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  • Articles  (65,939)
  • Springer  (65,939)
  • 1995-1999  (65,939)
  • 1998  (65,939)
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  • 1995-1999  (65,939)
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  • 1
    ISSN: 1420-9098
    Keywords: Key words: Caste-ratio dynamics, division of labor, foraging frequency, open-air foraging, social behavior.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary: The temporal dynamics and social interaction in the foraging activities of the open-air processional termite Hospitalitermes (Termitidae, Nasutitermitinae) were studied in Borneo, Southeast Asia. H. medioflavus and H. sp. A tended to forage from evening to the next morning. On average foraging activity occurred every 3.2 days. Some synchronization of foraging events among colonies was observed, which appeared to be caused by rainfall levels.¶ Temporal dynamics during foraging activity was observed in detail using a photographic method for two species; H. medioflavus and H. rufus. Roughly 300,000 to 500,000 individuals participated in a single foraging event in both species. The soldier ratio was highest at the beginning and the end of the activity. Temporal patterns of behavior were different between soldier, major worker, medium worker and minor worker during foraging. The patterns of behavior are consistent with their tasks in the foraging activity. Soldiers lead the foraging column and protect it, major workers act as food carriers in the earlier stage while medium workers become the dominant food ball carriers in the later stage, and minor workers play the role of gnawers. Therefore, caste composition changes during foraging activity. Similar behavioral tendencies were recognized in both species. Measurement of workers' body weights revealed that workers not only carry balls of food from foraging sites but also feed directly at the foraging sites.
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  • 2
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    Insectes sociaux 45 (1998), S. 33-41 
    ISSN: 1420-9098
    Keywords: Key words: Wasps, nesting sites, palm trees, Astrocaryum sciophilum, French Guiana.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary: In the edge of the rain forests in French Guiana, the large leaves of young Astrocaryum sciophilum, a palm tree with long thin spines (up to 9 cm) along their central vein, shelter significantly more mason as well as social wasps' nests, than leaves of other plants. Other such plants include older conspecific individuals with spines, but compound leaves, and young Bactris simplifrons, a palm tree with similar leaves but devoid of spines. The choice of these leaves is due to the association of two factors: (1) these large leaves with a concave underside offer good protection against inclement weather, and (2) the spines on which the wasps' nests are anchored serve as "acquired pedicels", offering protection against ant predation. As a consequence, the wasps' nests are found under these leaves in both inter- and intraspecific clusters.
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1420-9098
    Keywords: Key words: Isoptera, Rhinotermitidae, Reticulitermes, agonistic behavior.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary: Displays of intraspecific and interspecific overt agonistic behavior between colonies of Reticulitermes flavipes (Kollar) and colonies of Reticulitermes virginicus (Banks) were observed in laboratory assays. All possible combinations of arena sizes (1.3, 3.5, 6.0, and 9.0-cm) and group sizes (1, 2, 5 and 10 workers per arena) were assessed for effects on interspecific and intraspecific agonism. Agonistic behavior was scored positive in arenas if half or less of the starting number of termites was alive after 24h. Thirty-six percent of arenas with interspecific pairings were agonistic in all combinations tested while 4.5 % of arenas with intraspecific combinations showed aggression (N = 544 and N = 288, respectively). Two interspecific pairings provided scores that were not statistically different from intraspecific combinations. These assays indicate that evidence of overt agonism between worker termites from these two Rhinotermitid species is not a reliable indicator to differentiate species. Encounters in the two larger arena sizes resulted in significantly more agonism than the two smaller arena sizes. Group size had little apparent effect on the frequency of positive agonistic interactions. Possible reasons for the variable overt agonism scores are discussed.
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1420-9098
    Keywords: Key words: Gallery forest, Ivory Coast, savanna, termites, thermoregulation.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary: We determined density and distribution of the mounds of the fungus-cultivating termite Macrotermes bellicosus (Smeathman) in two habitats (shrub savanna and gallery forest) of the Comoé National Park (Ivory Coast, West Africa). We measured height, basal width, and interior and exterior temperatures of mounds in both habitats, and established a new method to measure the surface area of mounds.¶ In the shrub savanna, M. bellicosus mounds reached high densities (up to 22.7 live mounds/ha), whereas in the gallery forest mounds could only be found in open stands and at comparatively low densities (up to 6.5 live mounds/ha).¶ Ambient temperature had an important influence on the architecture of the mounds. Mounds in the warmer, but thermally more fluctuating shrub savanna were more structured with many ridges and turrets than the dome-like, compact mounds in the cooler, more equable gallery forest. The surface complexity was quantified as the ratio of surface (= rsf), which is the quotient of the real surface to the minimal possible surface of an ideal cone of the same height and basal width as the measured mound. By manipulating ambient temperatures, we were able to demonstrate causal relationships between temperature and mound shape. In the gallery forest, where shade was reduced surface complexity increased on mounds.¶Despite their different architecture in the gallery forest, the M. bellicosus colonies could not completely compensate for the cooler environment and had a lower than optimal nest temperature. We speculate that this might be caused by the need for a sufficient surface for gas exchange. The gallery forest is a suboptimal habitat for M. bellicosus, because of lower than optimal nest temperatures. This might limit M. bellicosus to open stands in the gallery forest and may explain its surprisingly low abundance in this habitat.
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  • 5
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    Insectes sociaux 45 (1998), S. 67-77 
    ISSN: 1420-9098
    Keywords: Key words: Size polymorphism, microgynes, reproductive strategies, dispersal.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary: With recent findings of an unexpected variability in the reproductive behaviour of ant sexuals, their morphology has become an area of major evolutionary interest (Heinze and Tsuji, 1995). Here we report on the occurrence of two queen morphs in Leptothorax rugatulus (Hym., Formicidae): Microgynes (small queens), exceeding worker-size only marginally, and macrogynes, which are, typically for the subgenus Myrafant, about twice as big as their workers. The frequency distribution of queen-size is clearly bimodal, in contrast to worker- and male-size. The average size of queens is highly correlated with the size of daughters in field-collected colonies, whereas within colonies no correlation between the average queen-size and the size of workers or males exists. This gives additional support that size-dimorphism is due to a specific, transmissible size reduction of the microgynes which could be based on genetics, the environment or both. This reduction is quasi-isometric, with a slightly smaller thorax-to-head ratio in microgynes, and scanning electron microscopy does not reveal any significant degeneration of the pterothorax, ocelli or number of ommatidia. The frequency of microgynes at different sample sites is highly variable, correlating well with the prevailing social structure in the respective subpopulations. Indeed, the majority of macrogynes is found in monogynous colonies, while microgynes abound in polygynous ones, which is strong evidence for an alternative dispersal tactic. However, the expected correlation to altitude or latitude was not found and further investigations are needed to reveal proximate and ultimate causes of this prevalent polymorphism between two types of female ant reproductives.
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  • 6
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    Insectes sociaux 45 (1998), S. 85-96 
    ISSN: 1420-9098
    Keywords: Key words: Chemical communication, Dufour's gland, recruitment, trail following, Messor capitatus.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary: Some aspects of the chemical communication system employed by the harvesting ant Messor capitatus during foraging were investigated in the laboratory. After locating a conspicuous food item the scouts return home dragging their gaster on the ground. Once inside the nest they run among nestmates and perform an excited motor display. Soon after, groups of workers rush out and move towards the food. Bioassays of different gland extracts showed that nestmates are activated and induced to leave the nest by substances from Dufour's gland. This gland was also found to be the source of the orientation-recruitment trails by which foragers reach newly discovered food sources. The bioassays showed that poison gland extracts are also active in inducing trail following. However, this response was accompanied by typical aggressive reactions by tested ants, suggesting that the poison gland is involved in alarm communication and recruitment towards a source of danger rather than in foraging activities. Some features of the Dufour's gland trail (such as its durability and lack of colony-specificity) are discussed with regard to the ecological requirements of this species.
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  • 7
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    Insectes sociaux 45 (1998), S. 113-124 
    ISSN: 1420-9098
    Keywords: Key words: Leptothorax, Formicoxenini, ergatoid queens, intermorphic queens, intercastes, morphology.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary: The terminology for ant females which are morphologically intermediate between “normal”, originally winged queens and workers teems with ill-defined terms, such as “ergatogyne”, “apterogyne”, or “gynaecoid worker”. The terminology proposed by Peeters (1991a) gets rid of most of these terms but fails to distinguish between sporadically occurring “intercastes”, reared due to “mistakes” in caste differentiation, and “intermorphic queens”, which are the ordinary female reproductives in many colonies of formicoxenine ants. A detailed examination of development, morphology, and occurrence of the latter suggests that intermorphic queens are more similar to ergatoid queens (sensu Peeters, 1991a) than to “intercastes”, and should not be comprised under the latter term.
