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  • Other Sources  (128)
  • AGU (American Geophysical Union)  (71)
  • Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum  (57)
  • Blackwell Publishing Ltd
  • 1985-1989  (88)
  • 1980-1984  (40)
Collection
Years
Year
  • 1
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Wissenschaftliche Veröffentlichungen, Reihe B, Arlington, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. E35, no. 31, pp. 1-13, pp. B04310, (ISBN: 0534351875, 2nd edition)
    Publication Date: 1989
    Keywords: Seismology ; Induced seismicity ; Rock bursts (see also ERDSTOSS and GEBIRGSSCHLAG) ; GEBIRGSSCHLAG (see also rockburst and Erdstoss) ; Earthquake catalog
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  • 2
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  in press, Washington, D.C., Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 10, no. WS-693 7-83, pp. 58-85, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1989
    Keywords: Earthquake ; BUG ; Induced seismicity ; Rock bursts (see also ERDSTOSS and GEBIRGSSCHLAG) ; ERDSTOSS (see also rockburst and Gebirgsschlag) ; Nearfield ; Source parameters ; Schaefer ; Schafer
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  • 3
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Beitrag zum Forschungsvorhaben: "Ableitung von Filterstrukturen zur seismischen Erkundung der tieferen Erdkruste", Washington, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 10, no. SSS-R-81-4656, S-CUBED, pp. 844, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1983
    Keywords: REP ; Seismics (controlled source seismology) ; Filter- ; Spectrum
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  • 4
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Diplomarbeit, Universität Karlsruhe, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 10, no. WS-693 7-83, pp. 235-239, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1988
    Keywords: SEModelling ; Rayleigh waves ; Channel waves ; Mining geophysics ; Fault zone
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  • 5
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Preprint, Stockholm, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 1034, no. 2-90/91, pp. 177-186, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1983
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  • 6
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Dissertation, Berichte Reihe A, New York, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. C 560, 183 pp., no. 26, pp. 109-124, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1989
    Keywords: Laboratory measurements ; Stress ; Fracture ; Strength ; Borehole geophys. ; 30 ; (Engineering ; Geology) ; rock ; mechanics ; failures ; borehole ; breakouts ; genesis ; fractures ; mechanics ; boreholes ; stress ; strength ; experimental ; studies ; uniaxial ; tests ; marbles ; deformation ; microcracks ; thin ; sections ; numerical ; models ; models ; boundary ; element ; analysis ; stability ; engineering ; geology ; shear ; strength ; Mohring
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  • 7
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Diplomarbeit, Stavanger, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 339-350, no. 84-770, pp. 541-588, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1988
    Keywords: Love-waves ; Channel waves ; Mining geophysics ; Fault zone ; Sturznickel
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  • 8
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Diplomarbeit, Washington, D.C., Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 10, no. 9, pp. 177-185
    Publication Date: 1986
    Keywords: Pseudo Impedance Log ; Waves ; Data analysis / ~ processing ; Boennemann ; Bonnemann
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  • 9
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Wissenschaftl. Veröffentl. (Reihe B), Hrsg. H.-P. Harjes, Atlanta, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 10, no. PL-TR-91-2127, pp. 1219-1222
    Publication Date: 1981
    Keywords: BUG ; ERDSTOSS (see also rockburst and Gebirgsschlag) ; Mining geophysics ; GEBIRGSSCHLAG (see also rockburst and Erdstoss) ; Earthquake catalog ; Rock bursts (see also ERDSTOSS and GEBIRGSSCHLAG) ; Local earthquakes
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  • 10
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Dissertation, Berichte, Bochum, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 10, no. 9, pp. 1109-1111
    Publication Date: 1981
    Keywords: Geomagnetics ; Plate tectonics ; Borehole geophys.
