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  • Elsevier  (378,659)
  • Wiley  (79,853)
  • 1995-1999  (458,512)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2024-03-20
    Description: Periphyton was grown on transparent plastic substrata in the Kiel Fjord and used for short-term laboratory experiments to study the feeding selectivity of the periwinkle Littorina littorea in response to the vertical structure of the periphyton. The susceptibility of algae to periwinkle grazing was assessed by comparing the species-specific biomass within the grazing tracks of the snails to the biomass outside the tracks. After 3 weeks of incubation, the periphyton consisted of a scattered monolayer of algal cells without vertical structure. No apparent grazing could be found. After 6 weeks of incubation, periphyton consisted of a tightly attached undergrowth (mainly Cocconeis scutellum, Bacillariophyceae, and Myrionema sp., Phaeophyceae) and canopy of filamentous (Melosira moniliformis, Bacillariophyceae) and stalked forms (Achnanthes longipes, Bacillariophyceae). The unicellular diatoms Fragilaria tabulata and Stauroneis constricta grew partly on the primary substratum and partly as epiphytes on the canopy species. The canopy species and the epiphytes were decimated inside the grazing tracks, while the tightly attached undergrowth species appeared ungrazed.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2023-09-19
    Description: Major- and trace-element as well as Pb-isotope data are presented for greenschist- to amphibolite-facies greenstones from two locations: (1) metabasalt-breccias from the Galfipagos Rift at 100°W; and (2) metabasalt-breccias and unbrecciated greenstones from the Chile Ridge at 38°S. Greenstone-breccias from both locations display stockwork-like sulfide mineralizations related to the upflow portion of a hydrothermal convection system. Whereas Galfipagos Rift stockwork sulfides belong to the "normal" type containing Cu-Fe-sulfides, Chile Ridge stockwork sulfides are galena-rich Pb-Zn _ Cu-sulfides and represent a previously unknown type of sulfide mineralisation in a MORB environment. Geochemically, the greenstones can be divided into two types: (1) The unbrecciated galena-free greenstones from both Chile Ridge and Galfipagos Rift show at least a 10-20-fold Pb enrichment compared to fresh MORB. With respect to similar Pb enrichment measured in greenstones from two other locations, i.e. DSDP Hole 504B and Galfipagos Rift near 86°W, we suggest that this may be a general feature of all stockwork-mineralised oceanic greenstones. (2) The galena- and quartz-rich metabasalt-breccias from the Chile Ridge are up to 3000-fold enriched in Pb (up to 1000 Ixg/g Pb in the whole-rock analyses) compared to MORB and indicate Pb mineralisation two orders of magnitude higher than that of the "normal" greenstone-type. A mass-balance calculation carried out using crustal column thickness of 3000 m with a 200-m-thick greenstone layer and 0.15 m of galena-beating breccias shows that at the Chile Ridge ~ 42% of the entire Pb is concentrated in the greenstones. This suggests that the rest of the crustal column is depleted in 58% of its primary Pb content. This degree of depletion matches well with previous calculations that a 56% depletion of Pb in oceanic crust subjected to mantle-recycling via subduction would be necessary to yield a HIMU mantle source within 2 Ga. Despite the need for future investigations into the extent and volume of the Pb enrichment in Chile Ridge greenstones, we believe that this process of major Pb redistribution is capable of creating huge volumes of oceanic crust that on average are extremely Pb-depleted and which when recycled would produce the HIMU source. Keywords: Chile Ridge; Galfipagos Ridge; Hydrothermal alteration; Greenstones; Geochemistry; Mineralogy
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2022-04-11
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 4
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    Elsevier
    In:  HAPEX Sahel. Special Issue of Journal of Hydrology
    Publication Date: 2022-03-21
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart
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  • 5
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    Wiley
    In:  How is ecosystem function affected by the hydrological lateral flows in complex landscapes? | Integrating hydrology, ecosystem dynamics and biogeochemistry in complex landscapes
    Publication Date: 2022-03-21
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2021-12-02
    Description: A standard, universally useful classification scheme for deepwater habitats needs to be established so that descriptions of these habitats can be accurately and efficiently applied among scientific disciplines. In recent years many marine benthic habitats in deep water have been described using geophysical and biological data. These descriptions can vary from one investigator to another, which makes it difficult to compare habitats and associated biological assemblages among geographic regions. Using geophysical data collected with a variety of remote sensor systems and in situ biological and geologic observations, we have constructed a classification scheme that can be used in describing marine benthic habitats in deep water.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2021-09-06
    Description: The filaria Litomosoides sigmodontis, which develops a patent infection in BALB/c mice, was used to determine the fate of a challenge inoculum following immunization of mice with irradiation attenuated infective larvae (3 subcutaneous inoculations at weekly intervals with 25 L3 irradiated at 60 krad, and challenge with 25 L3 two weeks after the final immunization). The adult worm burden of vaccinated mice was reduced to 50% of that of controls although the pattern of larval migration and microfilaraemia were not affected. Necropsies showed that the increased killing of the filariae of the challenge inoculum occurred at the L3 stage within the first 2 days of challenge. This result draws attention on the protective mechanisms operating very early and probably in the subcutaneous region.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 8
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    Elsevier
    In:  Marine and Petroleum Geology, 12 (5). pp. 457-475.
