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  • Other Sources  (35)
  • Springer  (20)
  • AGU (American Geophysical Union)  (12)
  • Cambridge University Press  (3)
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  • 1995-1999
  • 1985-1989  (35)
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  • 1985  (35)
  • 1
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    Springer
    In:  New York, Springer, vol. 7, no. Publ. No. 12, pp. 127, (ISBN 3-540-44363-0)
    Publication Date: 1985
    Keywords: Stress ; Borehole geophys. ; Seismicity ; Tectonics ; FROTH, ; RUB ; GMG
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  • 2
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Cambridge, 4th Edition, 470 pp., Cambridge University Press, vol. 106, pp. 503, (ISBN 0-415-24328-9 (hb), 0-203-47128-8 (pb))
    Publication Date: 1985
    Keywords: Textbook of geophysics ; Seismology
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  • 3
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    Springer
    In:  Professional Paper, Observation of the Continental Crust Through Drilling I., Berlin, Springer, vol. 1, no. 231, pp. 324-342, (ISBN: 3-540-23712-7)
    Publication Date: 1985
    Keywords: Stress ; Borehole geophys. ; Seismicity ; Tectonics
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  • 4
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    Springer
    In:  Heidelberg, Springer, vol. V/2, no. Subvol. b, pp. 220, (ISBN: 0-08-037951-6)
    Publication Date: 1985
    Keywords: Review article ; Seismology ; (The Earth's free) oscillations ; Waves ; Gravimetry, Gravitation ; Geomagnetics ; Planetology ; solar ; system ; Bosum ; Busse ; Chapman ; Gierloff-Emden ; Haak ; Hagedorn ; Jacoby ; Lubinova ; Rucher ; Roeser ; Schmucker ; Soffel ; Stacey ; Voppel
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  • 5
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  In: The Carbon Cycle and Atmospheric CO2: Natural Variations Archean to Present. , ed. by Sundquist, E. T. and Broecker, W. S. Geophysical Monograph, 32 . AGU (American Geophysical Union), Boulder, pp. 504-529.
    Publication Date: 2017-01-30
    Description: The Stratigraphie record from both deep-sea and shallow-water depositional environments Indicates that during late Aptian through Cenomanian time (1) global climates were considerably warmer than at present; (2) latitudinal gradients of atmospheric and oceanic temperatures were considerably less than at present; (3) rates of accumulation of organic matter of both marine and terrestrial origin were as high as or higher than during any other interval in the Mesozoic or Cenozoic; (4) the rate and volume of accumulation of CaC02 in the deep sea were reduced in response to a marked shoaling of the carbonate compensation depth; (5) seafloor spreading rates were somewhat more rapid than at any other time in the Cretaceous or Cenozoic; (6) off-ridge volcanism was intense and widespread, particularly in the ancestral Pacific Ocean basin; and (7) sea level was relatively high, forming widespread areas of shallow shelf seas. A marked increase in the rate of C02 outgassing due to volcanic activity between about 110 and 70 m.y. ago may have resulted in a buildup of atmospheric C02. A significant fraction of this atmospheric C02 may have been reduced by an increase in the production and burial of terrestrial organic carbon. Some excess C02 may have been consumed by marine algal photosynthesis, but marine productivity apparently was low during the Aptian-Albian relative to terrestrial productivity. Terrestrial productivity also may have been stimulated by increased rainfall that resulted from a warm global climate and increased marine transgression as well as by the higher C02.
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  • 6
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    Springer
    In:  In: Submarine Fans and Related Turbidite Systems. Springer, New York, pp. 71-78. ISBN 978-1-4612-9570-9
    Publication Date: 2018-01-19
    Description: The Magdalena Fan can be divided into: upper fan—1:60–1:110 gradients, channels with well-developed levees, generally several subbottom reflectors on 3.5-kHz records, and fine-grained sediments; middle fan—1:110–1:200 gradients, channels with very subdued levees, several to few sub- bottom reflectors on 3.5-kHz records, and chaotic and discontinuous reflections on multichannel seismic (MCS) records; lower fan—1:250 gradients, small channels and relatively smooth seafloor, generally coarsegrained sediments, few or no subbottom reflectors on 3.5-kHz records, and flat continuous reflections on MCS records. In addition to the turbidity currents, slumping along the continental slope and elsewhere also influenced sedimentation in the fan.
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 7
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 90 (C6). p. 11811.