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  • 11
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Beitrag zum Forschungsvorhaben DEKORP/Deutsches Kontinentales Reflexionsprogramm, Transformation reflexionsseismischer Profile in Pseudoimpedanzlogsektionen, RG 8312 4, Washington, D.C., Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 10, no. 9, pp. 177-185
    Publication Date: 1985
    Keywords: Pseudo Impedance Log ; Boennemann ; Bonnemann
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  • 12
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Wissenschaftl. Veröffentl. (Reihe B), Hrsg. H.-P. Harjes, Atlanta, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 10, no. PL-TR-91-2127, pp. 1219-1222
    Publication Date: 1984
    Keywords: BUG ; ERDSTOSS (see also rockburst and Gebirgsschlag) ; Mining geophysics ; GEBIRGSSCHLAG (see also rockburst and Erdstoss) ; Earthquake catalog ; Rock bursts (see also ERDSTOSS and GEBIRGSSCHLAG) ; Local earthquakes
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  • 13
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Wissenschaftl. Veröffentl. (Reihe B), Hrsg. H.-P. Harjes, Atlanta, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 10, no. PL-TR-91-2127, pp. 1219-1222
    Publication Date: 1988
    Keywords: BUG ; ERDSTOSS (see also rockburst and Gebirgsschlag) ; Mining geophysics ; GEBIRGSSCHLAG (see also rockburst and Erdstoss) ; Earthquake catalog ; Rock bursts (see also ERDSTOSS and GEBIRGSSCHLAG) ; Local earthquakes
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  • 14
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Wissenschaftl. Veröffentl. (Reihe B), Hrsg. H.-P. Harjes, Atlanta, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 10, no. PL-TR-91-2127, pp. 1219-1222
    Publication Date: 1983
    Keywords: BUG ; ERDSTOSS (see also rockburst and Gebirgsschlag) ; Mining geophysics ; GEBIRGSSCHLAG (see also rockburst and Erdstoss) ; Earthquake catalog ; Rock bursts (see also ERDSTOSS and GEBIRGSSCHLAG) ; Local earthquakes
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  • 15
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Beitrag zum Forschungsvorhaben: "Ableitung von Filterstrukturen zur seismischen Erkundung der tieferen Erdkruste", Washington, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 10, no. SSS-R-81-4656, S-CUBED, pp. 844, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1983
    Keywords: REP ; Seismics (controlled source seismology) ; Inversion ; Synthetic seismograms ; Filter- ; Spectrum
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  • 16
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Diplomarbeit, Oslo, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 10, no. AFGL-TR-87-0244, pp. 569-576
    Publication Date: 1984
    Keywords: Love-waves ; SEModelling ; Mining geophysics ; Channel waves
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  • 17
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Wissenschaftl. Veröffentl. (Reihe B), Hrsg. H.-P. Harjes, Atlanta, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 10, no. PL-TR-91-2127, pp. 1219-1222
    Publication Date: 1987
    Keywords: BUG ; ERDSTOSS (see also rockburst and Gebirgsschlag) ; Mining geophysics ; GEBIRGSSCHLAG (see also rockburst and Erdstoss) ; Earthquake catalog ; Rock bursts (see also ERDSTOSS and GEBIRGSSCHLAG) ; Local earthquakes
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  • 18
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Beitrag zum Forschungsvorhaben: "Kriterien zur Ereigniserkennung bei mehrspurigen digitalen Breitbandseismogrammen", Washington, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 10, no. SSS-R-81-4656, S-CUBED, pp. 844, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1983
    Keywords: REP ; Seismics (controlled source seismology) ; NOISE ; Inversion ; Spectrum ; Broad-band ; Seismology
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  • 19
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Potsdam, 75 pp., Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 1, no. XVI:, pp. 65-70, (ISBN 0521824893, 280 pp.)