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  • 8
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    Insectes sociaux 45 (1998), S. 97-109 
    ISSN: 1420-9098
    Keywords: Key words: Halictidae, pleometrosis, social evolution.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary: Female sweat bees in the species Halictus ligatus exhibit a wide range of reproductive roles, ranging from typically foundress or queen-like to typically worker-like. Nests are founded in spring and most are haplometrotic, that is, founded by a single foundress. A few (up to 12 %) are pleometrotic, founded by 2-6 foundresses. Variation in the proportion of multifoundress nests from year to year and from place to place suggests an adaptive basis for pleometrosis. We studied the demographic and social characteristics of 23 pleometrotic nests in an aggregation of 250-300 nests near Victoria, Ontario, in 1984, 1990, and 1991. In pleometrotic associations, dominant foundresses behaved in a manner typical of mid-summer, haplometrotic queens, while subordinates behaved like mid-summer workers. Dominant foundresses tended to be larger than subordinates. Pleometrotic nests were significantly more likely than haplometrotic nests to produce brood, and they also produced more workers. However, this early advantage did not result in the production of more reproductive brood per nest, nor did pleometrotic foundresses experience higher productivity per foundress than did haplometrotic foundresses. Relatively low relatedness among various categories of brood implied that subordinate foundresses were not closely related to dominants. We suggest that pleometrosis most likely results from accidental encounters between spring foundresses as they leave their hibernacula. Once formed, such associations confer a survival advantage on the nest as a whole, but do not result in greater reproductive brood productivity.
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  • 9
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    Insectes sociaux 45 (1998), S. 125-134 
    ISSN: 1420-9098
    Keywords: Key words: Life history, kleptoparasitism, interspecific relationships, sociality, spiders.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary: Among spiders, some species could be qualified as colonial. Individuals may live alone or in colonies where each spider exploits its own capture web in a communal network. We compared solitary with colonial life in Cyrtophora female populations from South-East Sicily in 1992 and 1993. We used 6 parameters to describe and compare the populations: spider size, web size, egg production, prey captured, presence of kleptoparasites and their size.¶ Spiders living in colonies did not differ in size from solitary spiders.¶ The webs of colonial spiders were smaller than those of solitary spiders.¶ The number of prey captured and their size did not differ between the two types of spiders.¶ Solitary spiders produced more eggs than colonial individuals.¶ Kleptoparasite spiders Argyrodes gibbosus were more numerous in the webs of solitary spiders than in the webs of colonial spiders and there were more solitary webs infested by kleptoparasites in 1992. The kleptoparasites were larger in colonial webs than in solitary ones. Another species of spider, Holocnemus pulchei, spun its own web in the network of the web of Cyrtophora. The number of Holocnemus per web did not differ between solitary and colonial Cyrtophora.¶ Results are discussed by referring to what it is known in other temporarily social spiders.
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  • 10
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    Insectes sociaux 45 (1998), S. 191-195 
    ISSN: 1420-9098
    Keywords: Key words: Group effect, latency time, fungus-growing termites, building behavior, bees, aggressiveness.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary: We suggest that group effect need not be invoked to explain the differences in latency times exhibited by groups of different sizes in the initiation of building in the termite Macrotermes subhyalinus (Rambur). A simple, alternative, model is presented, that is fully consistent with experimental data.
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  • 11
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    Insectes sociaux 45 (1998), S. 301-313 
    ISSN: 1420-9098
    Keywords: Key words:Cataglyphis, worker odour, queen odour, Formicidae, polydomy.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary: We investigated the queen's effect on the cuticular hydrocarbon profile of workers in the monogynous and polydomous species Cataglyphis iberica. Within each of the three colonies tested, workers were separated for three months in queenright and queenless groups. After regrouping, nestmate recognition remained unchanged but the duration of antennal interactions between workers previously separated increased relative to controls. Separated groups presented slightly divergent cuticular hydrocarbon profiles which may induce the longer antennations. A quantitative analysis of major cuticular hydrocarbons showed that the total amount per unit of cuticular surface area remains similar between the two castes; but queens had higher quantities of n-alkanes than workers. The lack of a queen did not affect the workers' cuticular hydrocarbon profile in queenless groups. Indeed, the profile of queenless workers remained significantly different from the queen profile as did that of queenright workers. These results show that queens are not at the origin of the hydrocarbons' colonial profile. Two recognition processes seem to coexist within C.iberica colonies: nestmate discrimination based on the colonial odour which includes all nestmate workers, and a queen caste-specific odour. In a polydomous species such as C.iberica, the queen does not seem to contribute more than any other nestmate to the colonial odour, which probably derives from worker cues, confirming the existence of a "Gestalt" colonial odour.
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  • 12
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    Insectes sociaux 45 (1998), S. 315-333 
    ISSN: 1420-9098
    Keywords: Key words: Soldier, caste, evolution, ants.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary: The traditional hypothesis that ant soldiers originate from large size workers is rejected in favour of their direct origin from gynes. This conclusion is supported by the first report of soldiers smaller than workers, by an intercaste morphometric comparative analysis by means of D'Arcy Thompson's transformation grids and by phylogenetic studies on Cephalotes showing that the cephalic shield appeared ancestrally among soldiers and only later among gynes. The same conclusion flows from facts already known but hitherto misunderstood and stressed in this paper such as: 1) there are species of Cephalotes with soldiers with incomplete cephalic shield and no gyne shield and other species with complete soldier shield but only incomplete gyne shield; 2) the phragmotic behaviour is exercised by workers and soldiers and not by gynes but its morphological correlate, i.e., the shield-shaped head, occurs among soldiers and gynes and not in workers. These observations prove that the selection pressure for the shield morphology acts on workers and soldiers and not on gynes but its morphological correlate actually appears first in soldiers, later in gynes and never in workers. These data sharply contrast with a worker origin of soldiers and are perfectly consistent with the hypothesis of a separate origin of soldiers directly from gynes.
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  • 13
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    Insectes sociaux 45 (1998), S. 349-368 
    ISSN: 1420-9098
    Keywords: Key words: Social evolution, sex allocation, kin selection, comparative studies, Exoneura, Apidae.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary: Comparative studies provide one of the most powerful means of assessing the relative roles of selective agents underlying social evolution in insects. Because of the wide variation in social organisation, sex allocation and ecological traits within and between species of allodapine bees, this group provides a wealth of material for such comparative work. Recent studies on Australian allodapine bees are reviewed here and their consequences for understanding social evolution are discussed. Studies to date suggest the following trends: (i) benefits of group living appear to be linked to preventing brood failure rather than to increased brood rearing efficiency; (ii) female-biased sex allocation, when it occurs, is linked to benefits of group living and kinship among nestmates, and is probably mediated via local fitness enhancement; (iii) female-biased sex allocation patterns do not usually coincide with opportunities for sib-rearing and are therefore unlikely to facilitate eusociality; (iv) relatedness within colonies is usually high, but in some species females will nest with unrelated females if kin are not available; and (v) phylogenetic studies suggest that opportunities for sib-rearing, arising from brood development patterns and colony phenology, are plesiomorphic for the exoneurine group, but in at least one phylogenetically distal clade, Exoneura sensu stricto, the evolution of large group size and social complexity coincides with the loss or reduction of opportunities for sib-rearing. Assured fitness return models may be applicable to weakly social allodapine species, but do not predict patterns of eusociality. Instead, Australian studies suggest that the evolution of large group size and marked reproductive skew is linked with the need to defend against enemies at the nest, rather than high levels of relatedness, female biased sex allocation or opportunities to rear siblings.
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  • 14
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    Pure and applied geophysics 151 (1998), S. 81-99 
    ISSN: 1420-9136
    Keywords: Key words: Stochastic simulation, stochastic interpolation, microseisms, stationary Gaussian process, conditional random fields, nonparametric test, sign test.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: Abstract. —We examine the applicability of conditional stochastic simulation to interpretation of microseisms observed on soft soil sediments at Kushiro, Hokkaido, Japan. The theory of conditional random fields developed by Kameda and Morikawa (1994) is used, which allows one to perform interpolation of a Gaussian stochastic time-space field that is conditioned by realized values of time functions specified at some discrete locations. The applicability is examined by a blind test, that is, by comparing a set of simulated seismograms and recorded ones obtained from three-point array observa tions. A test of fitness was performed by means of the sign test. It is concluded that the method is applicable to interpretation of microseisms, and that the wave field of microseisms can be treated as Gaussian random fields both in time and space.
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  • 15
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    Pure and applied geophysics 151 (1998), S. 1-16 
    ISSN: 1420-9136
    Keywords: Key words: Cracks, cracked media, effective moduli.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: Abstract. —We calculate elastic moduli and viscosities for media containing strongly interacting in-plane shear cracks. The cracks are randomly oriented or aligned, with equal length or a logarithmic size distribution. Our results from both a boundary element and a finite-element method suggest that the average moduli are best approximated by a differential, self-consistent model (DEM). Thus crack-to- crack interaction, which is considered in the DEM model, is important at high crack densities. This result seems to be different to results obtained from numerical experiments with highly fractured anti-plane shear cracks.
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  • 16
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    Pure and applied geophysics 151 (1998), S. 17-45 
    ISSN: 1420-9136
    Keywords: Key words: Synthetic seismograms, elastic waves, Kirchhoff, Green's function, inhomogeneity, anisotropy, hybrid.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: Abstract. —An approximate hybrid formulation of the elastic Kirchhoff-Helmholtz theory for numerical simulation of seismic wave propagation in multilayered inhomogeneous and transversely isotropic media is developed. The layer boundaries can be curved or irregular. We insert a general computational ansatz into the basic elastodynamic divergence theorem to express the unknown variables in terms of slowly varying amplitude and phase functions. In situations where the geometrical optics approximation becomes invalid, more accurate methods can be applied to compute these functions. In particular, the kernel remains regular when rays have caustics on the target integral surface. Branch points are taken into account to include head waves. Both elementary solutions and WKBJ expansion are employed to compute the Green’s function. To reduce the resulting integral to a numerical form, the surface is divided into a set of segments and the above functions are replaced by their local polynomial series in the vicinity of each segment. It allows us to construct an error-predictive numerical algorithm in which the truncation error is prescribed via the higher order terms of such series. We show, using geologically relevant synthetic models, the performance of the proposed technique.
