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  • 2020-2024
  • 2020-2023
  • 2010-2014  (96,848)
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  • 1
    Description / Table of Contents: The Caledonides are a major orogenic belt that stretches from the Arctic, through Scandinavia, East Greenland, Britain and Ireland into the Atlantic coast of North America. Following the break-up of Rodinia, the Caledonides formed in the Palaeozoic by the drifting of various continents and their eventual aggregation in the Silurian and Devonian. The orogen subsequently fragmented during the opening of the Atlantic Ocean. This volume brings together 25 papers presenting the results of modern research that investigates the orogenic processes and the provenance of specific components of the belt. The contributions reflect different lines of research, linking traditional field studies with modern analytical techniques. In addition three overview papers summarize the main features of the belts in Scandinavia, Svalbard, East Greenland, Britain and Ireland, highlighting the advances made since the last major synthesis of the Scandinavian Caledonides 30 years ago, and discussing important open questions.
    Pages: Online-Ressource (VI, 718 Seiten)
    ISBN: 9781862393776
    Language: English
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  • 2
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Call number: 4/M 11.0235
    Description / Table of Contents: Content: Part I The Main Players. Rifted Margins: Building Blocks of Later Collision. - Intra-oceanic Subduction Zones. - The Subductability of Continental Lithosphere:The Before and After Story. - The Seismic Structure of Island Arc Crust. - Vertical Stratification of Composition, Density, and InferredMagmatic Processes in Exposed Arc Crustal Sections. - The Generation and Preservation of Mineral Deposits in Arc Continent Collision Environments. - Part II Specific Examples of Arc-Continent Collision: The Nature of the Banda Arc Continent Collisionin the Timor Region. - The Arc Continent Collision in Taiwan. - Early Eocene Arc Continent Collision in Kamchatka, Russia:Structural Evolution and Geodynamic Model. - The Asia Kohistan India Collision: Review and Discussion. - Processes of Arc Continent Collision in the Uralides. - The Record of Ordovician Arc Arc and Arc Continent Collisions in the Canadian Appalachians During the Closure of Iapetus. - Arc Continent Collision in the Ordovician of Western Ireland: Stratigraphic, Structural and Metamorphic Evolution. - Multiple Arc Development in the Paleoproterozoic Wopmay Orogen, Northwest Canada. - Part III Models of Arc-Continent Collision Processes: The Origin of Obducted Large-Slab Ophiolite Complexes. - Physical Modeling of Arc Continent Collision: A Reviewof 2D, 3D, Purely Mechanical and Thermo Mechanical Experimental Models. - Part IV Putting it All Together: Arc Continent Collision: The Making of an Orogen
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XIII, 493 S. : farb. Ill., und graph. Darst.
    ISBN: 9783540885573
    Series Statement: Frontiers in earth sciences
    Classification:
    Tectonics
    Location: Reading room
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 3
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Frankfurt a. Main : Suhrkamp
    Call number: M 11.0276
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 113 S.
    ISBN: 9783518061763
    Classification:
    Ecology
    Location: Upper compact magazine
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 4
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    Call number: AWI G1-15-0007
    Description / Table of Contents: Flooding caused by a rise in global mean sea Ievel has the potential to affect the lives of more than 1 billion people in coastal areas worldwide. There have been significant changes in sea Ievel over the past 2 million years, both at the local and global scales, and a compIete understanding of natural cycles of change as well as anthropogenic effects is imperative for future global development. This book reviews the history of research into these sea-level changes and summanses the methods and analytical approaches used to interpret evidence for sea-level changes. lt provides an overview of the changing climates of the Ouaternary, examines the processes responsible for global variability of sea-level records, and presents detailed reviews of sea-level changes for the Pleistocene and Holocene. The book concludes by discussing current trends in sea Ievel and likely future sea level changes. This is an important and authoritative summary of evidence for sea-level changes in our most recent geological period, and provides a key resource for academic researchers, and graduate and advanced undergraduate students, working in tectonics, stratigraphy, geomorphology and physical geography, environmental science and other aspects of Quaternary studies.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XVIII, 484 S. : Ill., graph. Darst., Kt.
    Edition: 1. publ.
