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  • Geological Society  (38)
  • 1
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    Geological Society
    In:  In: Subaqueous Mass Movements and Their Consequences: Assessing Geohazards, Environmental Implications and Economic Significance of Subaqueous Landslides. Geological Society London Special Publications, 477 . Geological Society, London, pp. 455-477.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-04
    Description: Landslides are common in aquatic settings worldwide, from lakes and coastal environments to the deep sea. Fast-moving, large-volume landslides can potentially trigger destructive tsunamis. Landslides damage and disrupt global communication links and other critical marine infrastructure. Landslide deposits act as foci for localized, but important, deep-seafloor biological communities. Under burial, landslide deposits play an important role in a successful petroleum system. While the broad importance of understanding subaqueous landslide processes is evident, a number of important scientific questions have yet to receive the needed attention. Collecting quantitative data is a critical step to addressing questions surrounding subaqueous landslides. Quantitative metrics of subaqueous landslides are routinely recorded, but which ones, and how they are defined, depends on the end-user focus. Differences in focus can inhibit communication of knowledge between communities, and complicate comparative analysis. This study outlines an approach specifically for consistent measurement of subaqueous landslide morphometrics to be used in the design of a broader, global open-source, peer-curated database. Examples from different settings illustrate how the approach can be applied, as well as the difficulties encountered when analysing different landslides and data types. Standardizing data collection for subaqueous landslides should result in more accurate geohazard predictions and resource estimation.
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart
    Format: text
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  • 2
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    Geological Society
    In:  Geophysics, London, 416 pp., Geological Society, vol. 200, no. 1, pp. 78-89, pp. L18607, (ISBN 1-86239-117-3)
    Publication Date: 2003
    Keywords: Textbook of geology ; Crustal deformation (cf. Earthquake precursor: deformation or strain) ; Rheology ; Tectonics ; Review article ; Structural geology ; atomic ; level ; pressure ; solution ; solid-state ; flow ; ductile ; fluids ; texture ; crust ; upper ; earth mantle ; state ; and ; perspectives
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  • 3
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    Geological Society
    In:  In: Atlas of submarine glacial landforms. , ed. by Dowdeswell, J. A., Canals, M., Jakobsson, M., Todd, B. J., Dowdeswell, E. K. and Hogan, K. A. Geological Society London Memoirs, 46 . Geological Society, London, pp. 17-40.
    Publication Date: 2017-02-14
    Description: The mapping of submarine glacial landforms is largely dependent on marine geophysical survey methods capable of imaging the seafloor and sub-bottom through the water column. Full global coverage of seafloor mapping, equivalent to that which exists for the Earth's land surface, has, to date, only been achieved by deriving bathymetry from radar altimeters on satellites such as GeoSat and ERS-1 (Smith & Sandwell 1997). The horizontal resolution is limited by the footprint of the satellite sensors and the need to average out local wave and wind effects, resulting in a cell size of about 15 km (Sandwell et al. 2001). A further problem in high latitudes is that the altimeter data are extensively contaminated by the presence of sea ice, which degrades the derived bathymetry (McAdoo & Laxon 1997). Consequently, the satellite altimeter method alone is not suitable for mapping submarine glacial landforms, given that their morphological characterization usually requires a much finer level of detail. Acoustic mapping methods based on marine echo-sounding principles are currently the most widely used techniques for mapping submarine glacial landforms because they are capable of mapping at a much higher resolution.
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 4
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    Geological Society
    In:  In: Atlas of submarine glacial landforms. , ed. by Dowdeswell, J. A., Canals, M., Jakobsson, M., Todd, B. J., Dowdeswell, E. K. and Hogan, K. A. Geological Society London Memoirs, 46 . Geological Society, London, pp. 519-552.
    Publication Date: 2017-03-10
    Description: Glacimarine processes affect about 20% of the global ocean today, and this area expanded considerably under cyclical full-glacial conditions during the Quaternary (Fig. 1) (Dowdeswell et al. 2016b). Many of the submarine landforms produced at the base and margin of past ice sheets remain well preserved on the seafloor in fjords and on high-latitude continental shelves after the retreat of the ice that produced them. These glacial landforms, protected from subaerial erosion and beneath wave-base and tidal currents in water that is often hundreds of metres deep, are gradually buried by both hemipelagic and glacimarine sedimentation; they may be preserved over long periods in the geological record if palaeo-continental shelves are not reworked by subsequent glacier advances or bottom currents (Dowdeswell et al. 2007). This means that, first, submarine glacial landforms can be observed at or close to the modern seafloor after retreat of the last great ice sheets from their most recent Quaternary maximum about 18–20 000 years ago using swath-bathymetric mapping systems and, secondly, buried glacial landforms may also be identified and examined within glacial-sedimentary sequences from Quaternary and earlier ice ages using seismic-reflection methods.