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  • 17
    ISSN: 1420-9136
    Keywords: Key words: Anisotropy, elastic constants, inversion, ODF, surface waves.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: Abstract —A general relation linking the elasticity tensor of an anisotropic medium with that of the constituting single crystals and the function describing the orientation distribution of the crystals is derived. By expanding the orientation distribution function (ODF) into tensor spherical harmonics and using canonical components of the elasticity tensors, it is shown that the elastic tensor of the medium is completely determined by a finite number of expansion coefficients, namely those with harmonic degree l≤ 4. The number of expansion coefficients actually needed to determine the elastic constants of the medium depends on the symmetry of the single crystals. For hexagonal symmetry of the single crystals it is shown that only 8 real numbers are required to fix the 13 elastic constants which are for example needed to determine the azimuthal dependence of surface wave velocities. Thus, inversions of observations of seismic anisotropy are feasible which do not make any a priori assumptions on the orientation of the crystals. As a byproduct of the derivation, a formula is given which allows the easy calculation of the elastic constants of a medium composed of hexagonal crystals obeying an arbitrary ODF. An application of the theoretical results to the inversion of surface wave dispersion curves for an anisotropic 1D-mantle model is presented. For the S-wave velocities the results are similar to those of previous inversions but the new approach also yields P-wave velocities consistent with the assumption of oriented olivine. Moreover it provides a hint of the orientation distribution of the crystals.
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  • 18
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    Pure and applied geophysics 151 (1998), S. 463-475 
    ISSN: 1420-9136
    Keywords: Key words: Anisotropy, mantle flow, subduction zones, shear-wave splitting.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: Abstract —We have obtained constraints on the strength and orientation of anisotropy in the mantle beneath the Tonga, southern Kuril, Japan, and Izu-Bonin subduction zones using shear-wave splitting in S phases from local earthquakes and in teleseismic core phases such as SKS. The observed splitting in all four subduction zones is consistent with a model in which the lower transition zone (520–660 km) and lower mantle are isotropic, and in which significant anisotropy occurs in the back-arc upper mantle. The upper transition zone (410–520 km) beneath the southern Kurils appears to contain weak anisotropy. The observed fast directions indicate that the geometry of back-arc strain in the upper mantle varies systematically across the western Pacific rim. Beneath Izu-Bonin and Tonga, fast directions are aligned with the azimuth of subducting Pacific plate motion and are parallel or sub-parallel to overriding plate extension. However, fast directions beneath the Japan Sea, western Honshu, and Sakhalin Island are highly oblique to subducting plate motion and parallel to present or past overriding plate shearing. Models of back-arc mantle flow that are driven by viscous coupling to local plate motions can reproduce the splitting observed in Tonga and Izu-Bonin, but further three-dimensional flow modeling is required to ascertain whether viscous plate coupling can explain the splitting observed in the southern Kurils and Japan. The fast directions in the southern Kurils and Japan may require strain in the back-arc mantle that is driven by regional or global patterns of mantle flow.
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  • 19
    ISSN: 1420-9136
    Keywords: Key words: Passive seismology, central Mediterranean, Italy, seismic tomography, seismic anisotropy, receiver function, upper mantle structure, geodynamics.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: Abstract —In the last decade temporary teleseismic transects have become a powerful tool for investigating the crustal and upper mantle structure. In order to gain a clearer picture of the lithosphere-asthenosphere structure in peninsular Italy, between 1994 and 1996, we have deployed three teleseismic transects in northern, central, and southern Apennines, in the framework of the project GeoModAp (European Community contract EV5V-CT94–0464). Some hundreds of teleseisms were recorded at each deployment which lasted between 3 and 4 months. Although many analyses are still in progress, the availability of this high quality data allowed us to refine tomographic images of the lithosphere-asthenosphere structure with an improved resolution in the northern and central Apennines, and to study the deformation of the upper mantle looking at seismic anisotropy through shear-wave splitting analysis. Also, a study of the depth and geometry of the Moho through the receiver function technique is in progress. Tomographic results from the northernmost 1994 and the central 1995 teleseismic experiments confirm that a high-velocity anomaly (HVA) does exist in the upper 200–250 km and is confined to the northern Apenninic arc. This HVA, already interpreted as a fragment of subducted lithosphere is better defined by the new temporary data, compared to previous works, based only on data from permanent stations. No clear high-velocity anomalies are detected in the upper 250 km below the central Apennines, suggesting either a slab window due to a detachment below southern peninsular Italy, or a thinner, perhaps continental slab of Adriatic lithosphere not detectable by standard tomography. We found clear evidence of seismic anisotropy in the uppermost mantle, related to the main tectonic processes which affected the studied regions, either NE–SW compressional deformation of the lithosphere beneath the mountain belt, or arc-parallel asthenospheric flow (both giving NW–SE fast polarization direction), and successive extensional deformation (∼E–W trending) in the back-arc basin of northern Tyrrhenian and Tuscany. Preliminary results of receiver function studies in the northern Apennines show that the Moho depth is well defined in the Tyrrhenian and Adriatic regions while its geometry underneath the mountain belt is not yet well constrained, due to the observed high complexity.
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  • 20
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    Pure and applied geophysics 152 (1998), S. 139-163 
    ISSN: 1420-9136
    Keywords: Key words: Iberian region, historical earthquakes, energy parameters.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: Abstract —The problems of recovering the seismic information contained in the old seismograms through their digitization and processing by computer methods are discussed. We present the main principles of a simple manual technique for digitization of early seismic records of the Wiechert seismograph. Detrending of the zero-line slope, circular arc removal, smoothing and interpolation treatment of the digital data are made. The accuracy of the digitizing process is assessed and its reliability is tested by a comparison with automatically obtained digital data and their spectral amplitudes. The deconvolution of the seismograph response has allowed us to obtain the time variation of ground motion which is then contrasted with direct measurements of ground motion displacement amplitudes given in the old-time bulletins. We have created a digital database for historical earthquakes which occurred in the Iberian area during the period 1912–1940 and recorded by the Wiechert seismograph at the Geophysical Observatory of Toledo, Spain. It contains the following output data the digitized original records; the geometrically corrected and interpolated data; the time variation of ground motion; maximum amplitudes and corresponding periods; total duration of the seismic oscillations and amplitude spectra. We carry out magnitude estimates and give formulae for magnitude classification based on the signal duration and on the maximum ground displacement amplitude. We also perform seismic moment determinations by spectral analysis of waveforms and propose a new seismic moment-magnitude relation.
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  • 21
    ISSN: 1420-9136
    Keywords: Key words: Vøring margin, Ocean-Bottom Seismograph, crustal structure, volcanic continental margin.
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    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: Abstract —This paper presents a crustal model derived from an Ocean Bottom Seismograph (OBS) study along the northern Vøring margin off Norway. The profile was acquired to map the crustal structure in the northernmost part of the Vøring Basin, and to link crustal models of the Lofoten and central Vøring Basin obtained by previous OBS studies. The Vøring margin, as well as the Lofoten margin to the north, was created by continental breakup between Norway and Greenland in late Paleocene-early Eocene. The rifting and continental breakup process were accompanied by intense extrusive and intrusive magmatic activities. The OBS data provide the whole crustal structure along the northern Vøring margin, in the area where the deep crustal structure cannot be resolved by conventional multichannel reflection data due to sill intrusions in the sedimentary sequence. The shallow part of the crustal model is characterized by up to 10 km thick sediments, a sequence of flood basalts and sill intrusions. The P-wave velocities in the flood basalts and sill intrusions are estimated to 5.0 km/s and 4.7–5.8 km/s, respectively. The model indicates an abrupt thickening of the upper crystalline crust from approx.3 km in the NE, to about 10 km towards the SE, with velocities of 6.0–6.2 km/s. The lower crustal velocities are not well resolved due to lack of clear refraction arrivals from the lower crust. However, the observed amplitude versus offsets are best explained by a model with a change in lower crustal velocities from 6.8 to 7.2 km/s beneath the Bivrost lineament. The modelling infers the presence of a lower crustal reflector beneath the lineament, which represents the landward continuation of the Bivrost lineament. Reflection arrivals from the Moho reveal a Moho depth of 23 km in the middle of the profile and 18– 20 km in the northeastern part of the profile. A 370 km long crustal section from the central part of the Vøring Basin to the Lofoten margin, obtained by the results of this study and previous OBS studies, shows a simple thinned continental crust on the Lofoten margin, and a high velocity lower crust underlying an upper crust of varying thickness in the Vøring Basin. The transition between these structures is situated beneath the Bivrost lineament in the lower crust, and beneath the basement high about 40 km south of the lineament in the upper crust.
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  • 22
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    Pure and applied geophysics 152 (1998), S. 177-192 
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  • 23
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    Pure and applied geophysics 152 (1998), S. 23-35 
    ISSN: 1420-9136
    Keywords: Key words: Analogue model, large earthquakes, recurrence behaviour, lognormal distribution.
