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  • Other Sources  (78)
  • AGU  (37)
  • Nature Publishing Group  (37)
  • GEOMAR
  • 1990-1994  (31)
  • 1985-1989  (43)
  • 1970-1974  (4)
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  • 1
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 371 (6498). p. 563.
    Publication Date: 2017-05-10
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2020-07-23
    Description: Zero-age basalts dredged from the Kolbeinsey Ridge directly north of Iceland are mafic quartz tholeiites (MgO 6-10 wt. %), strongly depleted in incompatible elements. Fractionation-corrected Na2O contents ('Na(sub 8)') are amongst the lowest found on the global ridge system, implying that the degree of partial melting at Kolbeinsey is amongst the highest for all mid-ocean ridge basalt (MORB). In contrast, the basalts show large ranges of incompatible-element ratios (e.g., K2O/TiO2 of 0.01 to 0.12 and Nd/Sm of 2.1 to 2.9) not related to variations in radiogenic isotope ratios; this suggests recent enrichment/depletion events associated with small-degree partial melting as their cause, rather than long-lived source heterogeneity. Tholeiitic MORB from many regions globally show similar or more extreme variations in K2O/TiO2. Dynamic melting of an adiabatically upwelling source can reconcile these conflicting indications of the degree of melting. Through dynamic melting, the incompatible elements are partially separated into different melt fractions based on their bulk partition coefficients, more incompatible elements being concentrated in deeper, smaller-degree partial melts. The final erupted magma is a mix of melts from all depths in the melting column. The concentration of highly incompatible elements in the mix will be very sensitive to the physical processes allowing the deep melts to separate and migrate to the site of mixing, and small fluctuations in the efficiency of the separation process can account for the large range of trace element ratios seen at Kolbeinsey. The major element chemistry of the erupted mix (and Na(sub 8) is much more robust, depending mainly on the integrated total amount of melting. The large variations of incompatible element ratios seen at Kolbeinsey, and in MORB in general, therefore give no information about the total degree of melting occuring beneath the ridge, nor do they require a heterogeneous source.
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  • 3
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 371 (6495). pp. 289-290.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-02
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  • 4
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 372 (6505). pp. 421-424.
    Publication Date: 2016-06-10
    Description: Observations of large and abrupt climate changes recorded in Greenland ice cores have spurred a search for clues to their cause. This search has revealed that at six times during the last glaciation, huge armadas of icebergs launched from Canada spread across the northern Atlantic Ocean, each triggering a climate response of global extent.
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  • 5
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 372 (6507). pp. 621-622.
    Publication Date: 2016-07-15
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  • 6
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 367 (6462). pp. 414-415.
    Publication Date: 2016-06-16
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  • 7
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    AGU
    In:  Professional Paper, Contribution of Space Geodesy to Geodynamics: Crustal Dynamics, Washington, AGU, vol. 23, no. Subvol. b, pp. 311-329, (ISBN: 3-540-23712-7)
    Publication Date: 1993
    Keywords: Plate tectonics ; Crustal deformation (cf. Earthquake precursor: deformation or strain) ; ranging ; Geodesy ; Review article
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  • 8
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    AGU
    In:  Bull., Open-File Rept., Contribution of Space Geodesy to Geodynamics: Crustal Dynamics, Washington, AGU, vol. 23, no. 16, pp. 5-20, (ISBN 1-86239-165-3, vi + 330 pp.)
    Publication Date: 1993
    Keywords: Plate tectonics ; Crustal deformation (cf. Earthquake precursor: deformation or strain) ; ranging ; Geodesy ; Review article
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  • 9
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    AGU
    In:  Bull., Open-File Rept., Relating Geophysical Structures and Processes, Washington, D. C., AGU, vol. 76, no. 16, pp. 39-52, (ISBN 1-86239-165-3, vi + 330 pp.)
    Publication Date: 1993
    Keywords: Subduction zone ; Rheology
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  • 10
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 362 (6421). pp. 626-628.
    Publication Date: 2019-02-07
    Description: WHILE ammonites and all other ectocochleate cephalopods became extinct, nautiloids survived relatively unchanged from the Ordovician, suggesting that they are unusually well adapted to their niche. Here we obtain high-resolution tracks of Nautilus positions and depths, combined with telemetered jet pressures, which clarify both its lifestyle and economics. Nautilus is more active in nature than in captivity1, but its energy costs are lower than projected2,3. Viewing Nautilus as 'vertic', rather than benthic, resolves this contradiction. Records show that the cost of transport is the same in any direction within a vertical plane. Living on a reef face swept by a lateral current means that vertical movements4,5 sample large areas for chemical trails. A detected trail can be followed upcurrent in the slow-moving boundary layer, but no effort is wasted on horizontal movement without good prospects for food; long-range movements are downcurrent and made by drifting. Once fed, a Nautilus can reduce its energy costs by moving to deeper, cooler waters, where a single meal can last for months.
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  • 11
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 363 (6428). p. 405.
    Publication Date: 2017-08-03
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  • 12
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 366 (6453). pp. 338-340.
    Publication Date: 2015-08-31
    Description: THE vestimentiferan tubeworm Riftia pachyptila is found around hydrothermal vent areas in the deep sea. Intracellular bacterial chemoautotrophic symbionts use the oxidation of sulphide from the effluent of the vents as an energy source for CO2 fixation. They apparently provide most or all of the nutritional requirements for their gutless hosts1–5. This kind of symbiosis has since been found in many other species from various other phyla from other habitats6–9. Here we present results that the bacteria of R. pachyptila may cover a significant fraction of their respiratory needs by the use of nitrate in addition to oxygen. Nitrate is reduced to nitrite, which may be the end product (nitrate respiration)10 or it may be further reduced to nitrogen gas (denitrification)11. This metabolic trait may have an important role in the colonization of hypoxic habitats in general by animals with this kind of symbiosis.
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  • 13
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 361 . pp. 249-251.