    Publication Date: 1986
    Keywords: Polarization ; Kruger
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  • 20
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Wissenschaftl. Veröffentl. (Reihe B), Hrsg. H.-P. Harjes, Atlanta, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 10, no. PL-TR-91-2127, pp. 1219-1222
    Publication Date: 1982
    Keywords: BUG ; ERDSTOSS (see also rockburst and Gebirgsschlag) ; Mining geophysics ; GEBIRGSSCHLAG (see also rockburst and Erdstoss) ; Earthquake catalog ; Rock bursts (see also ERDSTOSS and GEBIRGSSCHLAG) ; Local earthquakes
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  • 21
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Wissenschaftl. Veröffentl. (Reihe B), Hrsg. H.-P. Harjes, Atlanta, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 10, no. PL-TR-91-2127, pp. 1219-1222
    Publication Date: 1986
    Keywords: BUG ; ERDSTOSS (see also rockburst and Gebirgsschlag) ; Mining geophysics ; GEBIRGSSCHLAG (see also rockburst and Erdstoss) ; Earthquake catalog ; Rock bursts (see also ERDSTOSS and GEBIRGSSCHLAG) ; Local earthquakes
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  • 22
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Abschlußbericht, Erlangen, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 10, no. 421, pp. 61-63, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1986
    Keywords: Detectors ; Location ; Schaefer ; Schafer
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  • 23
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Dissertation, Berichte Reihe A, St. Louis, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. C 560, 183 pp., no. GL-TR-89-0143, pp. 13-24, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1987
    Keywords: Detectors
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  • 24
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Technical Report, Bochum, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. C 560, 183 pp., no. PL-TR-91-2250, pp. 1-53, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1986
    Keywords: SEModelling ; Mining geophysics ; Rayleigh waves ; Channel waves
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  • 25
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Diplomarbeit, London, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. C 560, 183 pp., no. 83-63, 14 pp., pp. 31-35, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1989
    Keywords: Hydraulic fracturing ; Fracture ; Laboratory measurements ; modelling
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  • 26
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Diplomarbeit, La Jolla, CA, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 1034, no. 77-767, pp. 293-297, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1982
    Keywords: Seismology ; Seismic arrays
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  • 27
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Diplomarbeit, Universität Frankfurt, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. C 560, 183 pp., no. 70, pp. 1143-1146 (SL3.8), (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1984
    Keywords: Laboratory measurements ; Instruments ; Elasticity ; Fracture ; Rock mechanics ; Muller
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  • 28
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Dissertation, Berichte Reihe A, Universität Frankfurt, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. C 560, 183 pp., no. 22, pp. 1143-1146 (SL3.8), (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1987
    Keywords: Laboratory measurements ; Review article ; Rock mechanics ; Anisotropy ; Finite Element Method ; Fracture ; Muller
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  • 29
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Diplomarbeit, Menlo Park, California, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 1034, no. 77-3, pp. 262-277, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1982
    Keywords: Mining geophysics ; Channel waves ; Layers ; Layers ; Love-waves ; Dispersion ; Rader
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  • 30
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Dissertation, Berichte Reihe A, Univ. Karlsruhe, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 1034, no. 27, pp. 262-277, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1989
    Keywords: Applied geophysics ; Seismology ; Mining geophysics ; Rock bursts (see also ERDSTOSS and GEBIRGSSCHLAG) ; Rock mechanics ; Acoustic emission ; Rakers
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  • 31
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Diplomarbeit, Univ. Karlsruhe, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 1034, no. 85-739, pp. 1-109, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1982
    Keywords: Seismic stratigraphy
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  • 32
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Dissertation, Berichte Reihe A, Univ. Karlsruhe, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 1034, no. 25, pp. 1-109, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1988
    Keywords: Seismics (controlled source seismology) ; Inversion ; Reflection seismics ; Wavelet processing ; Acoustics ; Impedance
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  • 33
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Diplomarbeit, La Jolla, CA, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 1034, no. 77-767, pp. 293-297, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1985
    Keywords: Rock bursts (see also ERDSTOSS and GEBIRGSSCHLAG) ; ERDSTOSS (see also rockburst and Gebirgsschlag) ; Schafer
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  • 34
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Diplomarbeit, Rome, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 10, no. 13, pp. 1431-1434, (ISBN 0 08 042822 3)
    Publication Date: 1981
    Keywords: Velocity ; Physical properties of rocks ; Laboratory measurements ; Instruments ; Wohrl
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  • 35
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Beitrag zum Forschungsvorhaben: "Ableitung von Filterstrukturen zur seismischen Erkundung der tieferen Erdkruste", Washington, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 10, no. SSS-R-81-4656, S-CUBED, pp. 844, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1983
    Keywords: REP ; Synthetic seismograms ; Filter- ; Seismics (controlled source seismology) ; Layers
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  • 36
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Dissertation, Berichte Reihe A, Hannover, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 10, no. 19, pp. 844, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1986
    Keywords: Reflectivity method ; Layers ; Waves ; Seismics (controlled source seismology)
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  • 37
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Wissenschaftl. Veröffentl. (Reihe A), Los Angeles, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 10, no. 41, pp. 143, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1982