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    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: Abstract —The recurrence behaviour of large earthquakes, in several tectonic settings, has been explained by simple models of stress accumulation and release which assume that the fault stress state is solely a function of the far-field tectonic strain rate. However, the limited dataset of large event recurrence intervals has been a major obstacle to the verification of these and other models. We present the results from a simple analogue model of earthquake rupture and stick-slip which displays power-law frequency-size statistics and involves many cycles of large events. We show that, despite the macroscopic homogeneity of the model, large events do not conform to simple deterministic time- or slip-predictable patterns. However, when the recurrence intervals for large events are divided by the median recurrence interval, the normalized data are composed of two distinct lognormally distributed populations. One population is characterized by events which are strongly clustered in time with relatively short recurrence intervals and low moment release, the other by events which are weakly clustered in time with median-sized recurrence intervals. It is suggested that the long-term recurrence behaviour of large earthquakes, whilst being non-deterministic, may be modelled by a well-defined statistical distribution of recurrence intervals.
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  • 24
    ISSN: 1420-9136
    Keywords: Key words: Seismic tomography, W. Greece, microearthquake networks.
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    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: Abstract —The 3-D P-wave velocity structure of the upper crust in the region of western Greece is investigated by inversion of about 1500 residuals of P-wave arrival times from local earthquake data recorded in the year 1996 by the newly established University of Patras Seismic Network (PATNET). The resulting velocity structure shows strong horizontal variations due to the complicated structure and the variation of crustal thickness. Relatively low-velocity contours are observed in the area defined by Cephallonia—Zakynthos Islands and northwestern Peloponnesos. This is in addition to some well localized peaks of relatively higher values of P-wave velocity may be related to the zone of Triassic evaporites in the region and correspond to diapirism that breaks through to the uppermost layer. Finally, a low P-velocity ‘deeping’ zone extending from Zakynthos to the Gulf of Patras is correlated with Bouguer anomaly map and onshore and offshore borehole drillings which indicate that thick sediments overly the evaporites which exist there at depth greater than 2 km.
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    Pure and applied geophysics 152 (1998), S. 213-220 
    ISSN: 1420-9136
    Keywords: Key words: Fractal dimensions, epicenter distribution, estimation.
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    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: Abstract —Within the fractal approach to studying the distribution of seismic event locations, different fractal dimension definitions and estimation algorithms are in use. Although one expects that for the same data set, values of different dimensions will be different, it is usually anticipated that the direction of fractal dimension changes among different data sets will be the same for every fractal dimension.¶Mutual relations between the three most popular fractal dimensions, namely the capacity, cluster and correlation dimensions, have been investigated in the present work. The studies were performed on the Monte Carlo generated data sets. The analysis has shown that dependence of the fractal dimensions on epicenter distribution, and relations among the fractal dimensions, are complex and variable. Neither values nor even inequalities among dimension estimates are preserved when different fractal dimensions are used. The correlation and the capacity dimensions seem to be good tools to trace collinear tendencies of eipicenters while the cluster dimension is more appropriate to studying uniform clustering of points.
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    Pure and applied geophysics 152 (1998), S. 539-550 
    ISSN: 1420-9136
    Keywords: Key words: Seismograph calibration, historical instruments, Wiechert seismograph.
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    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: Abstract —The paper presents results of experiments designed to measure the actual dynamic magnification of the Wiechert 1000 kg horizontal seismometer when excited by seismic waves. This is accomplished by comparing 51 digital records of seismic events recorded by the Wiechert and a well calibrated reference seismometer. The results obtained indicate that the magnification of the Wiechert seismometer is influenced by the interaction of its mass and frame, especially for high frequencies. This interaction has been modeled by considering a system of two coupled pendulums, yielding a theoretical dynamic magnification curve which exhibits main features of the observed magnification. The dis crepancy between the nominal and the actual response of the Wiechert seismograph may lead to errors in studies involving spectral analyses of recorded seismograms, and to overestimation of local earth quake magnitudes.
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  • 27
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    Pure and applied geophysics 153 (1998), S. 113-130 
    ISSN: 1420-9136
    Keywords: Key words: Water injection, microseismic events, source parameters.
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    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: Abstract —We analyze source parameters of microseismic events (M 〈 − 1) associated with high flow-rate water injections in a shale formation at a depth of 220 m. Two types of events were observed several hundred impulsive events with clear P- and S-wave arrivals, and continuous emissions with peaked spectra detected well into the experiment. For a representative collection of impulsive events, an 〈omega〉−2 model provided satisfactory fits to displacement spectra corrected for attenuation, and average quality factors of 34 and 15 were obtained for P and S waves. P-wave first motion analysis and E S  /E P ratios indicated the existence of a non-double-couple component in some events, particularly early in the experiment. A clear difference was observed for estimates of stress release parameters as non-double-couple events had smaller stress drops and apparent stresses. The seismic efficiency of double-couple and non-double-couple events was limited to 0.9% and 0.05% respectively, with average values being 0.25% and 0.02%. A comparison of our results with those reported for a similar magnitude range in a hard-rock formation indicates considerably smaller estimates of stress drop and apparent stress in our case while seismic efficiencies are comparable.
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    Pure and applied geophysics 153 (1998), S. 21-40 
    ISSN: 1420-9136
    Keywords: Key words: Epicenter migration, directional patterns, induced seismicity, nonparametric estimation.
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    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: Abstract —The regional mining-induced seismicity of the Upper Silesian Coal Basin, Poland forms two major and two minor spatial clusters. The directional patterns of seismic series from the major clusters were studied with the use of the analysis of deflections. The seismic series is parameterized by the deflection angle of the straight line connecting epicenters of every two consecutive events, measured from NS direction. The trends of epicenter migration are characterized by modes of distribution of the deflection angle, estimated by the nonparametric kernel method. The distribution of deflection angles for the studied seismic series is not random. Altogether four trends of epicenter migration have been identified two are connected with the subseries of events that belong to the same cluster and are related to the shape of the clusters, whereas the other two, linked to the subseries of events that alternate between the clusters, indicate that mutual positions of events in such series are not random. The results support recent hypotheses pertaining to low tectonic instability of this region.
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    Pure and applied geophysics 153 (1998), S. 239-256 
    ISSN: 1420-9136
    Keywords: Key words: Seismic wave attenuation, dislocations, geometrical kinks, transient creep, Peierls stress, Bordoni peak, Maxwell time.
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    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: Abstract —A microphysical model of seismic wave attenuation is developed to provide a physical basis to interpret temperature and frequency dependence of seismic wave attenuation. The model is based on the dynamics of dislocation motion in minerals with a high Peierls stress. It is proposed that most of seismic wave attenuation occurs through the migration of geometrical kinks (micro-glide) and/or nucleation/migration of an isolated pair of kinks (Bordoni peak), whereas the long-term plastic deformation involves the continuing nucleation and migration of kinks (macro-glide). Kink migration is much easier than kink nucleation, and this provides a natural explanation for the vast difference in dislocation mobility between seismic and geological time scales. The frequency and temperature dependences of attenuation depend on the geometry and dynamics of dislocation motion both of which affect the distribution of relaxation times. The distribution of relaxation times is largely controlled by the distribution in distance between pinning points of dislocations, L, and the observed frequency dependence of Q, Q, Q∝ωα is shown to require a distribution function of P(L)∝L -m with m=4-2α The activation energy of Q −1 in minerals with a high Peierls stress corresponds to that for kink nucleation and is similar to that of long-term creep. The observed large lateral variation in Q −1 strongly suggests that the Q −1 in the mantle is frequency dependent. Micro-deformation with high dislocation mobility will (temporarily) cease when all the geometrical kinks are exhausted. For a typical dislocation density of ∼ 108 m−2, transient creep with small viscosity related to seismic wave attenuation will persist up to the strain of ∼ 10−6, thus even a small strain (∼ 10−6−10−4) process such as post-glacial rebound is only marginally affected by this type of anelastic relaxation. At longer time scales continuing nucleation of kinks becomes important and enables indefinitely large strain, steady-state creep, causing viscous behavior.
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    Pure and applied geophysics 153 (1998), S. 539-561 
    ISSN: 1420-9136
    Keywords: Key words: Seismic attenuation, seismic Q, Midcontinent rift.
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    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: Abstract —Instantaneous frequency matching has been used to compute differential t* values for seismic reflection data from the Great Lakes International Multidisciplinary Program on Crustal Evolution (GLIMPCE) experiment. The differential attenuation values were converted to apparent Q −1 models by a fitting procedure that simultaneously solves for the interval Q −1 values using non-negative least squares. The bootstrap method was then used to estimate the variance in the interval Q −1 models. The shallow Q −1 structure obtained from the seismic reflection data corresponds closely with an attenuation model derived using instantaneous frequency matching on seismic refraction data along the same transect. This suggests that the effects of wave propagation and scattering on the apparent attenuation are similar for the two data sets. The Q −1 model from the reflection data was then compared with the structural interpretation of the reflectivity data. The highest interval Q −1 values (〉0.01) were found near the surface, corresponding to the sedimentary rock sequence of the upper Keweenawan. Low Q −1 values (〈0.0006) are found beneath the Midcontinent rift’s central basin. In addition to structural interpretation, seismic attenuation models derived in this way can be used to correct reflection data for dispersion, frequency and amplitude effects, and allow for improved imaging of the subsurface.
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    Pure and applied geophysics 153 (1998), S. 399-417 
    ISSN: 1420-9136
    Keywords: Key words: Body waves, seismic Q, S waves, SS−S waveform.