    Publication Date: 2017-02-24
    Description: THE supply of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) is not considered to limit oceanic primary productivity1, as its concentration in sea water exceeds that of other plant macronutrients such as nitrate and phosphate by two and three orders of magnitude, respectively. But the bulk of oceanic new production2 and a major fraction of vertical carbon flux is mediated by a few diatom genera whose ability to use DIG components other than CO2, which comprises 〈 1% of total DIC3, is unknown4. Here we show that under optimal light and nutrient conditions, diatom growth rate can in fact be limited by the supply of CO2. The doubling in surface water pCO2 levels since the last glaciation from 180 to 355 p.p.m.5,6 could therefore have stimulated marine productivity, thereby increasing oceanic carbon sequestration by the biological pump.
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  • 14
    Publication Date: 2023-03-23
    Type: Report , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 15
    Publication Date: 2024-01-08
    Type: Report , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 16
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 356 (6366). p. 199.
    Publication Date: 2017-03-14
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  • 17
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    AGU
    In:  Reviews of Geophysics, 30 (2). p. 113.
    Publication Date: 2020-06-03
    Description: Accretionary prisms are composed of initially saturated sediments caught in subduction zone tectonism. As sediments deform, fluid pressures rise and fluid is expelled, resembling a saturated sponge being tectonically squeezed. Fluid flow from the accretionary prism feeds surface biological cases, precipitates and dissolves minerals, and causes temperature and geochemical anomalies. Structural and metamorphic features are affected at all scales by fluid pressures or fluid flow in accretionary prisms. Accordingly, this dynamic tectonic environment provides an accessible model for fluid/rock interactions occurring at greater crustal depths. Porosity reduction and to a lesser degree mineral dehydration and the breakdown of sedimentary organic matter provide the fluids expelled from accretionary prisms. Mature hydrocarbons expulsed along prism faults indicate deep sources and many tens of kilometers of lateral transport of fluids. Many faults cutting accretionary prisms expel fluids fresher than seawater, presumably generated by dehydration of clay minerals at depth. Models of fluid flow from accretionary prisms use Darcy's law with matrix and fractures/faults being assigned different permeabilities. Fluid pressures in accretionary prisms are commonly high but range from hydrostatic to lithostatic. Matrix or intergranular permeability ranges from less than 10−20 m² to 10−13 m². Fracture permeability probably exceeds 10−12 m². A global estimate of fluid flux into accretionary prisms suggests they recycle the oceans every 500 m.y. Fluid flow out of accretionary prisms occurs by distributed flow through intergranular permeability and along zones of focused flow, typically faults. Focused fluid flow is 3 to 4 orders of magnitude faster than distributed flow, probably representing the mean differences in permeability along these respective expulsion paths. During the geological evolution of accretionary prisms, distributed flow through pore spaces decreases as a result of consolidation and cementation, whereas flow along fracture systems becomes dominant. Although thrust faults are most common in the compressional environment of accretionary prisms, normal and strike-slip faults are efficient fluid drains, because they are easier to dilate. Observations from both modern and ancient prisms suggest episodic fluid flow which is probably coupled to episodic fault displacement and ultimately to the earthquake cycle.
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  • 18
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 357 (6374). p. 105.
    Publication Date: 2017-08-03
    Type: Article , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 19
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    GEOMAR
    In:  (PhD/ Doctoral thesis), Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel, Kiel, Germany, 104 pp . GEOMAR-Report, 013 . DOI 10.3289/GEOMAR_REP_13_1992 〈http://dx.doi.org/10.3289/GEOMAR_REP_13_1992〉.
    Publication Date: 2020-10-20
    Description: Oxygen and carbon isotope measurements were carried out on tests of planktic foraminilers N. pachyderma (sin.) from eight sediment cores taken from the eastem Arctic Ocean, the Fram Strait, and the Iceland Sea, in order to reconstruct Arctic Ocean and Norwegian-Greenland Sea circulation patterns and ice covers during the last 130,000 years. ln addition, the influence of ice, temperature and salinity effects on the isotopic signal was quantified. Isotope measurements on foraminifers from sediment surface samples were used to elucidate the ecology of N. pachyderma (sin.). Changes in the oxygen and carbon isotope composition of N. pachyderma (sin.) from sediment surface samples document the horizontal and vertical changes of water mass boundaries controlled by watertemperature and salinity, because N. pachyderma (sin.) shows drastic changes in depth habitats, depending on the water mass properties. It was able to be shown that in the investigated areas a regional and spatial apparent increase of the ice effect occurred. This happened especially du ring the termination 1 by direct advection of meltwaters from nearby continents or during the termination and in interglacials by supply of isotopically light water from rivers. A northwardly proceeding overprint of the "global" ice effect, increasing from the Norwegian-Greenland Sea to the Arctic Ocean, was not able to be demonstrated. By means of a model the influence of temperature and salinity on the global ice volume signal during the last 130.000 years was recorded. In combination with the results of this study, the model was the basis for a reconstruction of the paleoceanographic development of the Arctic Ocean and the Norwegian-Greenland Sea during this time interval. The conception of a relatively thick and permanent sea ice cover in the Nordic Seas during glacial times should be replaced by the model of a seasonally and regionally highly variable ice cover. Only during isotope stage 5e may there have been a local deep water formation in the Fram Strait.
    Type: Thesis , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 20
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 358 (6389). pp. 710-711.
    Publication Date: 2016-06-10
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  • 21
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 356 (6370). pp. 587-589.
