the margins of these blocks, and the surrounding melange matrix are compatible with the evolution of the melange matrix through a complex combination of infiltrative and diffusional metasomatism and a process resembling mechanical mixing. Simple, linear mixing models are compatible with the development of the melange matrix primarily through simple mixture of the ultramafic and mafic rocks, with Cr/Al ratios serving as indicators of the approximate proportions of the two lithologies. This conclusion regarding mafic–ultramafic mixing is consistent with the field observations and chemical trends indicating strong resemblance of large parts of the melange matrix with rinds developed at the margins of mafic and ultramafic blocks. The overall process involved development of metasomatic assemblages through complex fluid-mediated mixing of the blocks and matrix concurrent with deformation of these relatively weak rind materials, which are rich in layer silicates and amphibole. This deformation was sufficiently intense to transpose fabrics, progressively disaggregate more rigid, block-derived materials in weaker chorite- and talc-rich melange, and in some particularly weak lithologies (e.g., chlorite-, talc-, and amphibole-rich materials), intimately juxtapose adjacent lithologies at the (sub-)cm scale (approaching grain scale) sampled by the whole-rock geochemical analyses. Chemical systematics of various elements in the melange matrix can be delineated based on the Cr/Al-based mixing model. Simple mixing relationships exhibited by Al, Cr, Mg, Ni, Fe, and Zr provide a geochemical reference frame for considerations of mass and volume loss and gain within the melange matrix. The compositional patterns of many other elements are explained by either redistribution (local stripping or enrichment) at varying scales within the melange (Ca, Na, K, Ba, and Sr) or massive addition from external sources (Si and H2O), the latter probably in infiltrating H2O-rich fluids that produced the dramatic O and H isotopic shifts in the melange. Melange formation, resulting in the production of high-variance ultramafic assemblages withhigh volatile contents, may aid retention of volatiles (in this case, H2O) to greater depths in subduction zones than in original subducted mafic and sedimentary materials. The presence of such assemblages (i.e., containing minerals such as talc, chlorite, and Mg-rich amphiboles) would impact the rheology of the slab–mantle interface and perhaps contribute to the low-velocity seismic structure observed at/near the slab–mantle interface in some subduction zones. If operative along the slab–mantle interface, complex mixing processes such as these, involving the interplay between fluid-mediated metasomatism and deformation, also could impact slab incompatible trace element and isotopic signatures ultimately observed in arc magmas, producing ‘‘fluids’’ with geochemical signatures inherited from interactions with hybridized rock compositions.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 10
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    University of Miami - Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science
    In:  Bulletin of Marine Science, 71 . p. 1164.
    Publication Date: 2017-09-18
    Description: A detailed analysis of lower rostral beak length (LRL) to body size and wet body mass measurements was carried out for the squids Loligo forbesi, Todarodes sagittatus and Todaropsis eblanae. Specimens were sampled in the northern North Sea during two research cruises of FRV WALTHER HERWIG III in January/February of 1998 and 1999. Altogether 241 specimens of Loligo forbesi (ML = 45–376 mm), 108 specimens of Todarodes sagittatus (ML = 173–325 mm) and 97 specimens of Todaropsis eblanae (ML = 30–127 mm) were investigated to correlate lower rostral beak length with both mantle length and wet body mass. Linear relationships between LRL and mantle length and powerfunctional relationships between LRL and wet body mass were calculated for all three species. By calculating these correlations separately for males and females, no obvious sex-specific relationships were found. The presented data will upgrade the information on beak/mantle length/body mass relationships of major cephalopod species of the North Sea. They provide essential information for future use in estimates of cephalopod prey biomass in North East Atlantic top predators such as whales, seals, seabirds and fishes.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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