    Publication Date: 2018-02-26
    Description: Large diurnal sea surface warming exceeding 1°C is common in the western North Atlantic Ocean and is often of large horizontal extent. These events correlate closely with very light winds and high insolation. In the area investigated, 17°–40°N and 55°–80°W, the largest warming is found in the western portion of the ridge associated with the Azores-Bermuda high, where the lowest wind speeds are observed. The distribution of warming events shows that the largest number occur between June and August, when insolation is highest and percent cloud cover and wind speed are low. The most probable latitude of warming events moves north from approximately 25°N in spring to near 30°N in summer, a shift similar to that seen in the minimum of the climatological winds. Local areas have a probability as high as 30% for diurnal warming in excess of 1°C in the summer. The net heat flux into the ocean, calculated by using monthly mean values for low latitudes in the summer, excluding diurnal warming events, is biased consistently high by as much as 5 W/m2 relative to the same values calculated with warming events included.
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  • 8
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research - Solid Earth, 90 (B8). 6709-6736 .
    Publication Date: 2016-04-18
    Description: Heat flow in the Imperial Valley and adjacent crystalline rocks is very high (∼140 mW m−2). Gravity and seismic studies suggest the crust is about 23.5 km thick with the lower half composed of gabbro and the upper fourth composed of low-density sediments. Conduction through such a crust resting directly on asthenosphere would give the observed heat flow if there were no extension or sedimentation. However, both processes must have been active, as the Imperial Valley is part of the Salton Trough, a pull-apart sedimentary basin that evolved over the past 4 or 5 m.y. To investigate the interrelations of these factors, we consider a one-dimensional model of basin formation in which the lower crustal gabbro and upper crustal sediments accumulated simultaneously as the crust extended and sedimentation kept pace with isostatic subsidence. For parameters appropriate for the Salton Trough, increasing the extension rate has little effect on surface heat flow because it increases effects of heating by intrusion and cooling by sedimentation in a compensating manner; it does, however, result in progressively increasing lower crustal temperatures. Analytical results suggest that the average extensional strain rate during formation of the trough was ∼20–50%/m.y. (∼1014 s−1); slower rates are inadequate to account for the present composition of the crust, and faster rates would probably cause massive crustal melting. To achieve the differential velocities of the Pacific plate at one end of the trough and North American plate at the other with this strain rate, extension must have, on the average, been distributed (or shifted about) over a spreading region ∼150 km wide. This is about 10 times wider than the present zone of active seismicity, suggesting that the seismic pattern is ephemeral on the time scale for the trough's formation. Narrow spreading zones are typical where sustained spreading is compensated by basaltic intrusion to form the thin oceanic crust, but where such spreading occurs in thicker continental crust, broader zones of distributed extension (with smaller strain rates) may be required for heat balance. The Salton Trough model suggests that distributed extension can be associated with substantial magmatic additions to the crust; their effect on crustal buoyancy has important implications for the relation between crustal extension and subsidence.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 9
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research - Solid Earth, 90 (B12). pp. 10043-10072.
    Publication Date: 2016-05-04
    Description: Petrological, geochemical, and geophysical gradients along the SE volcanic zone in Iceland imply systematic variations in melting and crystallization conditions and in magma supply and eruption rates. At the southern tip of the zone, in Vestmannaeyjar, alkali basalt magmas are generated by small degrees of melting under a thick lithosphere. Farther north, in the Hekla-Katla region, greater degrees of melting result in the generation of transitional basalt magmas. Magma supply rates exceed eruption rates, and melts begin to accumulate at the base of the crust, as indicated by magnetotelluric evidence. Uniform rare earth element patterns in the Hekla-Katla basalts may be explained by homogenization in the melt accumulation zone or by uniform melting conditions. Infrequent replenishment of magma reservoirs in this region leads to mixing of compositionally diverse magmas and, consequently, to basalts with diverse phenocryst compositions and textures. Even farther north, in central Iceland, the melting anomaly associated with the SE zone has developed to the same degree as it has beneath the SW axial rift zone, leading to similar magmatic conditions. High magma supply rates and low cooling rates inhibit fractionation and lead to the eruption of voluminous olivine tholeiites. In these areas a broad spectrum of melt compositions is generated by variable degrees of melting over a wide depth range. The compositional diversity, e.g., in large ion lithophile element enrichment, is masked somewhat by reequilibration and mixing of melts on ascent and in the melt accummulation zone. Compositional diversity may be preserved, however, in the melt accummulation zone in a lateral direction away from the rift axis since distal parts of the melt zone are fed only by melts segregating at greater depths. The variations in magmatic conditions along the SE zone, which are analogous to those inferred along propagating rifts, may be related to a mantle blob that ascended beneath central Iceland 2–3 m.y. ago, spread out laterally and triggered a southward propagating rift.