    Keywords: Data analysis / ~ processing ; Discrimination ; PIC ; gab ; Seismology ; Surface waves ; Data analysis / ~ processing ; Broad-band ; Detectors ; Nuclear explosion
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  • 38
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Dissertation, Berichte Reihe A, Hannover, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. C 560, 183 pp., no. 15, pp. 67-73, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1984
    Keywords: Rock bursts (see also ERDSTOSS and GEBIRGSSCHLAG) ; ERDSTOSS (see also rockburst and Gebirgsschlag) ; Moment tensor ; Fault plane solution, focal mechanism
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  • 39
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Dissertation, Berichte Reihe A, Potsdam, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. C 560, 183 pp., no. 20, pp. 69, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1986
    Keywords: Hydraulic fracturing ; Fracture
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  • 40
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Diplomarbeit, Tokyo, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. C 560, 183 pp., no. 29, pp. 1321-1323, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1981
    Keywords: SEModelling ; Channel waves ; Mining geophysics ; Rayleigh waves ; Kuhbach
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  • 41
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Diplomarbeit, Yaroslavl, U.S.S.R., Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. C 560, 183 pp., no. PL-TR-91-2130, pp. 5-7, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1985
    Keywords: Dispersion ; Mining geophysics ; Channel waves
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  • 42
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Vorlesungsskript, Hannover, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. C 560, 183 pp., no. 51, pp. 193-210, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1983
    Keywords: Data analysis / ~ processing ; Filter- ; Recursive filters ; Review article ; Seismics (controlled source seismology)
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  • 43
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Dissertation, Berichte Reihe A, San Antonio, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. C 560, 183 pp., no. 18, pp. 205-211, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1985
    Keywords: SEModelling ; Synthetic seismograms
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  • 44
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Preprint, New Orleans, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 10, no. EL-1021R, pp. 12, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1983
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  • 45
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Diplomarbeit, Clausthal-Zellerfeld, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 10, no. GL-TR-89-0259, pp. 277-280, (ISBN 0 08 042822 3)
    Publication Date: 1987
    Keywords: Detectors ; Nuclear explosion ; Broad-band ; Three component data
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  • 46
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Diplomarbeit, Hannover, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 10, no. Publ. num. 191, pp. 1-32, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1982
    Keywords: Seismology ; Dispersion ; Rayleigh waves
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  • 47
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  report, Essen, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 10, no. 421, pp. 61-63, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1987
    Keywords: REP ; Seismology ; Nuclear explosion ; Seismic arrays ; Seismic networks
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  • 48
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Teilbericht zum DFG-Vorhaben RU 225/10-1, Berlin, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. C 560, 183 pp., no. paper number 2056, pp. 3-35, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1987
    Keywords: Hydraulic fracturing ; Laboratory measurements ; Fracture
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Diplomarbeit, Hamburg, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. C 560, 183 pp., no. C86, vol. 5, pp. 333-342, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1989
    Keywords: Laboratory measurements ; Fracture ; Rock mechanics ; Physical properties of rocks
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Dissertation, Hanscom Air Force Base, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. C 560, 183 pp., no. PL-TR-91-2250, pp. 1-25, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1984
    Keywords: SEModelling ; Mining geophysics ; Channel waves ; Love-waves ; Rayleigh waves ; Reflectivity
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Technical Report, Hanscom Air Force Base, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. C 560, 183 pp., no. PL-TR-91-2250, pp. 1-25, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1982
    Keywords: Seismics (controlled source seismology) ; SEModelling ; Mining geophysics ; Channel waves
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Diplomarbeit, Reykjavík, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 1034, no. SAND 80-2048, pp. 1-162, (ISBN 3-933346-037)
    Publication Date: 1986
    Keywords: Rock mechanics ; Laboratory measurements ; Rheology
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Diplomarbeit, Uppsala, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 10, no. 3-80, pp. 26-27, (ISBN 0 08 042822 3)
    Publication Date: 1983
    Keywords: Rock bursts (see also ERDSTOSS and GEBIRGSSCHLAG) ; ERDSTOSS (see also rockburst and Gebirgsschlag)
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Dissertation, Berichte, Düsseldorf, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 10, no. 13, pp. II.496-II.505, (ISBN 0 08 042822 3)
    Publication Date: 1983
    Keywords: Stress ; Hydraulic fracturing ; Laboratory measurements
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Dissertation, Berichte, Houston, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, no. 10, pp. 103-155
    Publication Date: 1981
    Keywords: Stress ; cracks and fractures (.NE. fracturing) ; Fracture ; Laboratory measurements
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Berichte, Bochum, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 11, no. TR 80-12, pp. 1-9
    Publication Date: 1987
    Keywords: Stress ; Baumgartner ; Hydraulic fracturing ; Baumgaertner
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    Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
    In:  Wissenschaftl. Veröffentl. (Reihe B), Hrsg. H.-P. Harjes, Atlanta, Inst. f. Geophys., Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, vol. 10, no. PL-TR-91-2127, pp. 1219-1222
    Publication Date: 1985
    Keywords: BUG ; ERDSTOSS (see also rockburst and Gebirgsschlag) ; Mining geophysics ; GEBIRGSSCHLAG (see also rockburst and Erdstoss) ; Earthquake catalog ; Rock bursts (see also ERDSTOSS and GEBIRGSSCHLAG) ; Local earthquakes
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union, 67 (39). pp. 743-755.
