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  • Other Sources  (11)
  • Articles (OceanRep)  (10)
  • Bibliography on Seismology  (1)
  • AGU (American Geophysical Union)  (8)
  • Wiley
  • 1985-1989  (11)
  • 1987  (11)
  • 1
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    Wiley
    In:  New York, 3rd Edition, 538 pp., Wiley, vol. 14, no. 1, pp. 1-40, (ISBN 3-7643-6675-3)
    Publication Date: 1987
    Keywords: Reflection seismics ; Textbook of geophysics ; Applied geophysics
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  • 2
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Geophysical Research Letters, 14 (10). pp. 1061-1064.
    Publication Date: 2017-07-25
    Description: We present a method for objectively characterizing a swath of digitally sampled seafloor topography. Our method analyzes the distribution of surface slopes by compiling surface-normal vectors into a two-dimensional histogram using an equal-area projection. The direction of maximum variance (first principal axis) of the histogram is used to determine the azimuth of lineations in the topography, and the variance is used as a measure of seafloor roughness. We apply the method to short sections of Sea Beam swath data and find that the histogram parameters are effective in describing the behavior of the topography. In particular, similar patterns are observed for a sequence of histograms derived from data collected over the Mendocino and the Surveyor fracture zones in the northeast Pacific. Because the method does not require any data modification and is suitable for irregularly-shaped sample regions, it lends itself to real-time analysis.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 3
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research - Oceans, 92 (C3). pp. 2953-2969.
    Publication Date: 2016-04-14
    Description: The renewal of the deep water of the East Atlantic and its large-scale internal circulation are studied on the basis of the distributions of potential temperature, silicate, ΣCO2, and 14C. An isopycnal multibox model including advection, mixing, and sources and sinks is set up and described. Tracer data are input for the model, and balance equations for the various properties for the boxes of the model serve as constraints for the determination of water fluxes, mixing coefficients, and source parameters. Extremal values for various model parameters that are consistent with the tracer data (satisfy the balance equations within the estimated tolerances) are calculated by linear programming techniques. 14C data are seen to be valuable in determining absolute flow rates. Model results confirm the importance of the Romanche Facture Zone for the renewal of east Atlantic deep water. Eastward flows through the Romanche Fracture Zone were found to be between 2.6 and 5.1 Sv. Flows through the Vema Fracture Zone amount to at most 20% of the Romanche Fracture Zone inflow. Contributions of Antarctic Bottom Water at the southern end of the East Atlantic (Walvis Ridge) and of Iceland Scotland Overflow Water at the northern end are very small (〈 5% of equatorial inflow). Diapycnal mixing coefficients are between 1 and 10 cm2/s, and values for the dissolution rates of silicate and carbon are in the expected range.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 4
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 92 (C12). pp. 12993-13002.
    Publication Date: 2019-04-04
    Description: Reducing the large volume of TIROS-N series advanced very high resolution radiometer-derived data to a practical size for application to regional physcial oceanographic studies is a formidable task. Such data exist on a global basis for January 1979 to the present at approximately 4-km resolution (global area coverage data, ≈2 passes per day) and in selected areas at high resolution (local area coverage and high-resolution picture transmission data, at ≈1-km resolution) for the same period. An approach that has been successful for a number of studies off the east coast of the United States divided the processing into two procedures: preprocessing and data reduction. The preprocessing procedure can reduce the data volume per satellite pass by over 98% for full-resolution data or by ≈84% for the lower-resolution data while the number of passes remains unchanged. The output of the preprocessing procedure for the examples presented is a set of sea surface temperature (SST) fields of 512 × 1024 pixels covering a region of approximately 2000 × 4000 km. In the data reduction procedure the number of SST fields (beginning with one per satellite pass) is generally reduced to a number manageable from the analyst's perspective (of the order of one SST field per day). This is done in most of the applications presented by compositing the data into 1- or 2-day groups. The phenomena readily addressed by such procedures are the mean position of the Gulf Stream, the envelope of Gulf Stream meandering, cold core Gulf Stream ring trajectories, statistics on diurnal warming, and the region and period of 18°C water formation. The flexibility of this approach to regional oceanographic problems will certainly extend the list of applications quickly.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 5
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Paleoceanography, 2 (6). pp. 543-559.