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2016-01-22
    Description: The lipopolysaccharides of Rhodobacter sulfidophilus and the two budding species Rhodopseudomonas acidophila and Rhodopseudomonas blastica were isolated and chemically analyzed. The all have a lipid A backbone structure with glucosamine as the only amino sugar. The lipid A's of Rb. sulfidophilus and Rps. blastica contain phosphate, their fatty acids are characterized by ester-linked, unsubstituted 3-OH-10:0 and amide-linked 3-OH-14:0 (Rb. sulfidophilus) or 3-oxo-14:0 (Rps. blastica). Lipid A of Rps. acidophila is free of phosphate and contains the rare 3-OH-16:0 fatty acid in amide linkage. The lipopolysaccharides of all three species contain 2-keto-3-deoxy-octonate (KDO) but are devoid of heptoses. Neutral sugars with the exception of glucose are lacking in the lipopolysaccharide of Rb. sulfidophilus. This shows a high galacturonic acid content. The lipopolysaccharides of Rps. acidophila and Rps. blastica have neutral sugar spectra indicative for typical O-chains (rhamnose, mannose, galactose, glucose in both species, and in Rps. blastica additionally 2-O-methyl-6-deoxy-hexose). The taxonomic value of the data is discussed.
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  • 11
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Reviews of Geophysics and Space Physics, 23 (2). pp. 165-182.
    Publication Date: 2016-01-11
    Description: A variety of observations of intense, long-lived oceanic vortices are interpreted as examples of a distinct phenomenon, which is given the name Submesoscale, Coherent Vortices (SCV's). The distinguishing characteristics of SCV's are defined and illustrated by example, and a survey is made of the different SCV types presently known. On the basis of extant theoretical and modeling solutions, interpretations are made of the dynamics associated with SCV existence, movement, endurance, interactions with other currents, generation, and contributions to the transport of chemical properties in the ocean.
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  • 12
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    Springer
    In:  Paläontologische Zeitschrift, 59 (1-2). pp. 15-33.
    Publication Date: 2018-01-25
    Description: A concept explaining biocalcification as a form of calcium detoxification is advanced using geochemical and paleontological criteria. The first appearence of calcareous skeletons at the turn of the Precambrian/Cambrian is interpreted as a biotic response to a gradual rise of Ca2+ in world ocean resulting in Ca2+ stress environments in shelf areas. Periodic appearance in the Phanerozoic record of heavily calcified marine biota, absent or relic in modern seas, suggests considerable temporal fluctuations of calcium concentrations in the ancient ocean. Temporal changes in Ca2+ and mineral nutrient contents in the environment can thus be seen as overriding factors in the evolution of organisms.
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  • 13
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  In: The carbon cycle and atmospheric CO2: Natural variations archean to present; Proceedings of the Chapman Conference on Natural Variations in Carbon Dioxide and the Carbon Cycle, Tarpon Springs, FL, January 9-13, 1984. AGU (American Geophysical Union), Washington, DC, pp. 303-317.
    Publication Date: 2015-08-03
    Description: A 340,000-year record of benthic and planktonic oxygen and carbon isotope measurements from an equatorial Pacific deep-sea core are analyzed. The data provide estimates of both global ice volume and atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration over this period. The frequencies characteristic of changes in the earth-sun orbital geometry dominate all the records. Examination of phase relationships shows that atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration leads ice volume over the orbital bandwidth, and is forced by orbital changes through a mechanism, at present not fully understood, with a short response time. Changes in atmospheric CO2 are not primarily caused by glacial-interglacial sea level changes, which had been hypothesized to affect atmospheric CO2 through the effect on ocean chemistry of changing sedimentation on the continental shelves. Instead, variations in atmospheric CO2 should be regarded as part of the forcing of ice volume changes.
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 14
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    Springer
    In:  In: Observation of the Continental Crust Through Drilling I : proceedings of the international symposium held in Tarrytown, May 20-25, 1984. , ed. by Raleigh, C. B. Exploration of the deep continental crust . Springer, Berlin (u.a.), pp. 6-15. ISBN 3-540-15873-1 ; 0-387-15873-1
    Publication Date: 2015-03-02
    Description: For most earth scientists outside the USSR, plans for deep continental crustal drilling seem unrealistic. It will be even harder to convince money-spending organizations or personalities of their feasability. Therefore, we ourselves should continually have in mind an introduction to lectures that Patrick Winston from MIT uses to sell Artificial Intelligence: "If you are a skeptic, I want to make you a believer - and if you are a believer, I want to make you a skeptic."
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 15
    Publication Date: 2020-03-20
    Description: A multi-pond saltern that creates a gradient of salt concentrations has been studied with respect to some characteristics of the resulting environments and their microbial populations. The increase in salt concentration was correlated with increase in diurnal temperature and biomass present and with decrease in oxygen concentrations. Many types of organisms below 15% (w/v) total salts, were found, many of them normal inhabitants of seawater and even freshwater. Most organisms over 15% salts were halophilic. The salt concentrations comprised two ranges, each characterized by different microbial populations. First, between 15 and 30% salts, the populations ofDunaliella increased, reaching large numbers; moderately halophilic eubacteria and some fast-growing halobacteria predominated as heterotrophic microorganisms and, among the first, thePseudomonas-Alteromonas-Alcaligenes group andVibrio were the more abundant taxonomic groups; and gram-positive cocci appeared mainly over 25% salts. Phototrophic bacteria, both oxygenic and anoxygenic, were also found in this range, and among the anoxygenic type,Chromatium species andRodospirillum salexigens were probably predominant. Second, over 30% salts the diversity decreased greatly, all organisms found at the lower salt concentrations disappeared, and instead large populations of halobacteria developed. Over 50% salts, only three species of halobacteria were found.