    Publication Date: 2017-08-22
    Description: AGU considers only original scientific contributions that have not been accepted or published elsewhere and are not under consideration by another publisher. A contribution is considered previously published if its data and conclusions are offered for sale or are generally available in other ways to the public. Regardless of the original publication medium, including print, magnetic tape, or microform, such contributions are not eligible for republication in AGU journals or books.
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research - Oceans, 94 (C12). pp. 18213-18226.
    Publication Date: 2017-07-20
    Description: Characteristics of water masses were analyzed to study the Kuroshio intrusion into the sea southwest of Taiwan. Hydrographic data were obtained from CTD (conductivity, temperature, and depth) casts during two cruises in May and August 1986. In May, remnants of water intruding from the Kuroshio were found on the continental slope south of the Penghu Channel. By August, these were replaced by water from the South China Sea. During this period, water from the Kuroshio also appeared near the southern tip of Taiwan. The intrusion current reached a depth of at least 500 m and was probably part of a cyclonic circulation in the northern South China Sea. The results support the hypothesis of a seasonal pattern of the intrusion process: intrusion of water from the Kuroshio begins in late summer, intensifies in winter, and ceases by late spring when South China Sea waters again enter this region.
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research - Solid Earth, 87 (B13). pp. 10861-10881.
    Publication Date: 2017-01-25
    Description: Samples collected at hourly intervals on May 18–19, 1980, at three sites 200 km downwind from Mount St. Helens, have made possible a detailed reconstruction of the conditions that contribute to the compositional heterogeneity of mineral and glass components observed in distal tephra layers. The air fall tephra deposited at the sites during the first 7 hours of the May 18 eruption is mostly coarse grained, microlite-rich, nonjuvenile glass and feldspar. Grain-size maxima in this initial tephra can be related to the cataclysmic blast at 0832 and a subsequent pulse of the eruption at 1200. Juvenile, microlite-free glass increases in relative abundance at the sampling sites beginning at about 1900. Such a change between nonjuvenile and juvenile tephra can be related to a 5-km increase in column height associated with the last major pulse of the eruption which occurred at 1700 at the volcano. Electron microprobe study of both microlite-rich and microlite-free pumice in the time series samples reveals significant compositional differences. Interstitial glass in nonjuvenile pumice deposited during the first few hours at the sampling sites is enriched in SiO2 and K2O and depleted in TiO2, FeO*, and MgO relative to juvenile glass. By comparison, major element composition of the least evolved juvenile glass sampled during the last several hours of the eruption displays a slight trend toward less evolved composition. Least squares calculations suggest that the more evolved character of the nonjuvenile glass can be explained by greater fractional crystallization brought about by enhanced cooling in a cryptodome prior to eruption, whereas the temporal changes observed in juvenile glass composition during the last several hours of the eruption suggest the presence of a small, slightly zoned magma chamber at depth. Electron microprobe study of glass-coated ilmenites, magnetites, and plagioclases provides the following estimates of the physical conditions in this reservoir: 865°±50°C, PH2O = 2.2 kbar and -log ƒO2 = 11.7. Analyses of bulk pumice, glass and selected mineral phases from May 25, June 12, July 22, and October 16–18 pumices erupted from Mount St. Helens indicate that the bulk pumice (magma) compositions have become slightly more andesitic with time, while mineral and co-existing glass compositions have changed significantly in post-May 18 eruptions with both being more highly evolved than those associated with the May 18 eruption. An application of the magnetite-ilmenite geothermometer to June 12 and July 22 samples indicates temperatures of 919°±30°C and 930°±50°C, respectively. Least squares calculations suggest that such evolved post-May 18 glass and mineral phases can be derived by fractional crystallization of a magma composition like bulk May 18 pumice into approximately 50% crystals and 50% residual liquid. Such partitioning between crystals and residual liquid appears to have occurred on the scale of centimeters and is interpreted as a consequence of accelerated crystallization under reduced water pressure.
