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  • 1
    Call number: 9/M 05.0620
    In: Geological Society special publication
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: X, 320 S. , Ill., graph. Darst.
    ISBN: 1862391769
    Series Statement: Geological Society special publication 243
    Classification:
    Tectonics
    Location: Reading room
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Science Ltd
    Terra nova 15 (2003), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1365-3121
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: To investigate how magma rises through the brittle upper crust in a context of compressional tectonics, we have performed experiments on scaled physical models. Powdered silica (having a cohesion of 300 Pa and an angle of internal friction of 38°) was used to represent brittle crust. A vegetable oil (with a Newtonian viscosity of 10−2 Pa·s at 50 °C) was used to represent magma. A moving piston shortened the models in a box, while oil was injected steadily at the base. On cooling to room temperature, the oil solidified. The resulting intrusions were thin sills, dykes and laccoliths. Their shapes and emplacement modes depended on the ratio R between rates of shortening and injection. From shapes and orientations of intrusions, we infer that hydraulic fracturing was one mechanism of emplacement. Unconsolidated intrusions strongly influenced thrust formation. On the basis of our experiments, we suggest that magmas in orogenic belts can rise along thrust faults.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Nature 294 (1981), S. 754-757 
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] The light from a single 'resting', unfertilized oocyte (70 diameter, 200 pi volume), injected with aequorin to -5% of its volume, ranged typically between 1 and 16 photoelectrons per s above a background of 14 s"1 (Fig. ). The light signal was detected by holding the oocyte in a 75-^l-capacity ...
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Nature 319 (1986), S. 600-602 
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] Hepatocytes were isolated from fed, mature male rats and were kept at 37 C in a complete culture medium for use within 10 h. Cells of about 25 ?? diameter were injected with aequorin (see Fig. 1 legend). Stable resting signals could be recorded from individual hepatocytes for several hours. The ...
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 5
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Nature 366 (1993), S. 504-504 
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] SIR - Until last year, unmarried Spanish males under the age of 30 working over-seas were exempted from their nine months' military service if they were working abroad for at least three years, but this exemption no longer applies. As a result, a 25-year-old Spanish graduate student who ...
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 6
    ISSN: 1573-4935
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 7
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    New York : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Bioluminescence and Chemiluminescence 9 (1994), S. 363-371 
    ISSN: 0884-3996
    Keywords: Firefly luciferase ; cytoplasm ; inorganic pyrophosphate ; inorganic pyrophosphatase ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: In order to improve calibration of firefly luciferase signals obtained by injecting the enzyme into single, isolated heart and liver cells we have investigated why the luminescence from cells is greatly depressed compared with in vitro (in mammalian ionic milieu) and why the decay of the intracellular signal is remarkably slow. We have shown that inorganic pyrophosphate greatly depresses the signal in vitro and that micromolar concentrations of inoragnic pyrophosphate, comparable with that in cytoplasm, reverse this inhibition and stabilize the signal, eliminating its decay. Higher concentrations of pyrophosphate depress the signal by inhibiting ATP-binding to luciferase. Luciferse-injected cells exposed to extracellular luciferin concentrations above about 100 μmol/1 (corresponding to a cytoplasmic level of c. 5-10 μmol/1 because of a transplasmalemmal gradient) show a gradual, irreversible loss of signal. We attribute this phenomenon (which is not seen in vitro) to the gradual accumlation of a luminescently inactive, irreversible, luciferase-oxyluciferin complex. At low luciferin levels this complex is prevented from forming by cytoplasmic pyrophosphate. Above c. 100μmol/1 extracellular luciferin, the pyrophosphate level in the cytoplasm fails to fully prevent the complex forming. In vitro this phenomenon does not occur because the luciferase concentrations and hence oxyluciferin levels are orders of magnitude lower than in cells injected with concentrated luciferase solutions, which have a cytoplasmic luciferase concentration of approximately 2-4 μmol/1.