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  • 16
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    Springer
    In:  In: Antarctic Nutrient Cycles and Food Webs. , ed. by Siegfried, W. R., Condy, P. R. and Laws, R. M. Springer, Berlin, Germany, pp. 551-554. ISBN 978-3-642-82277-3
    Publication Date: 2020-06-11
    Description: The Sub-Antarctic Fur Seal, Arctocephalus tropicalis, at Gough Island preys predominantly on cephalopods, but includes relatively small quantities of fish in its diet. Stomachs of Fur Seals (n = 220) culled on land were either empty (32%), contained only stones (8%) or contained almost exclusively prey remains resistant to digestion, such as cephalopod pens, ‘beaks’, eye balls, fish bones and otoliths. The pooled cephalopod lower beaks (n = 424) that could be identified (n = 337), showed that Ommastrephidae (52.5%), Histioteuthidae (25.2%), Onychoteuthidae (19.9%), Cranchiidae (2.1%) and Octopoteuthidae (0.3%) constituted the main prey items based on frequency of occurrence. Cephalopod mass estimates, from regression of lower rostral lengths against mass, approximated this relative arrangement of cephalopod families.
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 17
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    Springer
    In:  Deutsche Hydrographische Zeitschrift, 38 (1). pp. 7-22.
    Publication Date: 2016-11-02
    Description: Current data obtained from 7 moorings in the Northeast Atlantic in the course of many years are analysed with respect to semi-diurnal barotropic and baroclinic tides and diurnal barotropic tides. For semi-diurnal tides M2 and S2 the energy distribution is usually dominated by the barotropic mode; only in a few cases does the first-order baroclinic mode contain higher energy. Barotropic tidal ellipse orientations are found to be consistent with results from earlier tide gauge observations in this area. Significant deviations occur, however, in amplitudes. Results for the diurnal component K1 are also presented. With few exceptions, tides are found to be progressive waves in this area. The current ellipse pattern is similar to results obtained indirectly by Cartwright, Edden, Spencer et al. [1980] from tide gauge observations.
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  • 18
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    Springer
    In:  Marine Biology, 85 (3). pp. 313-322.
    Publication Date: 2019-02-27
    Description: Fishes and zooplankton were obtained (March-April 1979 and partly in August 1974) from 45 hauls taken during the day and at night in the central equatorial Atlantic between Latitude 3 ~ and 2 ~ from the surface to 1250-m depth, using the RMT 1+8, a combined opening-closing plankton and micronekton trawl. The vertical distribution of 30 myctophid species is described. All species migrate in a diel pattern, Ceratoscopelus warmingii and Lampanyctus photonotus down to at least 1250 m. During daytime most species aggregated at 400- to 700-m depth, therefore only partly occupying the depth of the Deep Scattering Layer (400 to 500 m at 15 kHz). The feeding patterns of seven of the most abundant species were compared, with a total of 1 905 stomach contents being analysed. All seven species are regarded as opportunistic predators, which feed predominantly during the night on calanoid copepods. A total of 66 species of calanoid copepods were identified among the prey items, with smaller species definitely being in the minority. Stomachs of C. warmingii (700 to 1 250 m depth) and Lepidophanes guentheri (500 to 900 m depth) from daytime samples contained copepod species restricted to the upper 150 m of the water column, including Undinula vulgaris, Nannocalanus minor, and Euchaeta marina, thereby confirming an extended vertical migration of predators. Differences in diet and preferences between species in their total food spectrum are described.
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  • 19
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  In: The Carbon Cycle and Atmospheric CO: Natural Variations Archean to Present. , ed. by Sundquist, E. T. and Broecker, W. S. Geophysical Monograph, 32 . AGU (American Geophysical Union), Washington, pp. 469-486.