    ISBN: 9780521820837
    Note: Contents: Preface. - List of abbreviations. - 1. Sea-level changes: the emergence of a Quaternary perspective. - 1.1 Introduction. - 1.2 The Quaternary Period. - 1.3 Sea-Jevel changes: historical development of ideas. - 1.4 Observations from classical antiquity until the nineteenth century. - 1.4.1 Early Mediterranean studies. - 1.4.2 Eighteenth-century writings on universal changes to the Earth. - 1.4.3 Diluvial Theory - the universal flood. - 1.4.4 The Temple of Serapis: a compelling case for relative sea-level change. - 1.4.5 Lavoisier and the concepts of transgression and regression. - 1.5 Glacial action and recognition of the Ice Ages. - 1.5.1 Louis Agassiz and the Glacial Theory. - 1.5.2 The Croll-Milankovitch Hypothesis. - 1.6 Vertical changes in land and sea Ievel related to Quaternary climate. - 1.6.1 Charles Darwin and James Dana. - 1.6.2 Insights from around the world. - 1. 7 Evolution of ideas in the twentieth century. - 1. 7.1 Developments in Europe. - 1.7.2 Advances in geochemistry and geochronology. - 1.7.3 Oxygen-isotope records from marine sediments and ice cores. - 1.7.4 Geophysical models of sea-level changes. - 1.7.5 Sequence stratigraphy. - 1.7.6 International concern and a focus on current and future sea-level trends. - 1.8 Theoretical concepts relevant to the study of Quaternary sea-level changes. - 1.9 Synthesis and way forward. - 1.9.1 Revisiting old ideas. - 1.9.2 Quaternary sea-level changes: the status quo. - 2. The causes of Quaternary sea-level changes. - 2.1 Introduction. - 2.2 Sea Ievel and sea-level changes: some definitions. - 2.2.1 Sea Ievel and base Ievel. - 2.2.2 Relative sea-level changes. - 2.3 Processes responsible for relative sea-level changes in the Quaternary. - 2.3.1 Glacio-eustasy. - 2.3.2 lsostasy. - 2.3.3 Glacial isostasy and relative sea-Ievel changes. - 2.3.4 Hydro-isostasy and relative sea-level changes. - 2.3.5 The geoid and changes to its configuration. - 2.3.6 Global variation in geophysical response and equatorial ocean siphoning. - 2.4 Tectonism, volcanism, and other processes resulting in relative sea-level changes. - 2.4.1 Teetonic movements. - 2.4.2 Volcanism and its link to sea-level changes. - 2.4.3 Lithospheric flexure. - 2.4.4 Changes in tidal range. - 2.4.5 Steric changes, meteorological changes, and the role of ENSO events. - 2.5 Geophysical models and the sea-!evel equation. - 2.6 Synthesis and conclusions. - 3. Palaeo-sea-level indicators. - 3.1 Introduction. - 3.1.1 Fixed and relational sea-level indicators. - 3.1.2 Relative sea-level changes, sea-level index points, and indicative meaning. - 3.1.3 Sources of uncertainty in palaeo-sea-Ievel estimation. - 3.1.4 Palaeo-sea-level curve or envelope?. - 3.1.5 Facies architecture, allostratigraphy, and sea-level changes. - 3.2 Pleistocene and Holocene palaeo-sea-level indicators compared. - 3.3 Corals and coral reefs. - 3.3.1 Reefs and Pleistocene sea Ievels. - 3.3.2 Reefs and Holocene sea Ievels. - 3.3.3 Conglomerates and recognition of in-situ corals. - 3.3.4 Microatolls. - 3.4 Other biological sea-level indicators. - 3.4.1 Fixed biological indicators. - 3.4.2 Mangroves. - 3.4.3 Salt-marsh sediments and microfossil analysis. - 3.4.4 Seagrass. - 3.4.5 Marine molluscs. - 3.4.6 Submerged forests. - 3.5 Geomorphological and geological sea-level indicators. - 3.5.1 Marine terraces and shore platforms. - 3.5.2 Shoreline notches and visors. - 3.5.3 Isolation basins. - 3.5.4 Beach ridges. - 3.5.5 Cheniers. - 3.5.6 Aeolianites. - 3.5.7 Calcretes. - 3.5.8 Beachrock. - 3.6 Geoarchaeology and sea-level changes. - 3.7 Synthesis and conclusions. - 4. Methods of dating Quaternary sea-level changes. - 4.1 Introduction. - 4.1.1 Terminology. - 4.1.2 Historical approaches used for evaluating geological age of coastal deposits. - 4.2 Radiocarbon dating. - 4.2.1 Underlying principles of the radiocarbon method. - 4.2.2 Age range. - 4.2.3 Measurement techniques. - 4.2.4 Isotopic