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    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: Abstract —We study the frequency- and time-domain techniques which have been used to measure shear attenuation in the mantle using long-period body waveforms. In the time-domain technique, waveform modeling is carried out and the attenuation model that best fits the data is chosen. In the frequency-domain technique, we solve for the attenuation model that best fits the spectra of the seismic waveforms. Though theoretically both these techniques are equivalent, modeling assumptions and measurement biases associated with each technique can give rise to different results. In this study, we compare these two techniques in terms of their accuracy in obtaining mantle shear attenuation. Specifically, we estimate the biases in constraining attenuation from differential SS−S and absolute S waveforms. We carry out these tests using realistic synthetic seismograms and we follow this with an analysis of recorded data to verify the results from the synthetic tests. For the SS−S waveforms, the primary biasing factors are interference with seismic phases due to mantle discontinuities and due to crustal reverberation under the SS bounce point. These factors can affect the t* measurements by up to 0.5 s in the frequency domain and more than 1.5 s in the time domain. For the S waveforms, the frequency-domain measurements are accurate to 0.3 s while the time-domain measurements can vary by more than 2.0 s from the predicted values. These errors are also manifested in the t* measurements made using teleseismically recorded waveforms and lead to comparatively larger noise levels in the time-domain measurements. Based on these results, we propose that in long-period body-wave attenuation studies, frequency-domain techniques should be the method of choice.
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    Pure and applied geophysics 153 (1998), S. 587-612 
    ISSN: 1420-9136
    Keywords: Key words: Lg, coda, Q, South America, crust, attenuation.
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    Notes: Abstract —Nine broadband seismograph stations in South America have provided 389 recordings of Lg coda with paths that cover most of the continent. Lg coda Q (Q 0 ) and frequency dependence 〈(eta)〉 values at 1 Hz, obtained from these records, were inverted using back-projection tomography to obtain regionalized maps of Q 0 and 〈eta〉. The entire western margin of the continent (the active Andean mountain belt) is typified by low Q 0 (250–450), whereas broad regions of high Q 0 (700–1100) span the central Brazilian shield and contiguous regions to the north and south. Intermediate Q 0 (450–700) characterizes the northern Patagonia platform and most of the Atlantic shield. Reduced Q 0 in the Atlantic shield may be related to tectonic or igneous activity that occurred during the breakup of Gondwanaland during the Jurassic period. This Q distribution is generally consistent with earlier studies where Q 0 was found to be directly proportional to the time that has elapsed since the most recent episode of major tectonic or orogenic activity in any region. Reduced Q 0 in the Patagonian platform may, however, be due to young sediments there.¶Q 0 is slightly higher in two portions of the Andean belt (between latitudes 2.0°N and 10.0°S, and between latitudes 24.0°S and 34.0°S) than in other portions of the belt. These variations are consistent with results of earlier studies of body-wave attenuation and heat flow in the Andean mountain belt.¶Spatial variations of 〈eta〉 generally vary inversely with Q 0 , being low (0.0–0.2) throughout a broad region centered in the central Brazil shield and extending to the northeastern coast. All surrounding regions except that to the northeast exhibit intermediate to high (0.4–0.8 and possibly higher) 〈eta〉 values. Possible biasing of Lg coda Q measurements by proximity to the transition between the South American and Pacific plates was examined using records from a station near that boundary and was found to be small.
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    ISSN: 1420-9136
    Keywords: Key words: Attenuation, crust, frequency dependence, high-frequency seismic waves, quality factor.
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    Notes: Abstract —Borehole seismograms from local earthquakes in the aftershock region of the 1984 western Nagano Prefecture, Japan earthquake were analyzed to measure the frequency-dependent characteristics of P- and S-wave attenuation in the upper crust. The records from a three-component velocity seismometer at the depth of 145m exhibit high S/N-ratio in a wide frequency range up to 100 Hz. Extended coda normalization methods were applied to bandpass-filtered seismograms of frequencies from 25 to 102 Hz. For the attenuation of high-frequency P and S waves, our measurements show Q P -1≃ 0.052ƒ-0.66 and Q S -1≃ 0.0034ƒ-0.12 respectively. The frequency dependence of the quality factor of S waves is very weak as compared with that of P waves. The ratio of Q P -1/Q S -1 is larger than unity in the entire analyzed frequency range.
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    ISSN: 1420-9136
    Keywords: Key words: Attenuation, two-dimensional, upper mantle, peaceful nuclear explosions.
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    Notes: Abstract —We present a 2-D image of the upper mantle attenuation using nuclear explosion data from the ultra-long refraction/reflection profile "Quartz." Our analysis is based on a modified common spectrum technique followed by least-squares inversion for Q and iterative ray tracing in the velocity structure obtained earlier. The resulting attenuation structure corroborates the earlier model for northern Eurasia, as well as our recent estimate based on the analysis of the long-range P n phase, and provides significantly more detail than the existing models. The resulting upper mantle attenuation structure is characterised by Q values ranging from 400 to 1800. Down to the depths of 150–190, and probably 400 km, the attenuation increases horizontally in SE direction, away from the Baltic Shield. Our model exhibits strong 2-D, vertical and horizontal attenuation contrasts. A high-attenuation layer in the depth range of 120–150 to 160–180 km can apparently be associated with the presence of a partial melts within the base of the lithosphere.
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    Pure and applied geophysics 153 (1998), S. 257-272 
    ISSN: 1420-9136
    Keywords: Key words: Tomography, attenuation, earth's mantle.
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    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: Abstract —Resolving the lateral variations of attenuation in the deep mantle by tomographic methods holds potential for constraining its thermal structure and dynamics. It is a challenging subject which has been addressed by only a few studies until now. We here review the main motivations behind pursuing this challenge, the difficult issues involved in separating effects of anelastic attenuation from scattering and focusing due to propagation in 3-D elastic structure and finally discuss the current status of global attenuation tomography.
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    Pure and applied geophysics 153 (1998), S. 345-375 
    ISSN: 1420-9136
    Keywords: Key words: Attenuation, Frequency dependence, subduction zone.
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    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: Abstract —Teleseismic broadband recordings of intermediate and deep focus earthquakes are used to quantify both compression (Q 〈alpha〉 and shear(Q 〈beta〉 ) wave attenuation within the Lau backarc basin. A spectral-ratio method is employed to measure differential attenuation (〈delta〉t*) between the depth phases sS, pP, and sP and the direct S and P phases over the frequency band 0.05 and 0.5 Hz. We use a stacking algorithm to combine the spectra of several phase pairs from a single event, having similar azimuth and range, to obtain more robust 〈delta〉t* measurements; these estimates are then used to compute the average Q above the focal depth. Q 〈beta〉 and Q 〈alpha〉 are measured directly from the sS-S and pP-P phase pairs respectively, however, the interpretation of 〈delta〉t* measured from sP-P requires assumptions about the ratio Q 〈alpha〉  /Q 〈beta〉 . We find an empirical ratio of Q 〈alpha〉  /Q 〈beta〉 = 1.93 for this region and use it to compute Q 〈alpha〉 and Q 〈beta〉 from the Q sP observations. We observe lateral and depth variations in both Q β and Q 〉alpha〈 beneath the tectonically active Lau Basin and the geologically older, inactive Lau Ridge and Fiji Plateau. The upper 200 km beneath the Central and Northern Lau Basin show a Q 〈beta〉 of 45–57 and a Q 〈alpha〉 of 102–121, and Q appears to increase rapidly with depth. The upper 600 km beneath the Lau backarc basin has a Q 〈beta〉 of 118–138, while over the same depth interval we observe a higher Q 〈beta〉 of 139–161 beneath the Lau Ridge and Fiji Plateau. We also find Q 〈alpha〉 of 235–303 beneath the northern Lau Basin and a higher Q 〈alpha〉 of 292–316 beneath the Fiji Plateau and the Lau Ridge measured directly from pP-P phase pairs. These geographic trends in the broadband Q measurements correlate with our previous long-period estimates of Q 〈beta〉 in this region, however, the broadband measurements themselves are higher by about a factor of two. These observations suggest substantial frequency dependence of Q in the upper mantle, beginning at frequencies less than 1.0 Hz and consistent with the power-law form Q∝ωα with 〈alpha〉 between -0.1 and -0.3.
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  • 37
    ISSN: 1430-3418
    Keywords: Dogfish Shark ; Muscarinic receptor ; Squalus acanthias ; Vascular smooth muscle ; Ventral aorta
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A suite of muscarinic receptor blockers was used to characterize the receptor(s) mediating the contractile effect of acetylcholine (ACh) on isolated rings of ventral aorta from the dogfish shark, Squalus acanthias. The M2/M4-specific inhibitor N,N’-bis(6-{[(2-methoxyphenyl) methyl] amino} hexyl) -1,8- octane diamine tetrahydrochloride (methoctramine) did not reduce the efficacy of ACh, and the M3-specific inhibitor 4-diphenylacetoxy-N-methylpiperidine methiodide (4-DAMP) displaced the ACh concentration-response curve to the right at much lower concentrations than the M1-specific inhibitor (5-11-dihydro-11- [4-methyl-l-piperazinyl)acetyl] -6H-pyrido[2,3-b] [1,4] benzodiazepin-6-one dihydrochloride) (pirenzepine). It appears, therefore, that an M3-type muscarinic receptor is expressed in the aortic vascular smooth muscle of the dogfish shark.