    Publication Date: 2021-08-06
    Description: A structural model encompassing the southern North Sea basin west of the Central Graben has been developed. This model consists of a rift system affecting the post-salt section around the basin margin and a large area of detached compressional buckle folds within the basin. This pattern is initially a response to gravity sliding of the post-salt section on the salt within the basin during the late Triassic to late Jurassic. A close relationship between the location and trend of the peripheral graben system and basement structures in the pre-salt is noted. Pre-Jurassic extension across the peripheral graben systems was balanced by the sum of fault heaves at the pre-salt (Rotliegend) level and shortening across salt-cored buckle folds in the post-salt section. Salt pillows and swells passively infilled the cores of these gravity-induced buckle folds. Cretaceous and Tertiary inversion involved basin tilt and renewed movement on basin-bounding basement faults; notably, reverse movements did not propagate from basement structures up into the peripheral graben systems. The post-salt sedimentary section experienced gravity spreading in response to inversion-related uplift, resulting in syn-inversion extensional faulting in the Sole Pit High, where the Mesozoic section was thickest. This extension, combined with a loss of fault heave in the pre-salt section, was balanced by amplification of salt-cored buckle folds in the centre of the basin. In the context of the model described here, salt pillows represent passive infill of thin-skinned, compressional buckle folds which later amplified during thick-skinned basement shortening. Crestal collapse of such folds occurs via normal faulting, accompanied by reactive diapirism. Such reactive diapirs establish conduits through which salt may leak, leading to pillow deflation and ultimately conduit preservation as a salt wall (flanked by rim synclines in areas where the buckle folds were emergent). The salt structures described here are related to cover folds and faults, which in turn reflect episodes of basin extension, tilting and inversion. Hence individual salt structures can be said to be only remotely connected with regional, intraplate stresses.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2021-08-06
    Description: Normal faulting and halokinesis have been important controls on the deposition and subsequent deformation of Mesozoic and Tertiary strata in the North Sea. In addition to the previously documented mechanisms of salt withdrawal, dissolution and differential sedimentary loading, it is recognized that gravity-driven thin-skinned extension above inclined salt layers has played an important part in North Sea basin development. Commercial section restoration software has been used to facilitate depth conversion, restoration and decompaction of seismic sections selected from an interpreted regional database in the western central North Sea, allowing validation of the interpretations, and a graphical and highly quantitative description of salt-assisted extension. Results of this work show that Zechstein Group evaporites were deposited in shallow sag basins during the Permian. Triassic sedimentary pods were generated by localized deposition in synclinal basins and grabens above the evaporites. Bedded salt became folded, while mobile salt flowed to fill anticline cores. Since the early Jurassic, regional tectonic tilting related to post-rift subsidence and increasing sedimentary overburden have caused allochthonous Mesozoic and Tertiary strata to extend by gravity spreading above the mobile salt layer, which detaches the allochthon from the underlying autochthonous Late Palaeozoic rocks. Concave-up listric normal faults sole out in the salt layer, propagate into the overlying cover sewuence, and have been active at different geological times causing stratal thickening and folding within the allochthon. Antithetic and synthetic normal faults have developed, producing complex upward branching fault systems. In map view, the listric faults form curvilinear en echelon arrays, the faults linked by relay ramps. Fault blocks are typically 3–7 km wide, 2–3 km thick and 7–10 km long. Salt movement during the Jurassic-Tertiary has been driven by active extension of the cover, causing salt to fill potential voids created by fault block rotation. Thus salt highs occur beneath sites of extension. The listric faults generally dip in the same direction as the sub-salt surface, although there are also some major counter-regional faults. During extension, regional dips have increased up to about 5, which is sufficient for gravity-driven extension above a salt layer. A total extension of about 6% has occurred. The gravity-driven thin-skinned extension documented in the western central North Sea is a phenomenon which can be recognized elsewhere in the North Sea basin, and can be readily compared with similar phenomena already documented in offshore Angola, Brazil, Nova Scotia and the Gulf of Mexico.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 10
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    Wiley
    In:  Soil Science Society of America Journal, 59 (3). pp. 778-785.
    Publication Date: 2021-07-28
    Description: Oxides of Fe and Mn in soils are capable of sorbing large amounts of trace metal ions and can therefore be important in controlling trace metal concentrations in soil solution, and hence trace metal bioavailability in soils. There is, however, relatively little information on the rates of desorption of trace metals from oxide materials or on the factors affecting desorption rates. The objective of this study was to examine the kinetics of desorption of Cd and Co from two Fe oxides, goethite and ferrihydrite, and from two Mn oxides, hausmannite and cryptomelane. The concentrations of Cd and Co specifically sorbed by the oxides at pH 6.0 were greater for the Mn oxides than for the Fe oxides. The metals were also much less readily desorbed from the Mn than the Fe oxides and, in general, Cd was more readily desorbed than Co from all four oxides. Increasing the initial sorption period from 1 to 15 wk substantially decreased the proportion of sorbed Cd or Co subsequently desorbed from goethite, with a similar but much smaller effect also observed with the Mn oxides. Desorption kinetics for both Cd and Co were found to be described well by assuming either the occurrence of two simultaneous first-order desorption reactions, or by a continuous distribution of reaction sites, distributed lognormally with respect to desorption first-order rate constant. With increasing initial sorption period, the parameters obtained from fitting either type of kinetic equation to the experimental data could be interpreted as indicating a movement of metal ions to sites with slower desorption reactions.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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