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  • 1
    Call number: SR 91.1179(42)
    In: Abhandlungen der Geologischen Bundesanstalt Wien
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: 137 S.
    ISBN: 390031263X
    Series Statement: Abhandlungen der Geologischen Bundesanstalt 42
    Language: German
    Location: Lower compact magazine
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 2
    Call number: ad SR 94.0399(45)
    In: Mitteilungen der Abteilung für Geologie und Paläontologie am Landesmuseum Joanneum
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: 1 Karte
    Series Statement: Mitteilungen der Abteilung für Geologie, Paläontologie und Bergbau am Landesmuseum Joanneum 45
    Language: German
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2024-06-12
    Description: To test polyhalite age dating of the mineral polyhalite [K2Ca2Mg(SO4)4·2H2O], samples of the evaporitic Permian Haselgebirge Formation were collected in the Eastern Alps. Samples were taken from two salt bodies. The salt body of Altaussee (UTM 33T 405316 5278325) has a vertical thickness of 〉800 m. Samples were collected in the Altaussee mine (ALT). The salt body of Bad Dürrnberg-Berchtesgaden (UTM 33T 351091 5278007) is at least 1000 m thick. The salt body comprises two separate mines, where samples were collected, Bad Dürrnberg (DÜ) and Berchtesgaden (BGD) salt mines. The samples were collected during several field trips, and investigated at the University of Salzburg during the years 2007-2015. Electron microprobe analyses were conducted to determine possible chemical variations of polyhalite.
    Keywords: age dating; Eastern Alps; Haselgebirge; polyhalite
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2024-06-12
    Description: Electron microprobe analyses were conducted at the University of Salzburg, Department of Geography and Geology, in the year 2011. Measurements were performed on a JEOL electron microprobe (JXA-8600), equipped with a wave-length dispersive system. An acceleration voltage of 15 kV and a low sample current of 20 nA were applied to prevent decomposition of polyhalite under the electron beam. Additionally, the spot was defocused to a diameter of 15 µm and after measurement of sulfur, the sample was moved one beam diameter to start measurement of potassium and calcium. Sulfur, potassium and calcium were all measured with the same analyzing crystal. Synthetic and natural mineral standards were used to analyse the emitted wave lengths of the sample and to quantify their amount. Standard ZAF correction calculation revealed the composition in oxide weight percent (doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.942486). The calculation method after Love/Scott1 revealed the formula units of polyhalite.
    Keywords: age dating; Altaussee_salt_body; Calcium; Calculated, after Love/Scott; Eastern Alps; Haselgebirge; Iron 2+ and 3+; Magnesium; Manganese; polyhalite; Potassium; ROCK; Rock sample; Sample ID; Sodium; Strontium; Sulfur; Sum
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 290 data points
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2024-06-12
    Description: Electron microprobe analyses were conducted at the University of Salzburg, Department of Geography and Geology, in the year 2011. Measurements were performed on a JEOL electron microprobe (JXA-8600), equipped with a wave-length dispersive system. An acceleration voltage of 15 kV and a low sample current of 20 nA were applied to prevent decomposition of polyhalite under the electron beam. Additionally, the spot was defocused to a diameter of 15 µm and after measurement of sulfur, the sample was moved one beam diameter to start measurement of potassium and calcium. Sulfur, potassium and calcium were all measured with the same analyzing crystal. Synthetic and natural mineral standards were used to analyse the emitted wave lengths of the sample and to quantify their amount. Standard ZAF correction calculation revealed the composition in oxide weight percent. The calculation method after Love/Scott1 revealed the formula units of polyhalite (doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.942485).