    Additional Material: 7 Ill.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2007-10-08
    Description: The Andean Orogeny in South America has lasted over 100 Ma. It comprises the Peruvian, Incaic and Quechuan phases. The Nazca and South American plates have been converging at varying rates since the Palaeocene. The active tectonics of South America are relatively clear, from seismological and Global Positioning System (GPS) data. Horizontal shortening is responsible for a thick crust and high topography in the Andes, as well as in SE Brazil and Patagonia. We have integrated available data and have compiled four fault maps at the scale of South America, for the mid-Cretaceous, Late Cretaceous, Palaeogene and Neogene periods. Andean compression has been widespread since the Aptian. The continental margins have registered more deformation than the interior. For the Peruvian phase, not enough information is available to establish a tectonic context. During the Incaic phase, strike-slip faulting was common. During the Quechuan phase, crustal thickening has been the dominant mode of deformation. To investigate the mechanics of deformation, we have carried out 10 properly scaled experiments on physical models of the lithosphere, containing various plates. The dominant response to plate motion was subduction of oceanic lithosphere beneath continental South America. However, the model continent also deformed internally, especially at the margins and initial weaknesses.
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  • 9
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    In:  Geological Society Special Publication 243: ix-.
    Publication Date: 2007-10-08
    Description: Pierre Choukroune was born in Casablanca on 28 March 1943. He celebrated his 60th birthday a few weeks before the DRT2003 meeting in St Malo. Pierre received a PhD from Paris University in 1967 and a Doctorat d'Etat' from Montpellier University in 1974. The subject of both theses was the structural geology of the Pyrenees. The second thesis was published as Memoire 127 of the Societe Geologique de France. Pierre started his professional career in 1967 as Assistant' (Assistant Lecturer) at Montpellier University. In 1975, he moved to Rennes as Professor. He stayed at Rennes until 1995, when he moved to the University of Aix-Marseille. Building on his early fieldwork in the Pyrenees, Pierre rapidly acquired a prominent and highly personal scientific profile. His interests have always spanned various scales, from detailed analysis of microstructures, through regional patterns of strain and displacement (e.g. Choukroune 1976) to plate tectonics (Choukroune 1992). Of the more than 100 papers that he has published in international journals over the last three decades, many have had major impacts on structural geology and tectonics. One of his first papers (Choukroune 1971) was on the analysis of pressure shadows around pyrite crystals, as a tool to understand the development of slaty cleavage. As pointed out by Ramsay and Hubert (1983) in their textbook, This is an outstanding paper from the view point of descriptive excellence, the quality of the diagrams and photographs and the theoretical analysis of data'. This paper contains many of the ideas that Pierre ... This 250-word extract was created in the absence of an abstract.
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2012-05-01
    Description: Using three-dimensional seismic and well data from the northern North Sea, we describe a large (10 km3) body of sand and interpret it as extrusive. To our knowledge, this is the world's largest such sandbody. It would bury Manhattan, New York (60 km2), under 160 m of sand, or the whole of London, UK (1579 km2), under 6 m of sand. This sand vented to the seafloor, when it was more than 500 m deep, during the Pleistocene glacial period. The sandbody (1) covers an area of more than 260 km2, (2) is up to 125 m thick, (3) fills low areas around mounds, which formed when underlying sand injectites lifted the overburden, (4) wedges out, away from a central thick zone, (5) is locally absent along irregular ditches, 20 km long and up to 50 m deep, which overlie feeders on the flanks of the mounds, and (6) consists of fine-grained to medium-grained, sub-rounded to rounded grains. We compare the distribution of the sand with the results of scaled physical experiments. In our interpretation, high fluid pressure fractured the regional Hordaland Group seal in the study area, so that fluidized sand moved rapidly to the seafloor through fissures on the flanks of underlying mounds, mixed with seawater, and formed lateral gravity currents. These transported the sand as much as 8 km away from the blow-out fissures and formed extruded sand sheets. Large extrusive sands represent a new type of economically interesting reservoir.
    Print ISSN: 0091-7613
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-2682
    Topics: Geosciences
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