    Publication Date: 2016-07-20
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 20
    Publication Date: 2020-07-14
    Description: Adult Sepia officinalis L. were caught in June 1984, in the coastal waters of Wimereux (France). Deposition of the eggs took place in the seawater aquaria of the “Station Marine”. The oxygen consumption of S. officinalis was measured during embryonic and juvenile development. Aerobic metabolism occurs as soon as the early embryonic Stage 21. Oxygen diffuses through the initially thick egg shell; the oxygen level in the perivitelline liquid reaches a maximal value just before hatching (116.7±6.9 mm Hg). Hatchings display only a slight increase in oxygen consumption compared to embryos in the last stage of development. Respiration experiments with 40 d old juveniles showed that oxygen consumption increases with temperature, but is not affected by photoperiod. Experiments under increasing hypoxia revealed that S. officinalis juveniles are good regulators and maintain a constant oxygen consumption in the range of 4 to 7 mg O2l-1. Juveniles successfully recover from an hypoxic stress of 2 mg O2l-1 maintained for 1 h. This suggests that the respiratory pigments (pre-hemocyanins) of 40 d-old juveniles have a high oxygen affinity and/or that these juveniles have the ability to adapt to anaerobic conditions.
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  • 21
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    Springer
    In:  Marine Biology, 86 (2). pp. 199-202.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-14
    Description: Cephalopod remains were collected from all of 12 dead Emperor penguin chicks [Aptenodytes forsteri (Gray)], from 76% of 29 living adult Emperor penguins, and from 18% of 105 living adult Adelie penguins [Pygoscelis adeliae (Hombron & Jacquinot)] from Adelie Land, Antarctica, in 1982. Of the seven species of squids represented by lower beaks, Psychroteuthis glacialis comprised 88% of the number in both Emperor chicks and Emperor adults and 100% in Adelie adults. From estimates of the weight of squids represented by lower beaks, Gonatus antarcticus and Kondakovia longimana contributed 18 and 14%, respectively, of the weight of squids in the diet of Emperor chicks and 27 and 21%, respectively, in the diet of Emperor adults. The data suggest that Psychroteuthis glacialis probably hatch in July-September and grow steadily for one year, and then spawn and die.
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  • 22
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 65 (04). p. 983.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-16
    Description: Cephalopods may be divided into five types according to their buoyancy. Members of several families such as the Octopodidae, Loliginidae and Ommastrephidae are negatively buoyant and must swim to stay in midwater and are therefore highly muscular animals. Others have mechanisms to make them neutrally buoyant so they can remain suspended in midwater without effort. Nautilus, Spirula and cuttlefishes have low pressure gas-filled chambers and their flesh is muscular and non-buoyant (Denton & Gilpin-Brown, 1973). Squids of one family, the Gonatidae, have a low density oil in their livers to give buoyancy but most of their body is muscular. Some oceanic octopods have very watery tissues in which lighter chloride ions replace sulphate ions (Denton & Shaw, 1961). In 12 of the 26 teuthoid families the buoyancy is provided by low-density ammonia-rich solution in their body and head tissues or in an expanded coelomic cavity (Clarke, Denton & Gilpin-Brown, 1979). These ammoniacal squids are extremely abundant in the oceans of the world and form a large part of the diet of birds, cetaceans, seals and fish (Clarke, 1977). When their biomass is estimated from their utilization by predators it is important to know their properties as food and, in particular, their calorific values. As pointed out by Croxall & Prince in a review of the calorific values of cephalopods (1982), all the known values are of muscular, negatively buoyant species because they are of value as food for humans but no measurements have been made on the ammoniacal or oily species which are probably as important, or even more important, in the economy of the ocean (Clarke, 1983).
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  • 23
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    Springer
    In:  Estuaries, 8 (2A). pp. 145-157.
    Publication Date: 2019-02-27
    Description: Over the past decade, the annual cycle of the major pelagic processes in relation to environmental factors and species composition of the plankton has been studied intensively at a fixed station in Kiel Bight. A series of sequential phases, differentiated according to characteristic properties, succeed each other in a recurring pattern each year. The following phases have been differentiated: the spring diatom bloom, the late spring copepod maximum, the summer stratification, the fall blooms and the winter dormancy. Each phase represents a particular pattern of biogenous element cycling, both within the pelagic system and between the pelagic and benthic systems. Each phase is also characterized by a spectrum of dominant species, many of which do not recur each year. Greatest variation is found amongst bloom diatoms, whereas large, slow-growing species such as the Ceratia and most metazooplankton are highly recurrent. Variation in species composition is not related to long-term trends since the past century, in spite of the considerable increase in anthropogenic nutrient input to the Bight. Short-term events appear to determine occurrence of fast-growing species, many of which have benthic resting stages in their life histories. It is concluded that more attention should be paid to life history strategies of species if the mechanisms of seasonal succession are to be elucidated. Long-term observations on appearance or absence of the various species in relation to environmental properties can provide clues as to the nature of these life history strategies.
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  • 24
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    Springer
    In:  Oecologia, 67 (2). pp. 255-259.
    Publication Date: 2020-06-16
    Description: Every summer the deepest parts of the inner Flensburg fjord are subject to O2-deficiency lasting from a few weeks to several months. In spring, however, populations of Metridium senile can be found in these areas, in spite of the fact that frequently the local anoxic period of the previous summer has been 2–3 times longer than their anoxia LD50-value (3 wks). Responsible for this phenomenon is an intensive recolonization by adult Metridium during autumn and winter. This process has been investigated in an 8 months monitoring from May to December 1981. Results on the recolonization mechanism, the population structure of immigrating anemones and recolonization rate as a function of available hard substratum are presented.