    Keywords: age dating; Altaussee_salt_body; Calcium oxide; Eastern Alps; Electron microprobe (EMP); Haselgebirge; Iron oxide, FeO; Magnesium oxide; Manganese oxide; Oxides, total; polyhalite; Potassium oxide; ROCK; Rock sample; Sample ID; Sodium oxide; Strontium oxide; Sulfur trioxide
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 290 data points
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2024-06-12
    Description: The measurements were conducted at the University of Salzburg, Department of Geography and Geology, in the years 2007-2015. Polyhalite samples were manually reduced to small pieces with a hammer. They were washed with destilled water and dried with isopropanol to free them from dust and Cl-ions of halite. Chlorine produces Ar isotopes during irradiation, which may tamper the proportion of Ar isotopes from polyhalite. Grains of 200–250 µm size were selected under the microscope. A sufficient number of grains of each sample were packed into aluminium-foil and put into quartz vials. Details of the analytical 40Ar/39Ar technique is described in Leitner et al. (2014) and Cao et al. (2017). Irradiation was conducted for 16 hours in the Magyar Tudományos Akadémia (MTA) Központi Fizakai Kutato Intézet (KFKI) reactor (Debrecen, Hungary). Flux-monitors were placed between the samples for calculation of the J-values. The distance between adjacent flux-monitors was c. 5 mm. Corrections for interfering isotopes were the same as described earlier: Correction factors were calculated from 45 analyses of co-irradiated Ca-glass samples and 70 analyses of K-glass samples, and are: 36Ar/37Ar(Ca) = 0.000225, 37Ar/39Ar(Ca) = 0.000614, 38Ar/39Ar(K) = 0.0117, and 40Ar/39Ar(K) = 0.0266. Variation in the flux of neutrons were monitored with DRA1 sanidine standard for which a 40Ar/39Ar plateau age of 25.26 ± 0.05 Ma has been reported (van Hinsbergen et al. 2008). 40Ar/39Ar analyses were carried out at the Department of Geography and Geology at the University of Salzburg. The equipment used was the same as described earlier: 40Ar/39Ar analyses are carried out using a ultra high vacuum Ar-extraction line equipped with a combined MERCHANTEKTM UV/IR laser system, and a VG-ISOTECHTM VG-3600 noble gas mass spectrometer. Stepwise heating analyses of samples are performed using a defocused (~1.5 mm diameter) 25 W CO2-IR laser operating in Tem00 mode at wavelengths between 10.57 and 10.63 µm. The laser is controlled from a PC, and the position of the laser on the sample is monitored on the computer screen via a video camera in the optical axis of the laser beam through a double-vacuum window on the sample chamber. Gas clean-up is performed using one hot and one cold Zr-Al SAESTM getter. Gas admittance and pumping of the mass spectrometer and the Ar-extraction line are computer controlled using pneumatic valves. The VG-3600 is an 18 cm radius 60° extended geometry sector field mass analyzer instrument, equipped with a bright Nier-type source operated at 4.5 kV. Measurements are performed on an axial electron multiplier in static mode, peak-jumping and stability of the magnet is controlled by a Hall-probe. For each increment the intensities of 36Ar, 37Ar, 38Ar, 39Ar, and 40Ar are measured, the baseline readings on mass 35.5 are automatically subtracted. Intensities of the peaks are back-extrapolated over 16 measured intensities to the time of gas admittance either by a straight line or a curved fit, depending on intensity and type of pattern of the evolving gas. Inspection of intensities was applied with regard to background, system blanks, interfering isotopes and post-irradiation decay of 37Ar. Calculations of isotope ratios, errors, ages and plateau ages followed suggestions of McDougall and Harrison (1999), Scaillet (2000), Steiger and Jäger (1977) and Ludwig (2012).
    Keywords: age dating; Altaussee_salt_body; Bad_Duerrnberg-Berchtesgaden_salt_body; Eastern Alps; Haselgebirge; polyhalite; ROCK; Rock sample
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet, 3.1 MBytes
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  • 7
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    International journal of earth sciences 82 (1993), S. 556-565 
    ISSN: 1437-3262
    Keywords: Kinematics ; Crustal stacking ; Crustal extension ; Bohemian Massif
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract The south-eastern Bohemian Massif consolidated during the Late Variscan orogeny by the oblique collision of two continental crustal blocks after closure of an oceanic realm. One microcontinent comprises portions which are now distributed among Moravian and Moldanubian units and which are characterized by Late Proterozoic tectonothermal events, especially by granitoid intrusions. The other microcontinent includes the Gföhl gneiss and granulites (Gföhl nappe) of probable Early Palaeozoic protolith ages. Both continental blocks are separated by an ophiolite-like assemblage, which is preserved in portions of the Raabs unit. Oblique crustal stacking is accompanied by north-eastward propagation of nappes in a dextral transpressive regime. Exhumation of previously thickened crust is achieved by equally oriented bulk extension but partitioned in distinct displacement paths. Coeval stacking and extension at different crustal levels is suggested.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 8
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Weinheim : Wiley-Blackwell
    Liebigs Annalen 1979 (1979), S. 56-62 
    ISSN: 0170-2041
    Keywords: Chemistry ; Organic Chemistry
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Description / Table of Contents: Substituent Dependence in the Synthesis of 2-Oxazolidones from PhenyloxiranesOn heating with urea, the phenyloxiranes 1c-k yield the mostly new 5-phenyl-2-oxazolidones 2c-h and 2k and the 4-phenyl-2-oxazolidones3d-k. The yields can be increased by performing the reaction of 1c-e with urea in DMF. In general, an electron-withdrawing substituent in the o-or p-position favors formation of 2, while electron-repelling substituents promote formation of 3.
