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  • English  (5)
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  • 1
    Keywords: soil ; pedology ; Africa
    Description / Table of Contents: The first ever SOIL ATLAS OF AFRICA uses striking maps, informative texts and stunning photographs to answer and explain these and other questions. Leading soil scientists from Europe and Africa have collaborated to produce this unique document. Using state-of-the-art computer mapping techniques, the Soil Atlas of Africa shows the changing nature of soil across the continent. It explains the origin and functions of soil, describes the different soil types that can be found in Africa and their relevance to both local and global issues. The atlas also discusses the principal threats to soil and the steps being taken to protect soil resources. The Soil Atlas of Africa is more than just a normal atlas. It presents a new and comprehensive interpretation of an often neglected natural resource. The Soil Atlas of Africa is an essential reference to a non-renewable resource that is fundamental for life on this planet.
    Pages: Online-Ressource (176 Seiten)
    ISBN: 9789279267154
    Language: English
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2020-02-12
    Description: Cross-correlation of continuous broadband records allows the retrieval of body waves at teleseismic distances. These continuous records mainly contain low-amplitude background noise that comes from ocean–crust interactions, although there are also many transient events of different magnitudes and their coda associated with reverberation and/or scattering. We present an analysis at the global scale of these different contributions in the context of body-wave retrieval using the cross-correlation technique. Specifically, we compare the correlation of long codas after strong earthquakes with those of the quietest days. In the long period range (25–100 s), several phases that propagate in the deep Earth are observed in the correlations of the signals recorded after earthquakes, with some of these phases showing non-physical polarization. At the same time, the global section of correlations shows a series of spurious branches. These features are reproduced with synthetic correlations. A stack of the quietest days of the year shows that body waves are still present, with relative amplitudes that are closer to those expected for the actual Earth response. When considering shorter periods (5–10 s), the reconstruction of the deep phases is not affected by the earthquake coda, due to the dominance of scattering over reverberation.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2022-07-21
    Description: The Otago Schist in New Zealand hosts orogenic tungsten (W) mineralization in two types. Proximally-sourced (“proximal”) mineralization in sub- to lower-greenschist facies Mesozoic metasedimentary rocks within the northern flank of the Otago Schist Belt comprise quartz-calcite veins with minor scheelite and few sulfides. Distally-sourced (“distal”) deposits are hosted in major crustal discontinuities within Mesozoic sub-greenschist to upper-greenschist facies metasedimentary rocks and are associated with abundant sulfides ± Au. In-situ trace element (particularly REE, Sr, Mo, Na, As) and in-situ 87Sr/86Sr compositions of scheelite show the scheelite occurring in these different mineralization types to be geochemically distinct. Proximal occurrences are characterised by scheelite with both heterogenous trace element and Sr isotope compositions displaying variations that can be linked to different veins, host rock types and scheelite generations. In contrast, scheelite within distal scheelite deposits tends to have fairly homogenous trace element and Sr isotopic ratios at the deposit to grain scale. The heterogenous compositions of proximal occurrences represent local derivation of diverse components from the sub-millimetre to meter scales and small extents of fluid flow, which resulted in a high sensitivity to sources and local rock compositions and thus limited large-scale equilibration of elemental and isotopic systematics within the scheelite they contain. The larger distal deposits formed by regional leaching by metamorphic fluids, probably at the greenschist-amphibolite facies boundary, followed by homogenisation as they ascended through the crust and leading to deposition of scheelite with rather uniform chemical characteristics. Our data re-enforce the model that tungsten mobility in the Otago Schist involved local-scale mobilisation of W in the shallow crust by breakdown of detrital rutile and scheelite at low metamorphic grade. Burial of these veined scheelite-bearing rocks to temperatures of ∼500 °C enabled remobilisation of W by metamorphic fluids, concurrent with scavenging of Au, As and S, followed by return of the metal-bearing fluids towards mid to upper crustal levels, where they precipitated scheelite.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2024-03-05
    Description: The META-WT project was designed to perform a 4-weeks seismic experiment in Germany with a dense seismic array of ~400 three-component geophones that covered (1) a 2.5km x 2.5km wind farm area in Brandenburg, Germany, with almost 200 wind turbines (WTs) and a well-studied subsurface structure and (2) a 20-km long radial line from the center of the wind farm with one geophone every half-kilometer. The objective was to capture the spatio-temporal seismic wave-field signature of the wind farm from continuous recordings of ambient noise. Due to the dense interstation distance and proposed geometry the experiment allowed for analyzing both small-scale wave field characteristics at an unprecedented spatial resolution and the longer distance radiation pattern of the wind farm. Waveform data is available from the GEOFON data centre, under network code XF, and is embargoed until Jan 2025.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/workingPaper
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2024-05-22
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
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