    Publication Date: 2016-06-10
    Description: ALTHOUGH anthropogenic emissions of carbon dioxide have today created a greater atmospheric CO2concentration in the Northern than in the Southern Hemisphere, a comparison of interhemispheric CO2 profiles from 1980 and 1962 led Keeling and Heimann1,2 to conclude that, before the Industrial Revolution, natural CO2 sources and sinks acted to set up a reverse (south to north) gradient which drove about one gigatonne of carbon each year through the atmosphere from the Southern to the Northern Hemisphere. At steady state, this flux must have been balanced by a counter flow of carbon from north to south through the ocean. Here we present a means to estimate this natural flux by a separation of oceanic carbon anomalies into those created by biogenic processes and those created by CO2 exchange between the ocean and atmosphere. We find that before the Industrial Revolution, deep water formed in the northern Atlantic Ocean carried about 0.6 gigatonnes of carbon annually to the Southern Hemisphere, providing support for Keeling and Heimann's proposal. The existence of this oceanic carbon pump also raises questions about the need for a large terrestrial carbon sink in the Northern Hemisphere, as postulated by Tans et al.3, to balance the present global carbon budget.
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  • 22
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 359 (6398). pp. 779-780.
    Publication Date: 2016-06-10
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  • 23
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 356 (6372). pp. 744-746.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-02
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  • 24
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 351 (6325). pp. 394-397.
    Publication Date: 2017-08-10
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  • 25
    Publication Date: 2020-07-23
    Description: Monthly climatologies of near-surface phytoplankton pigment concentration and sea surface temperature (SST) were derived for the Gulf of Mexico from multiyear series of coastal zone color scanner (CZCS) (November 1978 to November 1985) and advanced very high resolution radiometer (AVHRR) (January 1983 to December 1987) images. We complement these series with SST from the comprehensive ocean-atmosphere data set (1946–1987) and Climate Analysis Center (1982–1990), and hydrographic profile data from the NOAA National Oceanographic Data Center (1914–1985). The CZCS ocean color satellite data provide the first climatological time series of phytoplankton concentration for the region. The CZCS images show that seasonal variation in pigment concentration seaward of the shelf is synchronous throughout the gulf, with highest values (〉0.18 mg m−3) in December to February and lowest values (∼0.06 mg m−3) in May to July. Variation in SST is also synchronous throughout the gulf, with maxima in July to September and minima in February to March, The amplitude of the SST variation in the western gulf is about twice that observed in the eastern gulf, and SST maxima and minima persist longer in the west. Larger amplitudes in SST variation are also observed toward the margins. While annual cycles of SST and pigment concentrations are out of phase relative to each other, the phases of mixed layer depth change and pigment concentration change are similar. Model simulations suggest that the single most important factor controlling the seasonal cycle in surface pigment concentration is the depth of the mixed layer. The combined use of ocean color and infrared images permits year-round observation of spatial structure of the surface circulation in the gulf and the pattern of dispersal of the Mississippi River plume. Infrared images are most useful between November and mid-May, when strong SST gradients occur. During this time, pigment concentrations are high and can be horizontally homogeneous. In contrast, between late May and October, SST fields are uniform, but the Loop Current and large anticyclonic eddies could be traced with the CZCS. Three anticyclonic eddies were observed in 1979, and at least two were observed in 1980. No eddies were observed during summers of subsequent years in the CZCS time series, but this may be a result of the dramatic decrease in the satellite sampling rate. The series of color images showed that small parcels of Mississippi River water were frequently (2–4 times a year) entrained in the cyclonic edge of the Loop Current, stretched along the Current, and carried to the southeast along the western Florida shelf. However, most of the Mississippi River water flowed to the west, following the Louisiana-Texas coast as far south as the Mexico-United States border. Here, a persistent cyclone may reside, exporting shelf constituents to deeper regions of the gulf.
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  • 26
    Publication Date: 2016-05-17
    Description: IN 1989, the submersible Nautile discovered one of the most active hydrothermal fields on the modern ocean floor, in the Lau back-arc basin (Fig. 1). The field contains high-temperature white and black smokers, and as we report here, its characteristics contrast strongly with those of the hydrothermal fields found at normal mid-ocean ridges. The main differences are the acidity (pH as low as 2), chemistry and temperature (up to 400 °C) of the hydrothermal fluids, the composition of the ore deposits, and the volcanic and tectonic environments. The fluids also have very high concentrations of trace metals, and primary gold is present in the accompanying mineral deposits. Our data show that these back-arc deposits in the Lau Basin are intermediate between typical mid-ocean-ridge mineralization and massive sulphide deposits of the Kuroko type.
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  • 27
    Publication Date: 2017-02-24
    Description: The response of the global climate system to smoke from burning oil wells in Kuwait is investigated in a series of numerical experiments using a coupled atmosphere–ocean general circulation model with an interactive soot transport model and extended radiation scheme. The results show a decrease in surface air temperature of ~4 °C in the Gulf region. Outside this region the changes are small and statistically insignificant. No weakening of the Indian summer monsoon is observed.
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  • 28
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 346 (6282). pp. 323-324.
    Publication Date: 2017-08-10
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  • 29
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    AGU
    In:  Reviews of Geophysics, 28 (4). pp. 357-380.
    Publication Date: 2020-06-03
    Description: Recent developments in side-scan sonar technology have increased the potential for fundamental changes in our understanding of ocean basins. Developed in the late 1960s, “side looking” sonars have been widely used for the last two decades to obtain qualitative estimates of the acoustic properties of the materials of the seafloor. Modern developments in the ability to obtain spatially correct digital data from side-scan sonar systems have resulted in images that can be subsequently processed, enhanced, and quantified. With appropriate processing, these acoustic images can be made to resemble easily recognizable optical photographs. Any geological interpretation of these images requires an understanding of the inherent limitations of the data acquisition system. When imagery is collected, these limitations are largely centered on the concept of resolution. In side-scan sonar images, there are several different types of resolution, including along- and across-track resolution, display resolution, and absolute instrumental resolution. All of these parameters play a critical role in our ability to calibrate and ultimately to interpret the new pictures of the ocean floor. Acoustic image processing is a new application of an old and well-established technique. Digital optical images have benefited from several decades of development in processing techniques. These relatively sophisticated techniques have been applied to photographic images from satellites and spacecraft, images which are “noisy” and difficult to obtain but extremely valuable. Side-scan sonar systems, on the other hand, have only recently been able to produce spatially correct, digital images of the seafloor. The application of digital signal-processing techniques to side-scan sonar data will now allow us to quantify what had been previously very subjective and qualitative interpretations of images of the seafloor. The goal of all this processing of acoustic images remains clear: the development of an interpretable map of the geology of the seafloor.