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  • 25
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 90 (B7). pp. 5429-5442.
    Publication Date: 2019-05-14
    Description: A multichannel seismic reflection record across the central Peru margin and trench was improved by processing 24 rather than the 12 channels previously processed and by thorough migrating to reject the strong diffractions that obscured weaker primary reflections. The increased resolution clarifies the structure of the 15‐km‐wide frontal accretionary complex and the adjacent truncated continental framework against which the trench sediment was imbricated. Resolved are individual thrust slices and packets adjacent to the trench axis, subducting sediment‐filled graben in the ocean crust beneath the lower slope, and a Tertiary stratigraphic section of the upper slope Yaquina Basin which is cut by normal faults. The resolution in this multichannel record provides criteria for reinterpreting single‐channel data off Chile with increased confidence. The previously proposed truncation of the South American continent along much of the Peru‐Chile Trench is confirmed and the development of an accretionary complex in front of the truncated continental crust appears to vary with the amount of sediment seen in the trench axis. The Andean margin frontal structure is similar to that off Central America, the Aleutian Trench, and the Japan Trench which suggests common truncation as well as accretion at the front of convergent margins.
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  • 26
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  In: The Carbon Cycle and Atmospheric CO2 : Natural Variations Archean to Present. , ed. by Sundquist, E. T. Geophysical monograph series, 32 . AGU (American Geophysical Union), Washington, D.C., pp. 99-110. ISBN 0-87590-060-7
    Publication Date: 2019-06-25
    Description: An ocean carbon pump is defined as a process that depletes the ocean surface of σCO2 relative to the deep‐water σCO2. Three pumps are recognized: a carbonate pump, a soft‐tissue pump, and a solubility pump. The first two result from the biological flux of organic and CaCO3 detritus from the ocean's surface. The third results from the increased CO2 solubility in downwelling cold water and is demonstrated by a one‐dimensional upwelling‐diffusion model of an abiotic ocean. In the soft‐tissue and solubility pumps, working strengths are defined in terms of the ΔσCO2 each creates between surface and deep‐water. Efficiencies of each pump are quantified as a ratio of working strength to potential maximum strength. Using alkalinity, nitrate, and σCO2 to remove the carbonate pump signal from ocean or model data, the individual working strengths of the soft‐tissue and solubility pumps can be calculated by scaling the soft‐tissue's ΔσCO2 to the surface‐to‐deep ΔPO4. This technique is applied to a three‐box ocean model known to demonstrate high‐latitude control of atmospheric CO2 through a variety of circulation and biological changes. Considering each pump separately reveals that the various changes which lower pCO2atm in the model are caused primarily by an increased solubility pump. Analysis of global ocean data indicates a positive solubility pump signal, subject to uncertainties in the C:P Redfield ratio and in the preindustrial pCO2atm. If C:P = 105 and pCO2atm = 270 μatm, the efficiency of the solubility pump is about 0.5. We suggest that this type of analysis of relative carbon pump strengths will be an effective method for inter‐model and intra‐model comparison and diagnosis of underlying oceanic mechanisms for pCO2atm changes.
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  • 27
    facet.materialart.
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    Springer
    In:  In: The Great American Biotic Interchange. , ed. by Stehli, F. G. S. and Webb, D. Springer, Boston, MA, pp. 3-16.
    Publication Date: 2019-07-03
    Description: Complex problems seem to have a way of becoming increasingly complex as we learn more, recognize new variables, and appreciate the labyrinthine nature of interactions. When we learn to deal with them as large-scale systems, however, models can be posited and tested, and it becomes possible to move from an observational-analytical approach to one allowing a certain degree of experimentation.
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  • 28
    facet.materialart.
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    Springer
    In:  In: The Great American Biotic Interchange. , ed. by Stehli, F. G. and Webb, D. Springer, Boston, MA, pp. 17-48.
    Publication Date: 2019-07-03
    Description: Any reconstruction of the geological history of the Central America land bridge is dependent on conjectural motions of several lithospheric plates. The most important aspect of a timing sequence for a link between the North and South America land masses is apparently the creation of the Caribbean Plate. The geological record, however, which details a tectonic evolution of the Caribbean Plate and its margins is so enigmatic that many critical questions remain unresolved, and every developed model is couched in some incompatibilities.
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  • 29
    facet.materialart.
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    Springer
    In:  In: The Great American Biotic Interchange. , ed. by Stehli, F. G. and Webb, S. D. Springer, Boston, MA, pp. 89-121.