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  • 38
    ISSN: 1430-4171
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    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract Traditional laboratories are often based on the hidden assumptions that students can, and indeed should, work alone, and that they can leave the laboratory when they have finished collecting the data or observations. Discovery laboratories provide an alternative to traditional laboratories in which one or more routes are taken by groups of students working toward the discovery of a specific scientific relationship or concept. The discovery laboratories used in this study were developed by colleagues from institutions where faculty teach the laboratory component of the course. The goal of this study was to see what happens when discovery laboratories are integrated into the general chemistry curriculum at a large research university where teaching assistants are in charge of the laboratory sections. For the purpose of this study, we differentiated between a minimal level of success, in which discovery laboratories become an alternative approach to traditional experiments, and a significant level of success, in which they become a preferred approach. Evidence is presented to support the notion that discovery laboratories can be successfully integrated into the curriculum at a large research university, that students in the discovery laboratories believe they had to take responsibility for what happened in the laboratory, that both teaching assistants and the students reacted positively to the discovery laboratories, and that we achieved at least our definition of the minimal level of success.
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-8 
    ISSN: 1430-4171
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    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract The reductive amination of pyruvate esters using benzylamine and sodium triacetoxyborohydride is described. Students isolate the N-benzylalanine ester and determine its structure using NMR and IR spectroscopy. Computational methods using CAChe provide information on reactive sites in the pyruvate substrate and reaction intermediates and allow for insight into the reaction mechanism. This experiment is safer than the more traditional reductive amination techniques, and it is appropriate for the introductory organic laboratory.
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-16 
    ISSN: 1430-4171
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    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract Although today unjustly neglected abroad and often even in his native land, Edvard Immanuel Hjelt (1855–1921), was an exceptionally gifted, dedicated, and multifaceted individual who made important contributions to chemistry, the history of chemistry, politics, and the management of national and international affairs. Little information about him is available in English. The present article supplements the only two English sources available [1, pp 66–83; 2] and makes this chemist-statesman better known to those chemists and historians who do not read Swedish or Finnish.
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-5 
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    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract A very simple stepper motor controller was designed and built for a scanning monochromator. The circuit design centers around a programmable peripheral interface chip that controls the gate of four power transistors, which in turn activate the coils on the stepper motor. Besides being very inexpensive to build, the interface shows improved performance when compared to the commercially available controller.
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-13 
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    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract Working on the premise that materials science is justifiably an appropriate place to begin teaching chemistry, George Lisensky and Dean Campbell demonstrated in their workshop a series of introductory chemistry laboratory experiments with solid-state chemistry as the focus. For the bulk of the workshop, participants broke up into various size groups, simulating a chemistry laboratory session. A rational ordering of demonstrations in solid-state chemical paradigms to be covered in a typical laboratory section, from unit cells to band theory, was presented. At each stage, the materials used for the laboratory demonstrations were clearly defined, shown to be budget friendly, very safe, and robust enough for student use. All experiments impressed workshop participants that solid-state laboratories are feasible and accessible teaching tools with just as much ability to stimulate students as other fields of chemistry. All the while, a very effective methodology for teaching chemistry through solid-state concepts was demonstrated.
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-7 
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    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract This workshop was composed of three interrelated topics: (1) learning styles, (2) teaching beliefs, and (3) group problems. To demonstrate different learning styles, an introductory survey was given to the participants to determine what learning styles were present in the group. The results of the survey were then discussed. The teaching beliefs of the participants were explored using another handout. The results from the group were then discussed as well as how the beliefs relate to teaching philosophy. Group problems were introduced through examples, and the workshop as a whole then negotiated a list of worthwhile characteristics for group problems.
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-11 
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    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract In this workshop, Mark M. Banaszak-Holl and M. David Curtis took turns elaborating on the recent changes and evolution of The University of Michigan’s introductory inorganic chemistry course, in light of an initial switch to teaching organic chemistry as a first-year chemistry course. The resulting weaker background of second-year students in traditional chemistry, particularly in physical chemistry topics, was noted. This situation prompted the following changes: creating a new physical chemistry course for second-year students to make up for the deficiencies in physical chemistry and narrowing the syllabi topics in the following inorganic course. It was reported that the overall curriculum shift brought about a fundamental re-evaluation of how teaching is approached at U of M with respect to the role of the person of the instructor as a traditional ‘purveyor of facts’ or a ‘motivator of learners.’ The use of Internet/multimedia sources to streamline class organization and improve learning were presented, including a proposal to integrate an interactive online question-and-answer site for the inorganic course. Interaction with workshop participants focused somewhat on comparative aspects of these curricular changes to their respective educational institutions but most heavily on test making and grading styles. The major problems associated with the curricula shift at U of M appear to have been identified and addressed, and work is continuing on further fine tuning of the classes.
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-7 
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    Notes: Abstract In this workshop, Peter Jurs and Robert Minard presented a concise, easily applied formula for improving the overall quality of the learning experience at a large state school through simple reading into student psychology. Using the example of a local beer garden, known for its activity, noise, and boisterousness, a ‘chaotic’ approach was described for designing a chemistry learning center attractive to students. The facility integrates all undergraduate laboratory instrumentation and study areas into one room with an atmosphere that is oriented to the student culture. Workshop participants concur that such an approach begins to address the problem of students being too distracted by nonacademic activities on campus after class. The development of this program was reported to greatly improve the level of peer interaction, group learning, and create a more positive response by majors and nonmajors alike to chemistry at Penn State. The success of the learning center in bringing in students suggests that this approach is not limited to chemistry, but is perhaps applicable to other fields of experimental science. Other departments at Penn State are currently exploring this option.
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-5 
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    Notes: Abstract The workshop ‘Technology and Assessment in Chemistry’ discussed a University of California at Los Angeles based and National Science Foundation funded project that is heavily invested in new instructional technology. Issues related to the convergence of technology and student learning and assessment were examined. The workshop was run by Bob Kozma of the Stanford Research Institute. Kozma first outlined the goals of the UCLA project entitled the ‘Molecular Science Project’ developed by Arlene Russell and Orville Chapman. Unlike other curriculum-reform projects, assessment is an integral part of the innovation. Kozma proceeded to describe his efforts to develop new assessment tools.
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-18 
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    Notes: Abstract Marie Anne Pierrette Paulze was a significant contributor to the understanding of chemistry in the late 1700s. Marie Anne married Antoine Laurent Lavoisier, known as the ‘Father of Modern Chemistry,’ and was his chief collaborator and laboratory assistant. Marie Anne Lavoisier translated Richard Kirwan’s ‘Essay on Phlogiston’ from English to French which allowed her husband and others to dispute Kirwan’s ideas. She drew many sketches and carved engravings of the laboratory instruments used by Lavoisier and his colleagues. She edited and published Lavoisier’s Memoirs and hosted many parties where eminent scientists discussed new chemistry and ideas. As a result of her close work with Antoine Lavoisier, it is difficult to separate her individual contributions from his, but it is correctly assumed that much of the work accredited to him bears her fingerprints.
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    Notes: Abstract The relative deuterium concentration and specific deuterium-site locations in a molecule can be determined using Site-Specific Natural Isotope Fractionation-Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (SNIF-NMR). For a given compound (e.g., ethanol) SNIF-NMR can provide information about the chemical pathway of formation and, in some cases, information about the geographic origin of a sample can also be discerned. SNIF-NMR has been applied to the analysis of wines and other alcoholic beverages. In this work, data were collected on samples of apple brandy, tequila, rum, potato vodka, cognac, and synthetic ethanol. Signal-to-noise considerations limit the samples that can be studied without preconcentration to those with relatively high alcohol contents.
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-13 
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    Notes: Abstract This report records a light-hearted (yet rigorous) study to determine the importance of the bend in the water molecule. We present the answer to what could be a rather open-ended question posed in a computational chemistry course to an advanced undergraduate student with access to a personal computer with one of several quantum chemical programs. We use commonly available computational chemical techniques as well as qualitative molecular orbital theory to probe the hypothetical question: If water were linear, what would be its nature?
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-8 
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    Notes: Abstract Many students of organic chemistry find it difficult to properly use electron arrows. Traditional arrows do not end at one type of location. Whereas the vast majority end at an atom, an arrow that indicates formation of a π bond points to a bond instead. Rethinking electron arrows leads to the following four rules, which form a consistent system: 1. An electron arrow always begins at an electron pair, either bonding or nonbonding. One arrow begins at the nucleophilic electron pair, if any. 2. An electron pair always remains attached to an atom, normally indicated by its arrow. 3. An electron arrow always ends at an atom, not at a bond. One arrow ends at the electrophilic atom, if an. 4. In a series of arrows for one mechanistic step, a succeeding arrow begins by the atom where the preceding arrow ends. This system of electron arrows is superior because the rules can be more generally applied, the arrows reflect the nucleophilicity of electron pairs, the arrows carry more meaning, the arrows in a series flow more directly from one to the next, and the arrows clearly prescribe products.
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-2 
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-3 
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-7 
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    Notes: Abstract The basic principles of laser-induced breakdown (emission) spectrometry (LIBS) for the determination of elements in solids, liquids, and aerosols are presented. A description of the instrumentation, including laser, sample chamber, and detection is followed by a brief discussion of potential interferences from matrix effects. The importance of time resolution and space resolution to minimize these effects is presented. The advantages and disadvantages of LIBS over inductively coupled plasma-atomic emission spectrometry (ICP-AES) and graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrometry (GFAAS) for elemental analysis is summarized. Special applications in which LIBS could excel include remote sensing, detection in a hostile environment, and underwater determinations.