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  • 30
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    GEOMAR
    In:  GEOMAR, Kiel, 27 pp.
    Publication Date: 2014-11-09
    Type: Report , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 31
    Publication Date: 2019-05-08
    Description: ISOTOPE ratios and concentrations of incompatible trace elements are remarkably successful in discriminating the tectonic origin and magmatic source components for basalts1–5. But problems remain with discriminating the tectonic origin of some tholeiites, especially where field relations and other geological evidence are ambiguous. For example, the tectonic origin of basalts from the Troodos ophiolite (Cyprus) has been debated for several decades. Most workers have been unable to distinguish between an island-arc and/or back-arc origin for the ophiolite6–8. Here we use volatile, K2O and TiO2 contents from ∼250 fresh submarine volcanic glasses to discriminate between tholeiites from different tectonic regimes. K2O÷H2O ratios are lower (〈0.70) in spread ing-centre glasses than in those from island arcs and intraplate oceanic islands. Back-arc-basin basalts can generally be separated from mid-ocean-ridge basalts by their high H2O contents. Using this information, we show that some fresh glasses from the Troodos ophiolite have a clear back-arc-basin affinity.
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  • 32
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    AGU
    In:  Washington D. C., AGU, vol. 4, no. 3, pp. 2-203, (ISBN: 3-540-41598-X)
    Publication Date: 1989
    Keywords: Plate tectonics ; Crustal deformation (cf. Earthquake precursor: deformation or strain) ; Stress ; Vanicek
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  • 33
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    AGU
    In:  Washington D. C., AGU, vol. 3, no. ALEX(01)-FR-77-01, AFTAC Contract F08606-76-C-0025, pp. 329, (ISBN 1-903544-06-8)
    Publication Date: 1989
    Keywords: Textbook of geology ; Volcanology ; Earthquake hazard
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  • 34
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    AGU
    In:  Washington D. C., AGU, vol. 5, no. XVI:, pp. 1-14, (ISBN 0-89871-521-0)
    Publication Date: 1989
    Keywords: Earth model, also for more shallow analyses ! ; Plate tectonics ; Geol. aspects ; Deep seismic sounding (espec. cont. crust)
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  • 35
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    AGU
    In:  Bull., Polar Proj. OP-O3A4, Origin and Evolution of Sedimentary Basins and Their Energy, Washington, D.C., AGU, vol. 48, no. 4, pp. 65-71, (ISBN 0080419208)
    Publication Date: 1989
    Keywords: Geol. aspects ; Modelling ; Crustal deformation (cf. Earthquake precursor: deformation or strain) ; 8110 ; Tectonophysics ; Continental ; tectonics ; 8165 ; Structural ; geology ; (crustal ; structure ; and ; mechanics) ; 8194 ; Instruments ; and ; techniques
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  • 36
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    AGU
    In:  Washington D. C., AGU, vol. 8, no. XVI:, pp. 1-14, (ISBN: 0-387-30752-4)
    Publication Date: 1989
    Keywords: Data analysis / ~ processing ; Statistical investigations
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  • 37
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    AGU
    In:  Washington D. C., AGU, vol. 8, no. Publ. No. 12, pp. 9, (3-540-24165-5, XXVI + 228 p.)
    Publication Date: 1989
    Keywords: Earth model, also for more shallow analyses ! ; Plate tectonics
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  • 38
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    AGU
    In:  AGU Spring Meeting, S22A-13, Baltimore, AGU, vol. 11, no. CUED/C/Mats/Tr 51, pp. 1414-1415
    Publication Date: 1989
    Keywords: Seismic networks ; Seismic arrays ; Filter- ; Polarization ; Shear waves
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  • 39
    Publication Date: 2018-03-02
    Description: RECENT advances in 40Ar/39Ar dating1,2 have made it possible to date individual K-feldspar grains from Pleistocene tephra, a capability that greatly improves the reliability and temporal resolving power of the method. Here we apply these new techniques to the dating of a phonolite tephra from the East Eifel volcanic field in West Germany, which is sandwiched between loess and palaeosol (alfisol) deposits, and which was therefore erupted during the transition from a glacial to an interglacial period. Our age estimate for this transition is 215±4 kyr (1 σ), which has important implications for the marine δ18O timescale and for models of global climate change during the Pleistocene. The results show that single-grain dating can detect and compensate for the large quantities of xenocrystic contaminants which are found in many tephra deposits. This technique could be used to date the tephra layers found in marine sediment cores and the results could greatly enhance the reliability of the marine δ18O timescale for more rigorous Fourier analysis testing of the Milankovitch hypothesis.
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  • 40
    Publication Date: 2016-06-16
    Description: ROOTH proposed that the Younger Dryas cold episode, which chilled the North Atlantic region from 11,000 to 10,000 yr BP, was initiated by a diversion of meltwater from the Mississippi drainage to the St Lawrence drainage system. The link between these events is postulated to be a turnoff, during the Younger Dryas cold episode, of the North Atlantic's conveyor-belt circulation system which currently supplies an enormous amount of heat to the atmosphere over the North Atlantic region2. This turnoff is attributed to a reduction in surface-water salinity, and hence also in density, of the waters in the region where North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) now forms. Here we present oxygen isotope and accelerator radiocarbon measurements on planktonic foraminifera from Orca Basin core EN32-PC4 which reveal a significant reduction in meltwater flow through the Mississippi River to the Gulf of Mexico from about 11,200 to 10,000 radiocarbon years ago. This finding is consistent with the record for Lake Agassiz which indicates that the meltwater from the southwestern margin of the Laurentide Ice Sheet was diverted to the northern Atlantic Ocean through the St Lawrence valley during the interval from ~11,000 to 10,000 years before present (yr BP).