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union, 69 (6). pp. 74-86.
    Publication Date: 2017-01-31
    Description: What is the relationship between volcanic eruptions and climate change? More than 200 years after the connection was first proposed, it remains a thorny question. This article provides a brief historical overview of the problem and a review of the various data bases used in evaluating volcanic events and associated climatic change. We use the term “climate” to describe changes in the atmosphere over wide regions for periods of several months and longer. We use “weather” to describe shorter-term, variable atmospheric fluctuations experienced over more restricted areas. We appraise the present state of knowledge and highlight some pitfalls involved in using available information. Cautiously, we suggest future avenues for study, including the possibility of “volcanic winters,” or severe eruption-induced coolings.
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  In: The Carbon Cycle and Atmospheric CO2: Natural Variations Archean to Present. , ed. by Sundquist, E. T. and Broecker, W. S. Geophysical Monograph, 32 . AGU (American Geophysical Union), Boulder, pp. 504-529.
    Publication Date: 2017-01-30
    Description: The Stratigraphie record from both deep-sea and shallow-water depositional environments Indicates that during late Aptian through Cenomanian time (1) global climates were considerably warmer than at present; (2) latitudinal gradients of atmospheric and oceanic temperatures were considerably less than at present; (3) rates of accumulation of organic matter of both marine and terrestrial origin were as high as or higher than during any other interval in the Mesozoic or Cenozoic; (4) the rate and volume of accumulation of CaC02 in the deep sea were reduced in response to a marked shoaling of the carbonate compensation depth; (5) seafloor spreading rates were somewhat more rapid than at any other time in the Cretaceous or Cenozoic; (6) off-ridge volcanism was intense and widespread, particularly in the ancestral Pacific Ocean basin; and (7) sea level was relatively high, forming widespread areas of shallow shelf seas. A marked increase in the rate of C02 outgassing due to volcanic activity between about 110 and 70 m.y. ago may have resulted in a buildup of atmospheric C02. A significant fraction of this atmospheric C02 may have been reduced by an increase in the production and burial of terrestrial organic carbon. Some excess C02 may have been consumed by marine algal photosynthesis, but marine productivity apparently was low during the Aptian-Albian relative to terrestrial productivity. Terrestrial productivity also may have been stimulated by increased rainfall that resulted from a warm global climate and increased marine transgression as well as by the higher C02.
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research - Solid Earth, 89 (B10). pp. 8441-8462.
    Publication Date: 2017-05-04
    Description: The well-known caldera of Thira (Santorini), Greece, was not formed during a single eruption but is composed of two overlapping calderas superimposed upon a complex volcanic field that developed along a NE trending line of vents. Before the Minoan eruption of 1400 B.C., Thira consisted of three Java shields in the northern half of the island and a flooded depression surrounded by tuff deposits in the southern half. Andesitic lavas formed the overlapping shields of the north and were contemporaneous with and, in many places, interbedded with the southern tuff deposits. Although there appears to be little difference between the composition of magmas erupted, differences in eruption style indicate that most of the activity in the northern half of the volcanic field was subaerial, producing lava flows, whereas in the south, eruptions within a flooded depression produced a sequence of mostly phreatomagmatic tuffs. Many of these tuffs are plastered onto the walls of what appears to have been an older caldera, most probably associated with an eruption of rhyodacitic tephra 100,000 years ago. The Minoan eruption of about 1400 B.C. had four distinct phases, each reflecting a different vent geometry and eruption mechanism. The Minoan activity was preceded by minor eruptions of fine ash. (1) The eruption began with a Plinian phase, from subaerial vent(s) located on the easternmost of the lava shields. (2) Vent(s) grew toward the SW into the flooded depression. Subsequent activity deposited large-scale base surge deposits during vent widening by phreatomagmatic activity. (3) The third eruptive phase was also phreatomagmatic and produced 60% of the volume of the Minoan Tuff. This activity was nearly continuous and formed a large featureless tuff ring with poorly defined bedding. This deposit contains 5–40% lithic fragments that are typical of the westernmost lava shield and appears to have been erupted when caldera collapse began. (4) The last phase consisted of eruption of ignimbrites from vent(s) on the eastern shield, not yet involved in collapse. Collapse continued after eruption of the ignimbrites with foundering of the eastern half of the caldera. Total volume of the collapse was about 19 km3, overlapping the older caldera to form the caldera complex visible today. Intracaldera eruptions have formed the Kameni Islands along linear vents concomitant with vents that may have been sources for the Minoan Tuff.