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-10 
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    Notes: Abstract In this workshop, George Bodner contrasted evaluation with assessment, and presented Action Research as a method for evaluating curriculum changes. He emphasized that any major change in teaching will have some effect; if test scores or other analyses do not reflect this effect, then one must use other tools to uncover it. Bodner defined Action Research as qualitative information-gathering and analysis from all available sources, including reflective journals, comments from students, and personal interviews. In the past few decades, such qualitative research has given way to more quantitative studies, such as analysis of test scores. Bodner argued in his presentation that these quantitative measures are more precise, but less accurate, than Action Research’s subjective, informal methods of evaluation.
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-13 
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    Notes: Abstract ChemLinks is a collaborative effort by over seventy active participants from twenty-four academic institutions to write, test, and disseminate topical modules to be used to teach chemistry in the first and second years of the college curriculum. Twenty-four modules are currently under development and an additional seven will be started this year. In this workshop the leaders discussed the plan and philosophy behind this project and presented components from two modules as examples.
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-6 
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-18 
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    Notes: Abstract Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy has become one of the most powerful tools available to the chemist and biochemist for the study of structure and chemical exchange in a multitude of chemical systems. The phenomenon of nuclear magnetic resonance was first observed in 1946, and in these last five decades the field has grown tremendously. Today, almost every university chemistry department owns at least one commercial NMR spectrometer. Historically, the development of both the experimental and theoretical backbone of NMR has been tied to high-resolution NMR spectroscopy of isotropic liquids or solutions. Even after fifty years, the pace at which solution NMR data is presented in the literature remains staggering. The Protein Data Bank at Brookhaven National Laboratory alone holds NMR files describing almost one thousand proteins, peptides, and viruses, and over 500 different multidimensional pulse sequences have been published describing the acquisition methods for the determination of three-dimensional structures in solution.
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-11 
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    Notes: Abstract An undergraduate instrumental analysis laboratory exercise is presented for the characterization of light emission generated using electrochemiluminescence (ECL). ECL involves the electrochemical generation of excited states and as such is a sensitive probe of electrochemical, electron-transfer and energy-transfer processes at electrified interfaces. An objective of this experiment is to have students develop an understanding of the mechanisms and factors affecting ECL. Also, this exercise gives students experience in coupling two powerful analytical techniques: electrochemistry and spectroscopy. With the recent development of ECL technology for use in clinical diagnostics applications, this exercise also facilitates discussions on the importance of basic research and the practical aspects of taking a technology from the bench top to commercial reality.
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-18 
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    Notes: Abstract The Murnaghan-Hildebrand equation of state, an accurate equation of state for many solids and liquids, is introduced for use in the illustration of thermodynamic relationships. It is shown to meet the need for an equation of state accurate over a wide range of pressures. Parameters are given for four solid phases of iron and for the liquid, with which eleven thermodynamic functions including V, U, H, S, αV, V/B, and G can be calculated at any specified temperature and pressure. The program for these calculations can be used to represent experimental values, to illustrate thermodynamic relationships, to calculate chemical and phase equilibria, and to stimulate student interest from the study of real systems, for instance, the form of iron in the core of the earth.
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    Notes: Abstract This paper describes a simple method for the evaluation of the effectiveness of a sunscreen product. It illustrates the basic principle of semiconductor (such as TiO2) band gap, band-gap excitation, conduction-band electron trapping, and its application as an effective dosimeter in the UVB and UVA regions. The color change of the dosimeter, prepared from TiO2 sol, can be quantitatively determined with a UV-vis spectrometer or qualitatively by visual inspection. The experiment can be used as a freshman-chemistry laboratory exercise or performed as a classroom demonstration for high school students or nonchemistry-major college students.
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    Notes: Abstract Bromination of aniline and anisole derivatives with pyridinium hydrobromide perbromide (PHP) has been selectively achieved. By selecting appropriate reaction conditions, monobrominated, dibrominated, and, in some instances, tribrominated products may be obtained. PHP provides a safe and environmentally friendly way to conduct aromatic brominations. Pedagogic opportunities for this experiment are wide-ranging. GC-MS may be used for the separation of product mixtures. Steric and solvent effects may also be discussed as the scope and limitations of this technique are investigated in the organic laboratory.
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    Notes: Abstract Synthesis of Diels—Alder adducts of phencyclone with diverse dienophiles provides the basis for a major extended module in the second-semester laboratory of an organic chemistry course. With many accessible target compounds, students can have individual novel compounds to prepare. Especially attractive for students, the adducts are highly hindered, resulting in slow rotation about the C—C sp2—sp3 single bond to the unsubstituted bridgehead phenyl groups. Slow-exchange-limit NMR spectra (1H at 300 MHz and 13C at 75 MHz) are obtained at ambient temperatures for these phenyl groups. The highly crystalline products are easily prepared and offer excellent opportunities to integrate modern 1-D and 2-D NMR techniques into this synthesis experiment, while introduccing concepts of dynamic NMR spectroscopy. The synthetic reactions are readily carried out at the microscale level.
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    Notes: Abstract In this organic chemistry laboratory experiment, students perform two different alkylations of α-methylcyclohexanone. Conditions have been established that allow the students to achieve efficient anion formation using lithium diisopropylamide in tetrahydrofuran. First, the enolate is alkylated with either allyl bromide or benzyl bromide and the product analyzed by GC/MS. Subsequently, a competitive alkylation is performed using both electrophiles and the reaction mixture analyzed by GC/MS.
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-2 
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-11 
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    Notes: Abstract A historical approach to students reading research papers about aspartate transcarbamoylase (ATCase) is described. The literature exercise makes students think about the origin of biochemical research on regulatory enzymes and allows them to follow the evolution of the research over more than four decades of investigation. In the process, the students find themselves identifying with the investigators, not only reading the papers for their content, but formulating ideas about the future course of ATCase research. The students finish the project by writing a research proposal on an aspect of their own choosing of ATCase research.
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-3 
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    Notes: Abstract The specular-reflectance technique has been used to develop an experiment for an undergraduate instrumental course that demonstrates the ability of Fourier transform IR spectroscopy to routinely procure vibrational spectra of thin films of polymethylmethacrylate on reflective copper discs. The experiment introduces students to the specular-reflectance technique and its selection rules, then demonstrates how they reveal the orientational constraint of adsorbed molecules within a thin film. Suggestions are included on how to expand the experiment to demonstrate the relationships between film thickness and the amount of light absorbed.
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-11 
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    Notes: Abstract General chemistry students often complain that they are unmotivated because they see no applications of chemical principles in ‘real life.’ Instructors become frustrated by these complaints because they see the world as nothing less than a cornucopia of applications of chemistry. How can students learn that chemistry does apply to real life? In this paper, we describe service learning, a powerful strategy for integrating chemistry, community service, and real-life applications in the general chemistry curriculum.
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    Notes: Abstract Molecular visualization software is widely available and readily incorporated into a variety of teaching environments. By taking full advantage of the wealth of structural information available, relationships between structure and reactivity are readily extracted. These exercises are designed to engage students in discussions that invoke principles introduced in general chemistry (e.g., Lewis acidity, hydrogen bonding, reduction potentials) and are presented here in the context of heme biochemistry. Students are asked to determine the coordination environment of the iron center for several heme proteins and use these structures to predict relative reactivities toward dioxygen and/or hydrogen peroxide. What they discover is that perturbation of the axial ligand(s) has a profound effect on the Lewis acidities of these metal centers and thus on heme iron reactivity. Therefore, their diverse reactivities can be rationalized as a natural consequence of their bioinorganic coordination chemistry. Several questions are posed to initiate further discussion.
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-2 
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-12 
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    Notes: Abstract We present here a discovery-based laboratory project that introduces elementary quantum mechanical concepts using the spectral distributions of natural and artificial light sources. The measured emission spectra of sunlight and interior/exterior lighting are explained using the electromagnetic spectrum, the phenomenon of blackbody radiation, and the quantization of light. This 4–5 week experiment is appropriate for the general chemistry laboratory or can be expanded for use in upper-division chemistry laboratories, and it uses modern spectroradiometric equipment that is readily available and increasingly used in the physical and biological sciences.
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-13 
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    Notes: Abstract The need for controls in experimental science is a difficult concept for many science students to grasp. To illustrate its importance, we developed an activity in which students, acting in the role of alchemists, perform an uncontrolled transmutation experiment. When their experiment yields a surprising result, the students are forced to recognize the critical role that a control plays in experimental design. The activity is constructivist in nature and engaging for students. Additionally, it offers the opportunity to introduce multicultural issues and topics from the history of science.
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-14 
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    Notes: Abstract We report the development of a new physical chemistry laboratory exercise that uses gel permeation chromatography (GPC) to study pristine and photopolymerized C60 materials. GPC is a well-known method for probing molecular weight distributions because of its ability to separate macromolecules based upon size. In this experiment students are interested in the changing molecular weight distribution with irradiation. Students inject both pristine and photoirradiated C60 into the system and analyze the retention time data with a differential UV detector set at 300 nm. The observation of higher molecular weight oligomers upon irradiation is consistent with intermolecular bond formation by the proposed [2 + 2] cycloaddition pathway. The implementation of this laboratory in the classroom has been very successful, generating consistently positive feedback from the students.