    Publication Date: 2019-07-02
    Description: The reconstruction of Caribbean plate history is an uncertain task, but a task that has intrigued generations of geologists. Each worker has turned to the task of historical interpretation influenced by a particular set of experiences or a special approach, and the results have been accordingly varied. A complete history of interpretations would form the subject of a fascinating chapter in the history of geological philosophy, but such is not the purpose of this chapter. Instead, I will dwell on a set of data that call for what I believe to be a relatively conservative view of Cretaceous and Tertiary plate history. My own interpretation is based heavily on my own or my students’ field experiences in the northeastern West Indies, Guatemala, Belize, and Venezuela, as well as extensive field excursions in Hispaniola, Jamaica, the Lesser Antilles, Central America, and the Dutch Antilles. I am further heavily influenced by the results of the Deep Sea Drilling Project (DSDP), Leg 15, which produced information of fundamental interest in the Venezuelan and Colombian Basins, and by several dissertations of the Princeton University group in northern Venezuela.
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  • 30
    facet.materialart.
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Water Resources Research, 21 (10). pp. 1511-1524.
    Publication Date: 2019-04-03
    Description: Nearly instantaneous melting of snow and ice by the March 19, 1982, eruption of Mount St. Helens released a 4 × 106 m3 flood of water from the crater that was converted to a lahar (volcanic debris flow) through erosion and incorporation of sediment by the time it reached the base of the volcano. Over the next 81 km that it traveled down the Toutle River, the flood wave was progressively diluted through several mechanisms. A transformation from debris flow to hyperconcentrated streamflow began to occur about 27 km downstream from the crater, when the total sediment concentration had decreased to about 78% by weight (57% by volume). The hyperconcentrated lahar‐runout flood wave, transporting immense quantities of sand in suspension, continued to experience progressive downstream dilution. Although turbulence was significantly dampened by the extremely high suspended load, very large standing waves and antidune waves were observed. The hyperconcentrated lahar‐runout flow deposited an unusual, faintly stratified, coarse sand which locally contained small, isolated gravel lenses. Very similar deposits in the Quaternary stratigraphy of Mount St. Helens and other Cascades volcanoes suggest that lahars may be more frequent than previously recognized.
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  • 31
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    Springer
    In:  Geologische Rundschau, 74 (3). pp. 585-597.
    Publication Date: 2021-02-18
    Description: The Pantelleria Rift system is a wide zone of post-Miocene northwest-trending grabens and horsts beneath the Sicily Strait. The central grabens host volcanics of predominantly alkalic composition which are exposed on the islands of Pantelleria and Linosa. On the Maltese Islands, along the northeastern shoulder of the rift, an Oligocene-Miocene carbonate succession exposed above sea level allows structural analysis and determination of shallow crustal stresses within the otherwise largely submarine rift system. An older northeast-trending set of normal faults is probably the expression of an Oligocene-Miocene crustal extension event which produced continental rifts in western Europe and led to passive margin formation in the western Mediterranean. Younger northwest-trending grabens of the Pantelleria Rift system cut the older faults almost at right angles and define a zone of lithospheric stretching between Tunisia and Sicily. The northwest-trending grabens which subsided dramatically since the beginning of Pliocene time appear to be connected by east-trending dextral and, more rarely, north-trending sinistral transforms. Displacement along the transforms is probably in the order of a few kilometres. In-situ stress measurements carried out on the Maltese Islands show maximum horizontal compression (SH) parallel to the rift. This suggests that in general σ1 (vertical) and σ2 (horizontal and parallel to the rift) are of about the same magnitude; both exceed σ3 (Sh) which trends northeasterly. Slight intraplate convergence in a NW-SE direction seems to be more than balanced by extension in a NE-SW direction. Neotectonics of the region possibly reflects an asthenospheric flow pattern which became established during the Messinian salinity crisis. The mechanism of recent intraplate deformation of the Pelagian shelf has relevance for the understanding of more anciently subsided platforms of the Apulian Plate.
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  • 32
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    Springer
    In:  Marine Biology, 86 (2). pp. 199-202.
    Publication Date: 2021-08-31
    Description: Cephalopod remains were collected from all of 12 dead Emperor penguin chicks [Aptenodytes forsteri (Gray)], from 76% of 29 living adult Emperor penguins, and from 18% of 105 living adult Adelie penguins [Pygoscelis adeliae (Hombron & Jacquinot)] from Adelie Land, Antarctica, in 1982. Of the seven species of squids represented by lower beaks, Psychroteuthis glacialis comprised 88% of the number in both Emperor chicks and Emperor adults and 100% in Adelie adults. From estimates of the weight of squids represented by lower beaks, Gonatus antarcticus and Kondakovia longimana contributed 18 and 14%, respectively, of the weight of squids in the diet of Emperor chicks and 27 and 21%, respectively, in the diet of Emperor adults. The data suggest that Psychroteuthis glacialis probably hatch in July–September and grow steadily for one year, and then spawn and die.