    Publication Date: 2016-09-05
    Description: A suit of sediment cores close to and south of the Strait of Gibraltar (12°-36°N, 500–2800 m water depth) were analyzed for stable isotopes in epibenthic foraminifers Cibicidoides wuellerstorfi and Planulina ariminensis. During peak glacial times, the data exhibit higher δ13C values of up to 1.6‰ at intermediate depths near the Strait of Gibraltar (36°N). The values decrease to the south as evidenced by our data, but also to the north as revealed by data of intermediate depth cores north of 38°N (in Duplessy et al. [1987]). Thus, the distribution pattern of δ13C provides crucial evidence for an increased influence of nutrient depleted Mediterranean Outflow Water (MOW) on the glacial northeast Atlantic hydrography. During oxygen isotope Terminations I and II, the meridional carbon isotope gradient indicates a significantly decreased but still active MOW. As deduced from the δ18O fluctuations, the temperatures of the MOW in the Atlantic were lower during glacial times by as much as 5°C. During glacial times and during Termination I the maximum δ13C values of the MOW correlate with minimum values of the North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) and vice versa. This inverse response to climatic change of the carbon isotope signals of both water masses indicates, that the supply of saline MOW to the north Atlantic may be less important for the formation of NADW than previously assumed.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 6
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 1 (1). pp. 15-29.
    Publication Date: 2016-06-15
    Description: The only viable explanations put forth to date for the glacial to interglacial change in atmospheric CO2 content suggested from measurements of the CO2 content of gas extracted from ice cores involve changes in the ocean's nutrient cycles. Any nutrient change capable of creating the 80 µatm changes in atmosphere CO2 pressure suggested by the ice core results also creates significant change in the deep ocean's CO3= content. Evidence from deep sea sediments suggests that these CO3= changes are compensated on the time scale of a few thousand years by reductions or increases in amount of CaCO3 accumulating in deep sea sediments. This compensation process has two important consequences. First, it significantly increases the magnitude of the CO2 change per unit of nutrient forcing. Second, it causes a delay in the response of the atmospheric CO2 change. While the first of these consequences is a boon to those seeking to explain the CO2 change, the second may prove to be a curse. The ice core CO2 record shows no evidence of a significant lag between the CO2 response and the polar warming. In any case it is important that we improve our knowledge of the magnitude and timing of the CaCO3 preservation events which mark the close of episodes of glaciation and of the dissolution events which mark the onset of these episodes.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 7
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research - Solid Earth, 92 (B5). pp. 3567-3572.
    Publication Date: 2016-09-15
    Description: A number of factors must be considered when using particle motion information to determine azimuths to source or azimuths of horizontal geophone axes on or below the ocean floor. These factors include anisotropy, unmatched sensor response, incorrect instrument location, tilted sensors or dipping structure, and poor coupling. Accurate determination of azimuths requires identification and understanding of these factors and their effects on the data.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2020-06-30
    Description: The diets of adult Macaroni penguins Eudyptes chrysolophus chrysolophus and Southern rockhopper penguins E. chrysocome chrysocome were analysed quantitatively at Marion Island, southern Indian Ocean, throughout two successive chick-rearing seasons. The diets were broadly similar. Crustaceans were the predominant prey type comprising, overall, 90% by mass and 98% by numbers in Macaroni penguins and 96% by mass and 99% by numbers in rockhopper penguins. Nauticaris marionis was the predominant crustacean eaten by both penguin species in 1983–84, but Euphausia vallentini and Thysanoessa vicina predominated in 1984–85. Themisto gaudichaudii was present in appreciable numbers only in Macaroni penguins. Fish was not found in measurable quantities in either species in 1983–84, but contributed 5% and 4% of the mass of the diet in Macaroni and rockhopper penguins, respectively, when calculated in terms of the original biomass of food ingested. In 1984–85, however, fish comprised 10% and 6% of observed mass and c. 25% and 14% of original biomass ingested in Macaroni and rockhopper penguins, respectively. Pelagic myctophids, predominantly Krefftichthys anderssoni, Protomyctophum tenisoni and P. normani between 0·01 and 8·3 g, were the most commonly identified fish prey, but Macaroni penguins took an appreciable number of Electrona carlsbergi in 1983–84. Cephalopods made up between 1 % and 3% of the diet by mass in both penguin species and between 5% and 13% of original biomass ingested. Predominant cephalopods eaten were Kondakovia longimana and an unidentified octopus species. The relative proportions of each prey type change throughout chick-rearing, with pelagic fish and cephalopods comprising a larger proportion later in the season when the penguins were assumed to be foraging farther from their breeding sites. Dietary segregation of the two species appears to be related to the difference in the timing of the breeding season, which begins three to four weeks earlier in Macaroni penguins.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 9
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Tectonics, 6 (1). pp. 53-67.