fractionation. - 4.2.5 Marine reservoir and hard-water effects. - 4.2.6 Secular 14C/ 12C variation and the calibration of radiocarbon ages to sidereal years. - 4.2.7 Cantamination and sample pre-treatment strategies. - 4.2.8 Statistical considerations: comparisons of radiocarbon age and pooling of results. - 4.3 Uranium-series disequilibrium dating. - 4.3.1 Underlying principles of U-series disequilibrium dating. - 4.3.2 U-series dating of marine carbonates. - 4.3.3 U-series dating of other materials. - 4.4 Oxygen-isotope stratigraphy. - 4.5 Luminescence dating methods. - 4.5.1 Quantifying the cumulative effects of environmental radiation dose. - 4.5.2 Age range of luminescence methods. - 4.5.3 Anomalaus fading and partial bleaching. - 4.6 Electron spin resonance dating. - 4.7 Amino acid racemisation dating. - 4.7.1 The amino acid racemisation reaction. - 4.7.2 Environmental factors that influence racemisation. - 4.7.3 Sources of uncertainty in AAR dating. - 4.7.4 Application of AAR to dating coastal successions. - 4.8 Cosmogenic dating. - 4.9 Other dating techniques. - 4.9.1 Event markers. - 4.9.2 Palaeomagnetism. - 4.10 Synthesis and conclusions. - 5 Vertical displacement of shorelines. - 5.5.1 Introduction. - 5.2 Plate tectonics and implications for coastlines globally. - 5.2.1 Lithospheric plate domains. - 5.2.2 Plate margins. - 5.2.3 Plate tectonics and coastal classification. - 5.2.4 Ocean plate dynamics and island types. - 5.3 Styles of tectonic deformation and rates of uplift or subsidence. - 5.3.1 Coseismic uplift. - 5.3.2 Epeirogenic uplift. - 5.3.3 Folding and warping. - 5.3.4 Isostasy. - 5.3.5 Lithospheric flexure. - 5.3.6 Mantle plumes. - 5.3.7 Subsidence and submerged shorelines. - 5.4 The last interglacial shoreline: a reference for quantifying vertical displacement. - 5.4.1 Terrace age and elevation. - 5.4.2 Constraints on using the last interglacial shoreline as a benchmark. - 5.5 Coastlines in tectonically 'stable' cratonic regions. - 5.5.1 Australia. - 5.5.2 Southern Africa. - 5.6 Coastlines of emergence. - 5.6.1 Huon Peninsula. - 5.6.2 Barbados. - 5.6.3 Convergent continental margins: Chile. - 5.7 Vertical crustal movements associated with glacio-isostasy: Scandinavia. - 5.8 The Mediterranean Basin . - 5.8.1 Italy. - 5.8.2 Greece. - 5.9 The Caribbean region. - 5.9.1 Southern Florida and the Bahamas. - 5.9.2 Other Caribbean sites and more tectonically active islands. - 5.10 Divergent spreading-related coastlines: Red Sea. - 5.11 Pacific Plate. - 5.11.1 Pacific islands. - 5.11.2 Hawaii. - 5.11.3 Japan. - 5.11.4 New Zealand. - 5.12 Synthesis and conclusions. - 6. Pleistocene sea-level changes. - 6.1 Introduction. - 6.2 Prelude to the Pleistocene. - 6.3 Pleistocene icesheets. - 6.4 Early Pleistocene sea Ievels. - 6.4.1 Roe Calcarenite, Roe Plains, southern Australia. - 6.4.2 The Crag Group, southeastern England. - 6.S The middle Pleistocene Transition. - 6.6 Middle Pleistocene sea-level changes. - 6.7 Sea-level highstands of the middle Pleistocene. - 6.7.1 Marine Isotope Stage 11. - 6.7.2 Marine Isotope Stage 9 - the pre-penultimate interglacial. - 6.7.3 Marine Isotope Stage 7 - the penultimate interglacial. - 6.8 Middle Pleistocene sea-level lowstands. - 6.9 Late Pleistocene sea-level changes. - 6.9.1 The last interglacial maximum (MIS 5e). - 6.9.2 Timing and duration of the last interglacial maximum. - 6.9.3 Global estimates of last interglacial sea Ievels - the sanctity of the 6 m APSL datum?. - 6.10 Interstadial sea Ievels of the last glacial cycle (MIS 5c and 5a). - 6.11 Interstadial sea Ievels during MIS 3. - 6.12 Late Pleistocene interstadial sea Ievels: Dansgaard-Oeschgerand Heinrich Events. - 6.13 Eustatic sea Ievels during the Last Glacial Maximum (MIS 2). - 6.14 Long records of Pleistocene sea-level highstands. - 6.14.1 Coorong Coastal Plain and Murray Basin, southern Australia. - 6.14.2 Wanganui Basin, New Zealand. - 6.14.3 Sumba Island, Indonesia. - 6.15 Synthesis and conclusions. - 7. Sea-level changes since the Last Glacial Maximum. - 7.1 Introduction. -