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-9 
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    Notes: Abstract An experiment which is familiar to most physical chemistry students is the speed of sound based on the Kundt’s tube.[1] The experiment also allows the student to determine the heat-capacity ratio for various gases. The process of changing gases may be more easily accomplished if the microphone in the tube can be fixed in its position relative to the speaker. In this article, this modification to the experiment is discussed in terms of resonance generated in closed pipes.
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-17 
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    Notes: Abstract Molecular vibration plays an important role in chemistry, both in chemical reactions and in the characterization and measurement of molecular structure and bonding. Normal modes provide the conceptual framework for understanding molecular vibrations. For example, the analysis of infrared spectra, an important tool for chemists, relies heavily on the concept of normal modes; yet, undergraduate students, even chemistry majors, seldom gain a thorough understanding of normal modes through the traditional chemistry curriculum. In fact, the most commonly used physical chemistry textbooks give only a cursory introduction to this concept, leaving out the substantive development. This occurs presumably because normal modes emerge from a multistepped mathematical analysis of the molecular dynamics. While the mathematical skill needed for each step typically has been covered in an introductory calculus course, the full development is a lengthy process and skipped in the texts. Thus, students have little opportunity to develop a sound conceptual understanding of ‘vibrational modes’ and ‘fundamental vibrational frequencies,’ even though they inevitably encounter these terms in their future work.
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-1 
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-15 
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    Notes: Abstract Chemists who have made important contributions to politics, although a rare breed, date from the very inception of our science. Antoine-Laurent Lavoisier (1743–1794), the founder of modern chemistry, spent most of his time working as a financier, economist, accountant, banker, treasurer, academician, statistician,
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    Notes: Abstract Iodine adsorbed on a Pd electrode has been shown to catalyze the anodic dissolution of Pd in halide-free acidic solutions. An undergraduate instrumental analysis laboratory experiment has been developed that enables students to use basic electrochemical techniques (cyclic voltammetry and chronocoulometry) to detect and confirm this phenomenon. Cyclic voltammograms of clean Pd and I-coated Pd were done in 0.5 M sulfuric acid solutions containing iodide and iodine as well as halide free 0.5 M sulfuric acid. The large currents noted in the halide-free solution indicate an anodic process that is not related to the oxidation process in solutions containing iodine species. Chronocoulometry was used to determine the total charge that was passed in the 0.5 M sulfuric acid solutions for clean and I-coated Pd electrodes. The results of these experiments point to a unique catalyzed corrosion process for this otherwise inert metal.
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-7 
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    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract The LabWorks learning system is a computer-controlled data acquisition interface that allows students to quickly obtain and analyze chemistry data. This article describes how the LabWorks interface can be controlled with an HP 48G hand-held calculator rather than a personal computer. The calculator provides users with the same automated data acquisition as if a computer were controlling the interface, but it costs less and requires less maintenance and laboratory bench space. The types of measurements made by the system are discussed and a sample experiment described. Student data and comments are also presented.
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-1 
    ISSN: 1430-4171
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    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-6 
    ISSN: 1430-4171
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract This article describes two experiments suitable for a first-year general chemistry laboratory program emphasising “everyday chemistry.” The first experiment is the synthesis of various inorganic pigments that have been used by artists painting in oils. The second treats such pigments as unknown samples in a semimicroanalysis scheme, allowing the goal to be a detection of forgery. Each experiment can be performed in a three-hour time period and can be conveniently tailored for a team or individual exercise.
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-2 
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    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-2 
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-9 
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    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-12 
    ISSN: 1430-4171
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract In this paper we describe a series of web assignments carried out in large lecture, introductory chemistry courses. Our intent is to share the path by which assessment of student attitudes about these assignments has led to a relatively useful assignment after several attempts. At each step in our development we have used student surveys to refine our assignments and show how these refinements lead to positive outcomes in terms of both student attitudes and reported learning.
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    The chemical educator 3 (1998), S. 1-4 
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    Requirements engineering 3 (1998), S. 155-173 
    ISSN: 1432-010X
    Keywords: Key words:Requirements engineering – Scenarios – Use cases
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Computer Science
    Notes: Scenario management (SM) means different things to different people, even though everyone seems to admit its current importance and its further potential. In this paper, we seek to provide an interdisciplinary framework for SM from three major disciplines that use scenarios – strategic management, human–computer interaction, and software and systems engineering – to deal with description of current and future realities. In particular, we attempt to answer the following questions: How are scenarios developed and used in each of the three disciplines? Why are they becoming important? What are current research contributions in scenario management? What are the research and practical issues related to the creation and use of scenarios, in particular in the area of requirements engineering? Based on brainstorming techniques, this paper proposes an interdisciplinary definition of scenarios, frameworks for scenario development, use and evaluation, and directions for future research.
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    Requirements engineering 3 (1998), S. 174-181 
    ISSN: 1432-010X
    Keywords: Key words:Decision practice – Requirements analysis – Risk control – Scenario development
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Computer Science
    Notes: In this paper, we address the question of how flesh and blood decision makers manage the combinatorial explosion in scenario development for decision making under uncertainty. The first assumption is that the decision makers try to undertake ‘robust’ actions. For the decision maker a robust action is an action that has sufficiently good results whatever the events are. We examine the psychological as well as the theoretical problems raised by the notion of robustness. Finally, we address the false feeling of decision makers who talk of ‘risk control’. We argue that ‘risk control’ results from the thinking that one can postpone action after nature moves. This ‘action postponement’ amounts to changing look-ahead reasoning into diagnosis. We illustrate these ideas in the framework of software development and examine some possible implications for requirements analysis.
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    Requirements engineering 3 (1998), S. 219-241 
    ISSN: 1432-010X
    Keywords: Key words:Design representations – Requirements engineering – Scenarios
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Computer Science
    Notes: Scenarios are becoming widely used in three areas of system development: software engineering, human–computer interaction (HCI), and organisational process design. There are many reasons to use scenarios during system design. The one usually advanced in support of the practice is to aid the processes of validating the developers’ understanding of the customers’ or users’ work practices, organisational goals and structures, and system requirements. All three areas identified above deal with these processes, and not surprisingly this has given rise to a profusion of scenario-based practices and representations. Yet there has been little analysis of why scenarios should be useful, let alone whether they are. Only by having such a framework for understanding what scenarios are, and what they are for, can we begin to evaluate different scenario approaches in specific development contexts. This paper is a contribution toward such a framework. We lay out a space of representational possibilities for scenarios and enumerate a set of values or criteria that are important for different uses of scenarios. We then summarise several salient representations drawn from the software engineering, HCI, and organisational process design communities to clarify how these representational choices contribute to or detract from the goals of the respective practices. Finally, we discuss how scenario representations from one area of design may be useful in others, and we discuss the relationship between these representations and other significant early-design and requirements engineering practices.
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    Requirements engineering 3 (1998), S. 153-154 
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    Development genes and evolution 207 (1998), S. 535-541 
    ISSN: 1432-041X
    Keywords: Key words Histones ; Oogenesis ; Drosophila
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract  A genomic fragment was cloned from a DNA library constructed from a Drosophila enhancer trap line in which reporter gene expression was observed at the anterior-most tip of the ovaries and testes. This genomic clone was identified as the L-repeat of the Drosophila melanogaster histone gene cluster. Northern blotting and in situ hybridisation to RNA in tissues with individual cDNAs and PCR-generated probes for each histone confirmed that gene expression was greatest at the anterior portion of each ovariole, in the germarium, and was also elevated in a few individual nurse cells and somatic follicle cells within the egg chamber during early developmental stages. Histone H1 and each of the core histones had a similar expression pattern which was correlated to cell division. Maternal stores of histone transcripts were also transported to the mature oocyte from the nurse cells at a later stage of oogenesis (stage 10), when virtually all the nurse cells contained high levels of histone transcripts. The results are consistent with expression of the somatic histone gene cluster during oogenesis as a co-ordinate unit. There does not seem to be a reduced level of somatic type H1 in the germ-line, as is observed in some other species. The relationship between the P[lacZ] expression pattern in the germarium and the overall expression of the histone cluster suggests there are specific regulatory elements for germ-line expression.
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  • 100
    ISSN: 1432-041X
    Keywords: Key words Cyclins ; Stringlike ; Patella vulgata ; Cell cycle ; Differentiation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract  Trochoblasts are the first cells to differentiate during the development of spiralian embryos. Differentiation is accompanied by a cell division arrest. In embryos of the limpet Patella vulgata, the participation of cell cycle-regulating factors in trochoblast arrest was analysed as a first step to unravel its cause. We determined the cell cycle phase in which the trochoblasts are arrested by analysing the subcellular locations of mitotic cyclins. The results show that the trochoblasts are most likely arrested in the G2 phase. This was supported by measurement of the DNA content in trochoblast nuclei after the last division. Trochoblasts complete their final division at the sixth mitotic cycle. This mitotic cycle resembles the first postblastoderm cell cycle of Drosophila, in which mitotic activity is controlled by expression of the string gene. As failure of string expression results in cell cycle arrest in the G2 phase, negative regulation of a Patella string homolog could be responsible for trochoblast arrest. Although Stl messengers disappeared from trochoblasts during their final division, expression was observed again 20 min later. Messengers remained present in all trochoblasts at low levels during further development. Thus, expression of the stringlike gene allows the cell cycle arrest of these cells, whereas in Drosophila cells arrested in division lack string messengers.
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