    Publication Date: 2019-06-11
    Description: The structure and evolution of the northern New Guinea collision zone is deduced from International Seismological Center (ISC) seismicity (1964–1985), new and previously published focal mechanisms and a reexamination of pertinent geological data. A tectonic model for the New Guinea margin is derived which illustrates the sequential stages in the collision and suturing of the Bewani‐Toricelli‐Adelbert‐Finisterre‐Huon‐New Britain arc to central New Guinea followed by subduction polarity reversal in the west. East of 149°E, the Solomon plate is being subducted both to the north and south; bringing the New Britain and Trobriand forearcs toward collision. West of 149°E the forearcs have collided, and together they override a fold in the doubly subducted Solomon plate lithosphere, which has an axis that is parallel to the strike of the Ramu‐Markham suture and that plunges westward at an angle of 5° beneath the coast ranges of northern New Guinea. Active volcanism off the north coast of New Guinea is related to subduction of the Solomon plate beneath the Bismarck plate. Active volcanism of the Papuan peninsula and Quaternary volcanism of the New Guinea highlands are related to slow subduction of the Solomon plate beneath the Indo‐Australian plate along the Trobriand Trough and the trough’s former extension to the west, respectively. From 144°–148°E, seismicity and focal mechanisms reveal that convergence between the sutured Bismarck and Indo‐Australian plates is accommodated by thrusting within the Finisterre and Adelbert ranges and compression of the New Guinea orogenic belt, together with basement‐involved foreland folding and thrusting to the south. The Finisterre block overthrusts the New Guinea orogenic belt, whereas the Adelbert block is sutured to New Guinea and overthrusts the oceanic lithosphere of the Bismarck Sea. Along the New Guinea Trench, west of 144°E, seismicity defines a southward dipping Wadati‐Benioif zone, and focal mechanisms indicate oblique subduction. Only this oldest, westernmost portion of the collision has progressed past suturing to a full reversal in subduction polarity.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 10
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Water Resources Research, 23 (4). pp. 618-624.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-20
    Description: A parametric model is developed to describe relative permeability‐saturation‐fluid pressure functional relationships in two‐ or three‐fluid phase porous media systems subject to monotonic saturation paths. All functions are obtained as simple closed‐form expressions convenient for implementation in numerical multiphase flow models. Model calibration requires only relatively simple determinations of saturation‐pressure relations in two‐phase systems. A scaling procedure is employed to simplify the description of two‐phase saturation‐capillary head relations for arbitrary fluid pairs and experimental results for two porous media are presented to demonstrate its applicability. Extension of two‐phase relations to three‐ phase systems is obtained under the assumption that fluid wettability follows the sequence water 〉 nonaqueous phase liquid 〉 air. Expressions for fluid relative permeabilities are derived from the scaled saturation‐capillary head function using a flow channel distribution model to estimate effective mean fluid‐conducting pore dimensions. Constraints on model application are discussed.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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