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  • 41
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    AGU
    In:  Washington, D.C., AGU, vol. Developments in Petroleum Science vol. 15B, no. Publ. No. 12, pp. 9, (ISBN: 3-540-31080-0)
    Publication Date: 1988
    Keywords: Handbook of physics ; Handbook of mineralogy ; Physical properties of rocks ; Mineralogy
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  • 42
    Publication Date: 2016-06-10
    Description: Abrupt changes in climatic conditions have been seen at high latitudes in the North Atlantic and the Antarctic at 13 kyr BP. It is important to determine whether this abrupt change was confined to high-latitude regions or whether it was global. Here we present results demonstrating an abrupt change in the rate and character of sedimentation in the South China Sea at the close of the last glacial period. Radiocarbon dating and its position in the oxygen isotope shift suggest that this change may be coincident with the changes found at high latitudes.
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  • 43
    Publication Date: 2016-06-15
    Description: Abrupt changes in climatic conditions have been seen at high latitudes in the North Atlantic1 and the Antarctic2,3 at 13 kyr BP. It is important to determine whether this abrupt change was confined to high-latitude regions or whether it was global. Here we present results demonstrating an abrupt change in the rate and character of sedimentation in the South China Sea at the close of the last glacial period. Radiocarbon dating and its position in the oxygen isotope shift suggest that this change may be coincident with the changes found at high latitudes.
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  • 44
    Publication Date: 2016-10-24
    Description: Perhaps the most significant event in the Cretaceous record of the carbon isotope composition of carbonate1,2, other than the 1–2.5 ‰ negative shift in the carbon isotope composition of calcareous plankton at the Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary3, is the rapid global positive excursion of ~2 ‰ (13C enrichment) which took place between ~91.5 Myr and 90.3 Myr (late Cenomanian to earliest Turonian (C/T boundary event))1,4,5. This excursion has been attributed to a change in the isotope composition of the marine total dissolved carbon (TDC) reservoir resulting from an increase in rate of burial of 13C-depleted organic carbon, which coincided with a major global rise in sea level5 during the so-called C/T oceanic anoxic event (OAE)6. Here we present new data, from nine localities, which demonstrate that a positive excursion in the carbon isotope composition of organic carbon at or near the C/T boundary7,8 is nearly synchronous with that for carbonate and is widespread throughout the Tethys and Atlantic basins (Fig. 1), as well as in more high-latitude epicontinental seas. The postulated increase in the rate of burial of organic carbon may have had a significant effect on CO2 and O2 concentrations in the oceans and atmosphere, and consequent effects on global climate and sedimentary facies.
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  • 45
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 333 (6168). pp. 64-66.
    Publication Date: 2014-04-25
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  • 46
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 333 (6168). pp. 17-18.
    Publication Date: 2019-05-06
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  • 47
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    AGU
    In:  Bull., Polar Proj. OP-O3A4, Composition, Structure and Dynamics of the Lithosphere-Asthenosphere System, Washington, D.C., AGU, vol. 16, no. Subvol. a, pp. 111-123, (ISBN 0080419208)
    Publication Date: 1987
    Keywords: Review article ; Anisotropy ; Physical properties of rocks
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  • 48
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 326 (6111). pp. 373-375.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-02
    Description: Hurricanes and other strong storms can cause important decreases in sea surface temperature by means of vertical mixing within the upper ocean, and by air–sea heat exchange. Here we use satellite-derived infrared images of the western North Atlantic to study sea surface cooling caused by hurricane Gloria (1985). Significant regional variations in sea surface cooling are well correlated with hydrographic conditions. The greatest cooling (up to 5°C) occurred in slope waters north of the Gulf Stream where the seasonal thermocline is shallowest and most compressed; moderate cooling (up to 3 °C) occurred in the open Sargasso Sea where the thermocline is deeper and more diffused; little or no cooling occurred in shallow coastal waters (bottom depth less than 20 m) which were isothermal before the passage of hurricane Gloria. There is a pronounced right-side asymmetry of sea surface cooling with stronger (by a factor of 4) and more extensive (by a factor of 3) cooling found on the right side of the hurricane track. These qualitative results are consistent with the notion that vertical mixing within the upper ocean is the dominant sea surface cooling mechanism of hurricanes.
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  • 49
    Publication Date: 2016-05-18
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  • 50
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 328 (6126). pp. 123-126.
    Publication Date: 2016-06-10
    Description: There is now clear evidence that changes in the Earth's climate may be sudden rather than gradual. It is time to put research into the build-up of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere on a better footing.
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  • 51
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    AGU
    In:  Washington D. C., AGU, vol. 1, pp. 6322, (ISBN 0-521-79203-7)
    Publication Date: 1986
    Keywords: Textbook of geophysics ; Seismics (controlled source seismology) ; Earth model, also for more shallow analyses !
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  • 52
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    AGU
    In:  Washington D. C., AGU, vol. 14, pp. 6322, (ISBN 0-521-79203-7)
    Publication Date: 1986
    Keywords: Textbook of geophysics ; Seismics (controlled source seismology) ; Earth model, also for more shallow analyses ! ; Reflection seismics
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  • 53
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    AGU
    In:  Washington D.C., AGU, vol. 6, no. XVI:, pp. 227-235, (ISBN 3-342-00685-4)
    Publication Date: 1986
    Keywords: Stress ; Earthquake precursor: statistical anal. of seismicity ; Source parameters ; Stress drop
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  • 54
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    AGU
    In:  Washington D.C., AGU, vol. 6, no. Publ. No. 12, pp. 81-89, (ISBN 0-444-50971-2)
    Publication Date: 1986
    Keywords: Rock mechanics ; Fluids ; Source
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  • 55
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    AGU
    In:  Professional Paper, Earthquake Source Mechanics, Washington, D.C., AGU, vol. 6, no. 16, pp. 91-96, (ISBN 1-4020-1729-4)
    Publication Date: 1986
    Keywords: Earthquake precursor: prediction research
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  • 56
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    AGU
    In:  Bull., Open-File Rept., Earthquake Source Mechanics, Maurice Ewing Ser., Washington D.C., AGU, vol. 6, no. 16, pp. 209-216, (ISBN 1-86239-165-3, vi + 330 pp.)
