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  • Archive of Ocean Data; ARCOD; Geological sample; GEOS; P-462/1; P-462/3; P-462/5; P-462/7; P-481; Southern Primorye  (1)
  • Growth rate variability  (1)
  • Space Sciences (General)  (1)
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  • 1
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Brandt, I S; Rasskazov, S V; Popov, V K; Brandt, S B (2009): Potassic specifics of basalts from the Sinii Utes Depression: Geochemical correlations and problems of K-Ar dating (Southern Primorye region). Translated from Tikhookeanskaya Geologiya, 2009, 28(4), 75-89, Russian Journal of Pacific Geology, 3(4), 374-387, https://doi.org/10.1134/S1819714009040058
    Publication Date: 2024-02-16
    Description: New data are reported on structure of sections, chemical composition, and age of volcano-sedimentary and volcanic rocks from the Sinii Utes Depression in the Southern Primorye region. The Sinii Utes Depression is filled with two sequences: the lower sequence composed of sedimentary-volcanogenic coaliferous rocks (the stratotype of the Sinii Utes Formation) and the upper sequence consisting of tephroid with overlying basalts. This work considers chemical composition and problems of K-Ar dating of basalts. The uppermost basaltic flow has K-Ar age 22.0±1.0 Ma. The dates obtained for the middle and upper parts of lava flows are underestimated. It is explained by their heating due to combustion of brown coals of the Sinii Utes Formation underlying the lava flow. Calculations show that argon could only partly have been removed from the basalts owing to conductive heat transfer and was lost largely due to infiltration of hot gases in heterogeneous fissured medium. Basaltic volcanism on continental margins of the southern Primorye region and the adjacent Korean and Chinese areas at the Oligocene-Miocene boundary preceded Early-Middle Miocene spreading and formation of the Sea of Japan basin. Undifferentiated moderately alkaline basalts of intraplate affinity developed in the Amba Depression and some other structures of the southern Primorye region and intraplate alkali basalts of the Phohang Graben in the Korean Peninsula serve as indicators of incipient spreading regime in the Sea of Japan. Potassic basalt-trachybasalt eruptions occurred locally in riftogenic depressions and shield volcanoes. In some structures this volcanism was terminated by eruptions of intermediate and acid lavas. Such evolution of volcanism is explained by selective contamination of basaltic melts during their interaction with crustal acid material and generation of acid anatectic melts.
    Keywords: Archive of Ocean Data; ARCOD; Geological sample; GEOS; P-462/1; P-462/3; P-462/5; P-462/7; P-481; Southern Primorye
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-1939
    Keywords: Growth rate variability ; Polygyny ; Sexual dimorphism ; Sus scrofa
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary In wild boar individual growth rate is linear between 0.5 and 6 months after birth, based on successive body weight measurements. Contrary to expectation for a dimorphic and polygynous mammal like wild boar, no sexual dimorphism in growth rate could be detected between 0.5 and 6 months. We argue that high total maternal invesment in offspring due to large litter size and/or strong selection for early reproduction in this population with a short generation time could explain this absence of early differentiation in postnatal growth rate according to offspring sex.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: We describe a probe-class mission concept that provides an unprecedented view of the X-ray sky, performing timing and 0.2-30 keV spectroscopy over timescales from microseconds to years. The Spectroscopic Time-Resolving Observatory for Broadband Energy X-rays (STROBE-X) comprises three primary instruments. The first uses an array of lightweight optics (3-m focal length) that concentrate incident photons onto solid state detectors with CCD-level (85-130 eV) energy resolution, 100 ns time resolution, and low background rates to cover the 0.2-12 keV band. This technology is scaled up from NICER [1], with enhanced optics to take advantage of the longer focal length of STROBE-X. The second uses large-area collimated silicon drift detectors, developed for ESA's LOFT [2], to cover the 2-30 keV band. These two instruments each provide an order of magnitude improvement in effective area compared with its predecessor (NICER and RXTE, respectively). Finally, a sensitive sky monitor triggers pointed observations, provides high duty cycle, high time resolution, high spectral resolution monitoring of the X-ray sky with approx. 20 times the sensitivity of the RXTE ASM, and enables multi-wavelength and multi-messenger studies on a continuous, rather than scanning basis. For the first time, the broad coverage provides simultaneous study of thermal components, non-thermal components, iron lines, and reflection features from a single platform for accreting black holes at all scales. The enormous collecting area allows detailed studies of the dense matter equation of state using both thermal emission from rotation-powered pulsars and harder emission from X-ray burst oscillations. The combination of the wide-field monitor and the sensitive pointed instruments enables observations of potential electromagnetic counterparts to LIGO and neutrino events. Additional extragalactic science, such as high quality spectroscopy of clusters of galaxies and unprecedented timing investigations of active galactic nuclei, is also obtained
    Keywords: Space Sciences (General)
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN50652 , American Astronomical Society (AAS) Meeting; Jan 08, 2018 - Jan 12, 2018; National Harbor, MD; United States
    Format: application/pdf
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