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 5
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    Geological Society
    In:  In: Atlas of submarine glacial landforms. , ed. by Dowdeswell, J. A., Canals, M., Jakobsson, M., Todd, B. J., Dowdeswell, E. K. and Hogan, K. A. Geological Society London Memoirs, 46 . Geological Society, London, pp. 3-14.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-03
    Description: Glacial landforms and sediments exposed sub-aerially have been the subject of description, analysis and interpretation for more than a century (e.g. De Laski 1864; De Geer 1889). Indeed, such features provided important initial observations informing Louis Agassiz's ideas that ice was a key instrument in sculpting the landscape and that glaciers and ice sheets had extended to mid-latitudes during the past, implying that Earth's climate must have changed considerably through time (Agassiz 1840). It is only in the last few decades that attention has begun to focus on the marine evidence for the past growth and decay of ice sheets that is recorded in submarine landforms and sediments preserved on high-latitude continental margins. This interest has been driven, in part, by the recognition that sediments deposited below wave-base are often well preserved in the Quaternary geological record, and may be less subject to erosion and reworking than their terrestrial counterparts. In addition, new marine-geophysical technologies have enabled increasingly high-resolution imaging and penetration of the high-latitude seafloor, most notably using multibeam swath-bathymetric and three-dimensional (3D) seismic-reflection methods, and modern ice-strengthened and ice-breaking research vessels have allowed the effective deployment of these increasingly sophisticated instruments in the often ice-infested waters of the Arctic and Antarctic seas.
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 6
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    Geological Society
    In:  In: The tectonics, sedimentation and palaeoceanography of the North Atlantic region. , ed. by Scrutton, R. A. Geological Society London Special Publications, 90 . Geological Society, London, UK, pp. 71-91.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-21
    Description: The crustal structure of the Mesozoic deep Galicia margin and adjacent ocean-continent boundary (OCB) was investigated by seismic reflection (including pre-stack depth migration and attenuation of seismic waves with time). The seismic data were calibrated using numerous geological samples recovered by drilling and/or by diving with submersible. The N-S trending margin and OCB are divided in two distinct segments by NE-SW synrift transverse faults locally reactivated and inverted by Cenozoic tectonics. The transverse faulting and OCB segmentation result from crustal stretching probably in a NE-SW direction during the rifting stage of the margin in early Cretaceous times. The Cenozoic tectonics are related to Iberia-Eurasia convergence in Palaeogene times (Pyrenean event). In both segments of the deep margin, the seismic crust is made of four horizontal layers: (1) two sedimentary layers corresponding to post- and syn-rift sequences, where velocity ranges from 1.9 to 3.5 km s−1, and where the Q factor is low, the two sedimentary layers being separated by a strong reflector marking the break-up unconformity; (2) a faulted layer, where velocity ranges from 4.0 to 5.2 km s−1, and where the Q factor is high. This layer corresponds to the margin tilted blocks, where continental basement and lithified pre-rift sediments were sampled; (3) the lower seismic crust, where the velocity (7 km s−1 and more) and the Q factor are the highest. This layer, probably made of partly serpentinized peridotite, is roofed by a strong S-S’ seismic reflector, and resting on a scattering, poorly reflective Moho. A composite model, based both on analogue modelling of lithosphere stretching and on available structural data, accounts for the present structure of the margin and OCB. Stretching and thinning of the lithosphere are accommodated by boudinage of the brittle levels (upper crust and uppermost mantle) and by simple shear in the ductile levels (lower crust and upper lithospheric mantle). Two main conjugate shear zones may account for the observations and seismic data: one (SZ1), located in the lower ductile continental crust, is synthetic to the tilting sense of the margin crustal blocks; another (SZ2), located in the ductile mantle, accounts for the deformation of mantle terranes and their final unroofing and exposure at the continental rift axis (now the OCB). The S-S′ reflector is interpreted as the seismic signature of the tectonic contact between crustal terranes and mantle rocks partly transformed into serpentinite by syn-rift hydrothermal activity. It is probably related to both shear zones SZ1 and SZ2. The seismic Moho is lower within the lithosphere, at the fresh-serpentinized peridotite boundary.
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 7
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    Geological Society
    In:  In: Metasomatism in oceanic and continental Lithospheric Mantle. , ed. by Coltorti, M. and Grégoire, M. Geological Society Special Publications, 293 . Geological Society, London, pp. 303-333. ISBN 978-1-86239-242-7
    Publication Date: 2016-01-14
    Type: Book chapter , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 8
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    Geological Society
    In:  London, Geological Society, vol. 48, no. XVI:, pp. 1-14, (ISBN 0-521-80380-2 (hb), 0521-00859-X (pb))
    Publication Date: 1990
    Keywords: Borehole geophys. ; Handbook of geophysics
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  • 9
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    Geological Society
    In:  Professional Paper, Geological Applications of Wireline Logs II, London, Geological Society, vol. 65, no. 16, pp. 221-234, (ISBN 0080419208)
    Publication Date: 1992
    Keywords: Borehole geophys. ; Physical properties of rocks ; Geol. aspects
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  • 10
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    Geological Society
    In:  Professional Paper, Geological Applications of Wireline Logs II, London, Geological Society, vol. 65, no. 16, pp. 179-184, (ISBN 1-86239-165-3, vi + 330 pp.)
    Publication Date: 1992
    Keywords: Borehole geophys. ; Borehole breakouts ; Stress
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