    Publication Date: 1986
    Keywords: Seismicity ; Subduction zone ; scaling ; Magnitude ; seismic Moment ; nokms
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  • 57
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    AGU
    In:  Bull., Open-File Rept., Earthquake Source Mechanics, Maurice Ewing Ser., Washington D.C., AGU, vol. 6, no. 16, pp. 157-167, (ISBN 1-86239-165-3, vi + 330 pp.)
    Publication Date: 1986
    Keywords: Fracture ; Fault zone ; Source
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  • 58
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    AGU
    In:  Washington, D.C., 341 pp., AGU, vol. 231, no. 3, pp. 2-203, (ISBN 0-470-02298-1)
    Publication Date: 1986
    Keywords: Earthquake precursor: prediction research
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  • 59
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    AGU
    In:  Washington D.C., AGU, vol. 6, no. XVI:, pp. 65-70, (ISBN: 3486274473, 2. Auflage 2004, xxiv, 244 Seiten)
    Publication Date: 1986
    Keywords: Friction ; Fault zone ; Elasticity
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  • 60
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    AGU
    In:  Washington D.C., AGU, vol. 6, no. 22, pp. 71-80, (ISBN 0-87590-422-X)
    Publication Date: 1986
    Keywords: Fracture ; Inelastic ; Fault zone ; Source mechanics
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  • 61
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    AGU
    In:  Professional Paper, Earthquake Source Mechanics, Washington, D.C., AGU, vol. 6, no. 16, pp. 237-245, (ISBN 1-86239-165-3, vi + 330 pp.)
    Publication Date: 1986
    Keywords: Earthquake precursor: prediction research ; Stress drop ; Seismic arrays ; Source parameters
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  • 62
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    AGU
    In:  Bull., Polar Proj. OP-O3A4, Reflection Seismology: A Global Perspective, Washington, D.C., AGU, vol. 13, no. Subvol. a, pp. 167-182, (ISBN 0080419208)
    Publication Date: 1986
    Keywords: Review article ; Deep seismic sounding (espec. cont. crust) ; Refraction seismics ; Muller
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  • 63
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    AGU
    In:  Bull., Open-File Rept., Earthquake Source Mechanics, Washington D. C., AGU, vol. 6, no. 16, pp. 147-155, (ISBN 1-86239-165-3, vi + 330 pp.)
    Publication Date: 1986
    Keywords: FractureT ; Fault zone ; Geol. aspects
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  • 64
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    AGU
    In:  Bull., Open-File Rept., Earthquake Source Mechanics, Washington, D.C., AGU, vol. 6, no. 1, pp. 131-145, (ISBN 1-86239-165-3, vi + 330 pp.)
    Publication Date: 1986
    Keywords: Earthquake ; Stress ; Geothermics ; CRUST ; Inelastic ; HGROSSER ; FROTH
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  • 65
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 320 (6058). pp. 107-108.
    Publication Date: 2016-03-01
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  • 66
    Publication Date: 2020-07-23
    Description: A high-resolution near-bottom survey has been conducted of the Clipperton transform fault and adjoining segments of the East Pacific Rise (EPR), using the Sea MARC I side-looking sonar system and the Lamont-Doherty Geological Observatory Olympus-based camera system. The transform fault zone (TFZ) is a narrow, well-defined belt of transform-parallel lineaments, which varies along strike from a single, sharp-edged notch to a complex band of subparallel lineaments up to 1 km wide. The TFZ is set within a 5-km-wide band of unusually fine-grained side scan texture, which could indicate nonbasaltic seafloor and/or pervasively sheared and mass-wasted basaltic crust The fine-grained swath is surrounded by constructional volcanic terrain with no hint of strike-slip motion; this observation puts an upper limit of 5 km on the extent of lateral migration of the TFZ in the last 1.5 m.y. Both ridge transform intersections (RTIs) are dominated by bathymetric highs located on the old plate opposite the spreading center. A mantling of fresh-looking constructional volcanic terrain on side scan images suggests that the highs are built in part by recent extrusive and intrusive volcanism; thermal expansion may also play a part. The EPR south of Clipperton has recently experienced extrusion of high effusion rate basalts, burial of faults and fissures by lava flows, and development of vigorous hydrothermal circulation. On the EPR north of Clipperton, the axial zone of faults and fissures tapers toward the transform fault; this may reflect a change in the shape or size of the underlying shallow level magma feeders as a function of distance from the site of magma upwelling or distance toward the transform fault.
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  • 67
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    AGU
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 91 (C12). pp. 14192-14206.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-23
    Description: In the western tropical Atlantic, seasonal variations in the surface winds and in the ocean are dominated by an annual harmonic. A simulation with a general circulation model indicates that the response in the western side of the basin is an equilibrium one practically in phase with the local winds. It includes the following: large vertical excursions of the thermocline that have a 180° change in phase across 8°N approximately; a change in the direction of the North Brazilian Coastal Current, which flows continuously along the coast between December and May but which veers offshore near 5°N to feed the North Equatorial Countercurrent during the other months; and a seasonal reversal of the countercurrent. To the east of 30°W, seasonal changes in the model have a prominent semiannual harmonic in phase with the local winds but only partially attributable to forcing at that frequency. The transients excited by the abrupt intensification of the southeast tradewinds in May happen to have a phase essentially the same as that of the semiannual forcing. These transients decay by the end of the calendar year, so that the seasonal cycle that starts with the intensification of the winds in May can be treated as an initial value problem as far as the upper ocean, above the thermocline, is concerned. The winds along the equator determine the response of the surface equatorial layer in the Gulf of Guinea but play a minor role in the seasonal upwelling along the coast near 5°N. That upwelling is strongly influenced by changes in both components of the wind, and in the curl of the wind, over the Gulf of Guinea.