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  • 5
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Princeton [u.a.] : Princeton University Press
    Call number: PIK B 030-15-0122
    Description / Table of Contents: Contents: Introduction ; I. Torts and Misalignments ; 1. Prices, Sanctions, and Discontinuities ; 2. The Injurer's Self-Risk Puzzle ; 3. Negligence Per Se and Unaccounted Risks ; 4. Lapses and Substitution ; 5. Total Liability for Excessive Harm ; II. Contracts and Victims' Incentives ; 6. Unity in the Law of Torts and Contracts ; 7. Anti-Insurance ; 8. Decreasing Liability Contracts and the Assistant Interest ; III. Restitution and Positive Externalities ; 9. A Public Goods Theory of Restitution ; 10. Liability Externalities and Mandatory Choices ; 11. The Relationship between Nonlegal Sanctions and Damages ; Conclusion
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 232 S. : graph. Darst.
    ISBN: 9780691151595
    Location: A 18 - must be ordered
    Branch Library: PIK Library
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  • 6
    Call number: PIK B 190-12-0174(2014,05)
    In: Working paper
    Description / Table of Contents: Contents: 1. Introduction ; 2. Background and related empirical literature ; 3. Data description and methodology ; 4. Empirical results ; 5. Conclusions
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: III, 27 S.
    Series Statement: Working paper 05/2014
    Location: A 18 - must be ordered
    Branch Library: PIK Library
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  • 7
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Princeton [u.a.] : Princeton Univ. Press
    Call number: PIK B 130-11-0110
    Description / Table of Contents: Contents: What went wrong and what we can do about it ; PART I - The critique ; 1. The invention of mechanical markets ; 2. The folly of fully predetermined history ; 3. The Orwellian world of "Rational Expectations" ; 4. The figment of the "Rational Market" ; 5. Castles in the air: the efficient market hypothesis ; 6. The fable of price swings as bubbles ; PART II - An alternative ; 7. Keynes and fundamentals ; 8. Speculation and the allocative performance of financial markets ; 9. Fundamentals and psychology in price swings ; 10. Bounded instability: linking risk and asset-price swings ; 11. Contingency and markets ; 12. Restoring the market-state balance ; Epilogue
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XV, 285 S. : graph. Darst.
    ISBN: 9780691145778
    Location: A 18 - must be ordered
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  • 8
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press
    Call number: M 11.0356
    Description / Table of Contents: Rivers provide the primary link between land and sea. Utilizing the world's largest database, this book presents a detailed analysis and synthesis of the processes affecting fluvial discharge of water, sediment and dissolved solids. The ways in which climatic variation, episodic events, and anthropogenic activities - past, present and future - affect the quantity and quality of river discharge are discussed in the final two chapters. The book contains 26 tables and more than 165 figures - many in full color - including global and regional maps. The book's extensive appendix presents the 1534-river database as a series of 44 tables that provide quantitative data regarding the discharge of water, sediment and dissolved solids. The complete database is also presented within a GIS-based package available online at www.cambridge.org/milliman. River Discharge to the Coastal Ocean provides an invaluable resource for researchers, professionals and graduate students in hydrology, oceanography, geology, geomorphology and environmental policy
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: VIII, 384 S. , Ill., graph. Darst., Kt.
