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  • EARTH RESOURCES AND REMOTE SENSING  (4)
  • high terrain evolution  (1)
  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Speculations in science and technology 21 (1998), S. 171-185 
    ISSN: 1573-9309
    Keywords: Carbon dioxide ; crustal penetration by asteroid impact ; geochemical change ; extinction ; high terrain evolution
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Natural Sciences in General , Technology
    Notes: Abstract It has been established from geological studies that change in the atmospheric content of carbon dioxide gas commenced about one hundred million years ago. The likely origin of this change is advanced as being the onset of the Brewer circulation caused by the rise in terrain induced by tectonic plate movement. It is demonstrated that tectonic plate movement can be affected by impacts from external bodies which penetrate the crust of the Earth. The consequences of the change in atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide are proposed as first, extinctions and reductions in animal numbers, including primates, as a result of changes in body chemistry of these animals and second, a change in the rate of weathering of rocks giving rise to changes in the availability of chemicals such as calcium and potassium which are essential for plant and animal life. This latter change contributing to the extinctions and reductions in animal numbers. It is shown that the change in weathering can account for the rise to dominance of angiosperm plants. It is concluded that there were several simultaneous evolutionary environments on Earth which were a function of altitude which gave rise to a vertical variation in atmospheric content of carbon dioxide. This variation disappeared with rise of terrain and the onset of the Brewer circulation. Such changes are advanced and being much more important than any changes in temperature caused by greenhouse effects since the disappearance of atmospheric variations in carbon dioxide allowed animal migration. It is demonstrated that the conditions of extinction could be reintroduced by human activities.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2016-06-07
    Description: Very long baseline interferometry observations made with a 3900 km baseline interferometer (Haystack Observatory in Massachusetts to Owens Valley Observation in California) were used to estimate changes in the X-component of the position of the Earth's pole and in UT1. These estimates are compared with corresponding ones from lunar laser ranging, satellite laser ranging, satellite Doppler, and stellar observations.
    Keywords: EARTH RESOURCES AND REMOTE SENSING
    Type: Radio Interferometry; p 33-44
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2016-06-07
    Description: National Geodetic Survey activities towards the development of operational geodetic survey systems based on radio interferometry are reviewed. Information about the field procedures, data reduction and analysis, and the results obtained to date is presented.
    Keywords: EARTH RESOURCES AND REMOTE SENSING
    Type: NASA. Goddard Space Flight Center Radio Interferometry; p 9-22
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Radio interferometry measurements were used to measure the vector baselines between large microwave radio antennas. A 1.24 km baseline in Massachusetts between the 36 meter Haystack Observatory antenna and the 18 meter Westford antenna of Lincoln Laboratory was measured with 5 mm repeatability in 12 separate experiments. Preliminary results from measurements of the 3,928 km baseline between the Haystack antenna and the 40 meter antenna at the Owens Valley Radio Observatory in California are presented.
    Keywords: EARTH RESOURCES AND REMOTE SENSING
    Type: NASA-TM-X-71405 , X-922-77-242 , Ann. Meeting of the Am. Soc. of Civil Engr.; Oct 17, 1977 - Oct 21, 1977; San Francisco
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-06-27
    Description: The use of very-long-baseline interferometry (VLBI) observations for the estimation of geodetic and astrometric parameters is discussed. Analytic models for the dependence of delay and delay rate on these parameters are developed and used for parameter estimation by the method of weighted least squares. Results are presented from approximately 15,000 delay and delay-rate observations, obtained in a series of nineteen VLBI experiments involving a total of five stations on two continents. The closure of baseline triangles is investigated and found to be consistent with the scatter of the various baseline-component results. Estimates are made of the wobble of the earth's pole and of the irregularities in the earth's rotation rate. Estimates are also made of the precession constant and of the vertical Love number, for which a value of 0.55 + or - 0.05 was obtained.
    Keywords: EARTH RESOURCES AND REMOTE SENSING
    Type: NASA-TM-X-71395 , X-922-77-228
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