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  • 68
    Publication Date: 2020-07-23
    Description: Eddy correlation measurements over the ocean give CO2 fluxes an order of magnitude or more larger than expected from mass balance measurements using radiocarbon and radon 222. In particular, Smith and Jones (1985) reported large upward and downward fluxes in a surf zone at supersaturations of 15% and attributed them to the equilibration of bubbles at elevated pressures. They argue that even on the open ocean such bubble injection may create steady state CO2 supersaturations and that inferences of fluxes based on air-sea pCO2 differences and radon exchange velocities must be made with caution. We defend the global average CO2 exchange rate determined by three independent radioisotopic means: prebomb radiocarbon inventories; global surveys of mixed layer radon deficits; and oceanic uptake of bomb-produced radiocarbon. We argue that laboratory and lake data do not lead one to expect fluxes as large as reported from the eddy correlation technique; that the radon method of determining exchange velocities is indeed useful for estimating CO2 fluxes; that supersaturations of CO2 due to bubble injection on the open ocean are negligible; that the hypothesis that Smith and Jones advance cannot account for the fluxes that they report; and that the pCO2 values reported by Smith and Jones are likely to be systematically much too high. The CO2 fluxes for the ocean measured to date by the micrometeorological method can be reconciled with neither the observed concentrations of radioisotopes of radon and carbon in the oceans nor the tracer experiments carried out in lakes and in wind/wave tunnels.
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  • 69
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 319 . pp. 574-576.
    Publication Date: 2019-01-21
    Description: One of the most striking features of the upper North Atlantic Ocean is an extensive layer of water with temperature close to 18°C and salinity close to 36.5‰, (ref. 1). This 18°C water is formed by winter convection in the Sargasso sea2,3, but aspects of the annual rate of 18°C water formation remain obscure4. We have simulated this water mass formation by integrating a one-dimensional model along a 4-yr trajectory of a water column circulating around the Sargasso Sea. Winter convection is deep (≥200 m) in regions where the ocean suffers a net annual heat loss to the atmosphere, and shallow (≤lOOm) where the ocean gains heat each year. The origin of the thermostad (nearly isothermal layer) is a thick layer of nearly homogeneous water subducted beneath the seasonal boundary layer in the year that the water column passes through the line dividing annual cooling from annual heating. We estimate the annual production of 18°C water to be 446,000 km3 yr−1. Downstream, more stratified central water is formed each year at a rate that depends more on Ekman pumping (wind-forced convergence) than on the decreasing depth of winter convection
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  • 70
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    AGU
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 90 (B8). p. 6709.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-23
    Description: Heat flow in the Imperial Valley and adjacent crystalline rocks is very high (∼140 mW m−2). Gravity and seismic studies suggest the crust is about 23.5 km thick with the lower half composed of gabbro and the upper fourth composed of low-density sediments. Conduction through such a crust resting directly on asthenosphere would give the observed heat flow if there were no extension or sedimentation. However, both processes must have been active, as the Imperial Valley is part of the Salton Trough, a pull-apart sedimentary basin that evolved over the past 4 or 5 m.y. To investigate the interrelations of these factors, we consider a one-dimensional model of basin formation in which the lower crustal gabbro and upper crustal sediments accumulated simultaneously as the crust extended and sedimentation kept pace with isostatic subsidence. For parameters appropriate for the Salton Trough, increasing the extension rate has little effect on surface heat flow because it increases effects of heating by intrusion and cooling by sedimentation in a compensating manner; it does, however, result in progressively increasing lower crustal temperatures. Analytical results suggest that the average extensional strain rate during formation of the trough was ∼20–50%/m.y. (∼1014 s−1); slower rates are inadequate to account for the present composition of the crust, and faster rates would probably cause massive crustal melting. To achieve the differential velocities of the Pacific plate at one end of the trough and North American plate at the other with this strain rate, extension must have, on the average, been distributed (or shifted about) over a spreading region ∼150 km wide. This is about 10 times wider than the present zone of active seismicity, suggesting that the seismic pattern is ephemeral on the time scale for the trough's formation. Narrow spreading zones are typical where sustained spreading is compensated by basaltic intrusion to form the thin oceanic crust, but where such spreading occurs in thicker continental crust, broader zones of distributed extension (with smaller strain rates) may be required for heat balance. The Salton Trough model suggests that distributed extension can be associated with substantial magmatic additions to the crust; their effect on crustal buoyancy has important implications for the relation between crustal extension and subsidence.
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  • 71
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    AGU
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 90 (C4). pp. 6953-6970.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-23
    Description: Water column inventories are calculated for bomb radiocarbon at all the stations occupied during the GEOSECS and NORPAX expeditions and for the available TTO stations. The pattern of global inventories obtained in this way suggests that a sizable portion of the bomb radiocarbon that entered the Antarctic, the northern Pacific, and the tropical ocean has been transported to the adjacent temperate zones. A strategy for utilizing these inventory anomalies as constraints on global ocean circulation models is presented. Essential to this strategy are the improvement of our knowledge of the pattern of wind speed over the ocean, the establishment of the wind speed dependence of the rate of gas exchange between the atmosphere and sea, and the continued mapping of the distribution of bomb-produced radiocarbon in the sea.
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  • 72
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    AGU
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 90 (C4). pp. 6940-6944.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-23
    Description: Comparison of the 1973 GEOSECS expedition results from the deep eastern basin of the North Atlantic with those for 1981 TTO expedition reveal no firm evidence for change in NO3, PO4, or a H4SiO4. concentration. While a 2–3 μmol/kg difference is seen for O2, it is more likely experimental than temporal in origin. The combined TTO-GEOSECS data sets reveal no evidence for ventilation of the bottom waters of the eastern basin by waters from the north.