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  • 33
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  In: The Carbon Cycle and Atmospheric CO2: Natural Variations Archean to Present. , ed. by Sundquist, E. T. and Broecker, W. S. Geophysical Monograph, 32 . AGU (American Geophysical Union), Washington, D.C., pp. 504-529.
    Publication Date: 2018-09-04
    Description: The stratigraphic record from both deep‐sea and shallow‐water depositional environments indicates that during late Aptian through Cenomanian time (1) global climates were considerably warmer than at present; (2) latitudinal gradients of atmospheric and oceanic temperatures were considerably less than at present; (3) rates of accumulation of organic matter of both marine and terrestrial origin were as high as or higher than during any other interval in the Mesozoic or Cenozoic; (4) the rate and volume of accumulation of CaCO3 in the deep sea were reduced in response to a marked shoaling of the carbonate compensation depth; (5) seafloor spreading rates were somewhat more rapid than at any other time in the Cretaceous or Cenozoic; (6) off‐ridge volcanism was intense and widespread, particularly in the ancestral Pacific Ocean basin; and (7) sea level was relatively high, forming widespread areas of shallow shelf seas. A marked increase in the rate of CO2 outgassing due to volcanic activity between about 110 and 70 m.y. ago may have resulted in a buildup of atmospheric CO2. A significant fraction of this atmospheric CO2 may have been reduced by an increase in the production and burial of terrestrial organic carbon. Some excess CO2 may have been consumed by marine algal photosynthesis, but marine productivity apparently was low during the Aptian‐Albian relative to terrestrial productivity. Terrestrial productivity also may have been stimulated by increased rainfall that resulted from a warm global climate and increased marine transgression as well as by the higher CO2.
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  • 34
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  In: The carbon cycle and atmospheric CO2 [CO] : natural variations archean to present. Geophysical Monograph, 32 . AGU (American Geophysical Union), Washington, DC, pp. 99-110. ISBN 0-87590-060-7
    Publication Date: 2018-11-13
    Description: An ocean carbon pump is defined as a process that depletes the ocean surface of σCO2 relative to the deep‐water σCO2. Three pumps are recognized: a carbonate pump, a soft‐tissue pump, and a solubility pump. The first two result from the biological flux of organic and CaCO3 detritus from the ocean's surface. The third results from the increased CO2 solubility in downwelling cold water and is demonstrated by a one‐dimensional upwelling‐diffusion model of an abiotic ocean. In the soft‐tissue and solubility pumps, working strengths are defined in terms of the ΔσCO2 each creates between surface and deep‐water. Efficiencies of each pump are quantified as a ratio of working strength to potential maximum strength. Using alkalinity, nitrate, and σCO2 to remove the carbonate pump signal from ocean or model data, the individual working strengths of the soft‐tissue and solubility pumps can be calculated by scaling the soft‐tissue's ΔσCO2 to the surface‐to‐deep ΔPO4. This technique is applied to a three‐box ocean model known to demonstrate high‐latitude control of atmospheric CO2 through a variety of circulation and biological changes. Considering each pump separately reveals that the various changes which lower pCO2atm in the model are caused primarily by an increased solubility pump. Analysis of global ocean data indicates a positive solubility pump signal, subject to uncertainties in the C:P Redfield ratio and in the preindustrial pCO2atm. If C:P = 105 and pCO2atm = 270 μatm, the efficiency of the solubility pump is about 0.5. We suggest that this type of analysis of relative carbon pump strengths will be an effective method for inter‐model and intra‐model comparison and diagnosis of underlying oceanic mechanisms for pCO2atm changes.
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  • 35
    Publication Date: 2023-07-19
    Description: The dissolution rates of spheres of two magnesian olivines, two plagioclases, and quartz in tholeiitic basalt have been determined at three super-liquidus temperatures and one-atmosphere pressure. There are considerable differences in the rates among the minerals, e.g. at 1210°, 12° above the liquidus temperature of the basalt, labradorite dissolves at 86 µm/h. and the magnesian olivines at 9 and 14 µm/h. The rates are not time dependent and this, coupled with the existence of concentration gradients in the composition of quenched melt adjacent to partially dissolved crystals, indicates that the dissolution rates are dictated by a combination of diffusion and convection of components to and from the crystal-liquid interface. Values for the activation enthalpy of dissolution are small for quartz and plagioclase (40–50 kcal mol−1) but large for olivine 73–118 kcal mol−1). Dissolution of plagioclase in rock melts seems to be a much more rapid process than crystal growth, whereas olivines apparently dissolve and grow at similar rates. Crystal dissolution is sufficiently slow that ascending, crystal-bearing magma may become superheated and yet fail to dissolve the crystal fraction before quenching; this may be the reason that olivine phenocrysts are often rounded.
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