    Notes: Die Phenyloxirane 1c—k ergeben beim Erhitzen mit Harnstoff die größtenteils neuen 5-Phenyl-2-oxazolidone 2c-h und k sowie die 4-Phenyl-2-oxazolidone 3d-k. Führt man die Reaktion von 1c-e mit Harnstoff in DMF durch, erhöhen sich die Ausbeuten. Allgemein begünstigt Elektronenzug o- oder p-ständiger Substituenten das Entstehen von 2, Elektronenschub dagegen die Bildung von 3.
    Additional Material: 3 Tab.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2008-07-10
    Description: The Meliata nappe of the Western Carpathian orogen is comprised of Triassic deep-sea metasedimentary rocks and fragments of blueschist-bearing ophiolite. These were structurally emplaced onto Permian/Triassic shelf sequences and its Variscan basement. The nappe records a succession of deformational events which formed under decreasing pressure conditions. Subduction-related burial and resulting blueschist metamorphism is dated by 40Ar/39Ar plateau ages recorded by four phengitic muscovite concentrates (160-150 Ma). These crystallized during ductile deformation characterized by predominantly coaxial NW-SE stretching. The structures were overprinted by semiductile, nonpenetrative fabric elements which formed under greenschist facies conditions and contemporaneously with fabrics which developed in footwall tectonic units. Kinematic indicators record top north to NW shear during Middle Cretaceous loading of the Meliata unit onto the Inner Carpathian nappe complex recorded by a 40Ar/39Ar whole rock phyllite age of 105.8{+/-}1.5 Ma. A subsequent southeastern sense of shear is interpreted to have resulted from extension during Late Cretaceous uplift along hinterland margins of the tectonic wedge. The Meliata unit is part of a major Late Jurassic/Early Cretaceous suture which initially extended from the Alps to the Hellenides. It has been subsequently disrupted as a result of later strike-slip faulting following Tertiary collision of the Cretaceous orogen, and was transported onto extra-Alpine European units.
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  • 10
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    In:  Geological Society Special Publication 204: 81-102.
    Publication Date: 2002-01-01
    Description: Internal sectors of the Alpine-Balkan-Carpathian-Dinaride (ABCD) orogen comprise fundamentally different ore deposits along strike in three temporally and spatially distinct belts. These were formed by several short-lived, late-stage collisional processes (including slab break-off) during the Late Cretaceous and Oligocene to Neogene times. Reconstruction of Late Cretaceous (c. 92-65 Ma) collisional structures, magmatic features and mineralization reveals contrasting variations along strike, including the following. (1a) The Late Cretaceous banatite' magmatic belt, which extends from the Apuseni mountains to the Balkans, associated mainly with porphyry Cu-Au, massive sulphide and Fe-Cu skarn mineral deposits. In respect to their country rocks and geodynamic setting, the magmatism is interpreted to represent either post-collisional or Andean-type calc-alkaline due to continuous subduction or break-off of the subducted lithosphere. (1b) The Alpine-West Carpathian sector, which is characterized by strong Late Cretaceous metamorphic/deformational overprint, lack of magmatism and both syn- and late-orogenic formation of metasomatic and metamorphogenic talc, magnesite, siderite and vein- and shear zone-type Cu and As-Au due to the exhumation of metamorphic core complexes. (2a) The Oligocene-Miocene Serbomacedonian-Rhodope metallogenic zone extends across several structural units from the Bosnian Dinarides to the Rhodopes and to Thrace. It includes both a belt with volcanic-hosted and vein-type Pb-Zn deposits and a belt of porphyry Cu-Au-Mo and epithermal Au mineralization, which is more common in the south. Both belts appear to relate to microcontinent collision and associated subsequent magmatism, again possibly due to slab break-off. (2b) Different types of mineralization were also formed along the internal Inner Carpathian and Alpine sectors during Late Oligocene to Miocene collision. In the Alps, mineralization formed due to eastward extrusion of fault-bounded blocks into the Carpathian arc. Associated mineral deposits are always related to exhumation of metamorphic core complexes and include: sub-vertical mesothermal Au-quartz veins and replacement As-Ag-Cu ore bodies within the metamorphic core complex, fault-bounded mineralization (Pb-W-Au) along low-angle ductile normal faults along the upper margins of the metamorphic core complex, mineralized (Sb-Au) strike-slip faults and sub-vertical Au-Ag-Sb-bearing tension veins. (2c) In contrast, nearly all Miocene ore deposits within the Carpathians are related to volcanic activity contemporaneous with the invasion of fault-bounded blocks into the Carpathian arc. These have been related to slab break-off and cessation of subduction. Mineral deposits include structurally controlled Au-Sb-Cu-Pb-Zn ore bodies within shallow volcanic edifices, with a preference for steep tension veins parallel to the motion direction of laterally escaping crustal blocks.
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