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  • 73
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 315 (6016). pp. 216-218.
    Publication Date: 2016-10-26
    Description: Marine organic carbon is heavier isotopically (13C enriched) than most land-plant or terrestrial organic C1. Accordingly, δ 13C values of organic C in modern marine sediments are routinely interpreted in terms of the relative proportions of marine and terrestrial sources of the preserved organic matter2,3. When independent geochemical techniques are used to evaluate the source of organic matter in Cretaceous or older rocks, those rocks containing mostly marine organic C are found typically to have lighter (more-negative) δ 13C values than rocks containing mostly terrestrial organic C. Here we conclude that marine photosynthesis in mid-Cretaceous and earlier oceans generally resulted in a greater fractionation of C isotopes and produced organic C having lighter δ 13C values. Modern marine photosynthesis may be occurring under unusual geological conditions (higher oceanic primary production rates, lower P CO2) that limit dissolved CO2 availability and minimize carbon isotope fractionation4.
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  • 74
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 315 (6014). pp. 21-26.
    Publication Date: 2016-06-10
    Description: The climate record obtained from two long Greenland ice cores reveals several brief climate oscillations during glacial time. The most recent of these oscillations, also found in continental pollen records, has greatest impact in the area under the meteorological influence of the northern Atlantic, but none in the United States. This suggests that these oscillations are caused by fluctuations in the formation rate of deep water in the northern Atlantic. As the present production of deep water in this area is driven by an excess of evaporation over precipitation and continental runoff, atmospheric water transport may be an important element in climate change. Changes in the production rate of deep water in this sector of the ocean may push the climate system from one quasi-stable mode of operation to another.
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  • 75
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    AGU
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research, 78 (17). pp. 3340-3355.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-24
    Description: The application of plagioclase geothermometry to plagioclase-bearing volcanic ash layers and to the glassy margins of pillow basalts from the fast-spreading East Pacific rise, the moderately spreading Gorda and Juan de Fuca ridges, and the slow-spreading mid-Atlantic ridge has shown that magma temperatures, as well as average An contents of plagioclases, are negatively correlated with spreading rates. A detailed investigation of the major element chemistry of volcanic glasses from each of these areas suggests that the observed consistent element-element covariances among individual populations of samples have been caused by fractional crystallization of the magmas. The regularity of chemical variation and the similarity of magma temperatures within each population of samples suggest that magmas ascending from beneath each ridge have had similar evolutionary histories. Vector analysis of the chemical data of all samples of volcanic glasses indicate that each population of samples from each of the spreading centers is chemically distinct, even though all samples have been subjected to similar amounts of fractional crystallization. The compositional distinctiveness of each population of oceanic tholeiites probably reflects differences in the depths at which the magmas were generated. Calculated magma temperatures and geothermal gradients calculated from published heat flow measurements can be used to estimate depths of magma generation of about 16 km beneath the East Pacific rise and about 23 km beneath the mid-Atlantic ridge.
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  • 76
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 244 (131). pp. 11-12.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-02
    Description: STEP-LIKE structures in temperature and salinity beneath the Mediterranean water have been observed in the Eastern Atlantic1–6. In Fig. 1 we show the stations where steps have been found in the area to the west of Gibraltar. Salt fingering as a result of double diffusive processes has been suggested as a possible cause for the generation of such step-like structures7. During cruise No. 23 of RV Meteor in 1971 we intended to study the small scale features of such structures8. Some previous observations6 in August/September 1970 had revealed an extensive zone where a “thermohaline staircase” existed (Fig. 1). We therefore selected stations in this area and close to it for the proposed study. A high resolution in situ conductivity-temperature-depth meter of the “Kieler Multi-Meeressonde” type was used for the vertical profiling of temperature and salinity.
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  • 77
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    Nature Publishing Group
    In:  Nature, 238 (5364). pp. 405-406.
    Publication Date: 2016-09-14
    Description: In the southern hemisphere, female and young male sperm whales (up to about 39 feet long) are not normally found in higher latitudes than 40° S while large males occur in Antarctic waters1–3; clearly many large bulls must migrate from the breeding areas into colder regions. Evidence of the return of large bulls to lower latitudes rests upon marking them in the Antarctic4 or external infestation by Antarctic Cocconeis or Cyamus 5. Only a single mark5 has been recovered which provides direct evidence for the return north from Antarctic waters. This mark (USSR No. 650203) was fired on December 25, 1967, at 62° 22′ S 26° 25′ E and the whale was killed on May 13, 1968, off Durban. The small size of the male concerned (35 feet at death) makes this record rather surprising although Jonsgård6 did mention that the smallest whales from Antarctic waters were about 35 feet. Marking can provide information on only a small part of the whale population at considerable cost, freshness of the whale restricts the value of infestation as an indicator but the study of food remnants in sperm whale stomachs provides another method without these disadvantages.
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  • 78
    Publication Date: 2016-04-11
    Description: Marine Upper Jurassic sediments have recently been reported from South Africa (Knysna Outlier, Cape Province) for the first time1. They occur as shallow water, sandy clays (Brenton Beds) in association with terrestrial/fluviatile conglomerates and sandstones, which were deposited in an approximately east-west elongate intermontane basin between the Cape Fold mountains (formed of Lower Palaeozoic sediments). Post-Cretaceous erosion has reduced the original deposits to a series of small, isolated outliers, only two of which have been reported to contain marine sediments (Knysna, lower Upper Jurassic; Algoa, Valanginian2) (Fig. 1). Extensive Neocomian-Maas-trichtian outcrops are known from the continental shelf off to the south of South Africa3, and a complete mid-Jurassic to Upper Cretaceous marine succession is suspected on the Agulhas Bank infilling and overlying east-west striking, fault bounded folds of Lower Palaeozoic Cape Supergroup rocks as shown in Fig. 1 (R. V. D., in preparation and refs. 1 and 4).
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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