    ISBN: 9780521879873
    Classification:
    Sedimentology
    Location: Upper compact magazine
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 9
    Call number: PIK N 531-11-0384
    Description / Table of Contents: Contents: 1 Cretaceous and Tertiary climate change and the past distribution of megathermal rainforests ; 2 Andean montane forests and climate change ; 3 Climate and vegetation change in the lowlands of the Amazon Basin ; 4 The Quaternary history of Far Eastern rainforests ; 5 Rainforest responses to past climatic changes in tropical Africa ; 6 Prehistoric human occupation and impacts on neotropical forest landscapes during the Late Pleistocene and Early/Middle Holocene ; 7 The past, present, and future importance of fire in tropical rainforests ; 8 Ultraviolet insolation and the tropical rainforest: Altitudinal variations, Quaternary and recent change, extinctions, and the evolution of biodiversity ; 9 Climate change in the Amazon Basin: Tipping points, changes in extremes, and impacts on natural and human systems ; 10 Plant species diversity in Amazonian forests ; 11 Biogeochemical cycling in tropical forests ; 12 The response of South American tropical forests to recent atmospheric changes ; 13 Ecophysiological response of lowland tropical plants to Pleistocene climate ; 14 Tropical environmental dynamics: A modeling perspective ; 15 Modeling future effects of climate change on tropical forests ; 16 Conservation, climate change, and tropical forests ; Taxonomic index
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XXXIV, 454 S. : Ill. graph. Darst., Kt.
    Edition: 2. ed.
    ISBN: 9783642053825
    Series Statement: Springer-Praxis books in environmental sciences
    Location: A 18 - must be ordered
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  • 10
    Call number: AWI A13-11-0030
    In: Lecture Notes in Computational Science and Engineering
    Description / Table of Contents: This book surveys recent developments in numerical techniques for global atmospheric models. It is based upon a collection of lectures prepared by leading experts in the field. The chapters reveal the multitude of steps that determine the global atmospheric model design. They encompass the choice of the equation set, computational grids on the sphere, horizontal and vertical discretizations, time integration methods, filtering and diffusion mechanisms, conservation properties, tracer transport, and considerations for designing models for massively parallel computers. A reader interested in applied numerical methods but also the many facets of atmospheric modeling should find this book of particular relevance.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XVI, 556 S. : graph. Darst., Kt.
    ISBN: 9783642116391
    Series Statement: Lecture Notes in Computational Science and Engineering 80
    Note: Contents: PART I EQUATIONS OF MOTION AND BASIC IDEAS ON DISCRETIZATIONS. - 1 Some Basic Dynamics Relevant to the Design of Atmospheric Model Dynamical Cores / John Thuburn. - 2 Waves, Hyperbolicity and Characteristics / Joseph Tribbia and Roger Temam. - 3 Horizontal Discretizations: Some Basic Ideas / John Thuburn. - 4 Vertical Discretizations: Some Basic Ideas / John Thuburn. - 5 Time Discretization: Some Basic Approaches / Dale R. Durran. - 6 Stabilizing Fast Waves / Dale R. Durran. - PART II CONSERVATION LAWS, FINITE-VOLUME METHODS, REMAPPING TECHNIQUES AND SPHERICAL GRIDS. - 7 Momentum, Vorticity and Transport: Considerations in the Design of a Finite-Volume Dynamical Core / Todd D. Ringler. - 8 Atmospheric Transport Schemes: Desirable Properties and a Semi-Lagrangian View on Finite-Volume Discretizations / Peter H. Lauritzen, Paul A. Ullrich, and Ramachandran D. Nair. - 9 Emerging Numerical Methods for Atmospheric Modeling / Ramachandran D. Nair, Michael N. Levy, and Peter H. Lauritzen. - 10 Voronoi Tessellations and Their Application to Climate and Global Modeling / Lili Ju, Todd Ringler, and Max Gunzburger. - PART III PRACTICAL CONSIDERATIONS FOR DYNAMICAL CORES IN WEATHER AND CLIMATE MODELS. - 11 Conservation in Dynamical Cores: What, How and Why? / John Thuburn. - 12 Conservation of Mass and Energy for the Moist Atmospheric Primitive Equations on Unstructured Grids / Mark A. Taylor. - 13 The Pros and Cons of Diffusion, Filters and Fixers in Atmospheric General Circulation Models / Christiane Jablonowski and David L. Williamson. - 14 Kinetic Energy Spectra and Model Filters / William C. Skamarock. - 15 A Perspective on the Role of the Dynamical Core in the Development of Weather and Climate Models / Richard B. Rood. - 16 Refactoring Scientific Applications for Massive Parallelism / John M. Dennis and Richard D. Loft.
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