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research - Solid Earth, 93 (B4). pp. 2857-2874.
    Publication Date: 2017-07-07
    Description: Magnetic lineation mapping in the western central Pacific has revealed a pair of opposite-sensed, fanned lineation patterns that define the accretionary boundaries of the fossil Magellan microplate. This tectonic synthesis results from extensive magnetic mapping of two new lineation patterns over a large area and extended mapping of previously identified lineations. The entire evolutionary history of the Magellan microplate is well constrained to a 9-m.y. period in the Early Cretaceous by synchronous spreading patterns and associated geologic data. During this period the microplate grew and evolved as a generally rectangular structure to a final size of 700 km×600 km with spreading centers on two opposing sides and transform faults on the other two sides. The lifetime and size of the Magellan microplate are somewhat longer and larger, respectively, than presently active microplates on the East Pacific Rise. However, these modern structures are still evolving and growing, and the tectonic behavior of the modern and Cretaceous systems appears to be similar. Study of both active and fossilized microplates should provide additional insights on their common tectonic histories. In particular, we show that the Magellan Trough spreading center behaved as an asymmetric accretionary plate boundary that can be described with two separate poles of motion very close to this spreading center during much of its history. The Magellan Trough spreading center then failed as a result of a larger ridge reorganization at the triple junction of the Pacific, Farallon, and Phoenix plates at Ml0N time. Microplate activity ceased when the microplate became welded to the Pacific plate at M9 time.
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 94 (B11). pp. 16023-16035.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-06
    Description: A seismic refraction profile recorded along the geologic strike of the Chugach Mountains in southern Alaska shows three upper crustal high-velocity layers (6.9, 7.2, and 7.6 km/s) and a unique pattern of strongly focussed echelon arrivals to a distance of 225 km. The group velocity of the ensemble of echelon arrivals is 6.4 km/s. Modeling of this profile with the reflectivity method reveals that the echelon pattern is due to peg-leg multiples generated from with a low-velocity zone between the second and third upper crustal high-velocity layers. The third high-velocity layer (7.6 km/s) is underlain at 18 km depth by a pronounced low-velocity zone that produces a seismic shadow wherein zone peg-leg multiples are seen as echelon arrivals. The interpretation of these echelon arrivals as multiples supersedes an earlier interpretation which attributed them to successive primary reflections arising from alternating high- and low-velocity layers. Synthetic seismogram modeling indicates that a low-velocity zone with transitional upper and lower boundaries generates peg-leg multiples as effectively as one with sharp boundaries. No PmP or Pn arrivals from the subducting oceanic Moho at 30 km depth beneath the western part of the line are observed on the long-offset (90-225 km) data. This may be due to a lower crustal waveguide whose top is the high-velocity (7.6 km/s) layer and whose base is the Moho. A deep (~54 km) reflector is not affected by the waveguide and has been identified in the data. Although peg-leg multiples have been interpreted on some long-range refraction profiles that sound to upper mantle depths, the Chugach Mountains profile is one of the few crustal refraction profiles where peg-leg multiples are clearly observed. This study indicates that multiple and converted phases may be more important in seismic refraction/wide-angle reflection profiles than previously recognized.
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Paleoceanography, 4 (4). pp. 353-412.
    Publication Date: 2017-03-14
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  In: Coastal Upwelling. , ed. by Richards, F. A. Coastal and estuarine sciences, 1 . AGU (American Geophysical Union), Washington, USA, pp. 348-356.
    Publication Date: 2017-08-10
    Description: During a 10-year study more than 2,000 phytoplankton samples were collected from the entire coast of Peru and analyzed. In general, diatoms were the most abundant group of organisms in all seasons. Predominant species were Rhizosolenia delicatula, Skeletonema costatum Thalassiosira subtilis, Thalassionema nitzschioides and several species of the genus Chaetooeros. Dinoflagellates and flagellates were observed frequently during summer. The mean distribution of the phytoplankton concentration during the 10 years shows the existence of several centers with higher cell densities along the coast, coinciding with the areas of more intense and persistent upwelling. Four major centers have been identified: Pimentel (˜6°S), Chimbote (˜9°S), Callao (˜12°S), and Tambo de Mora-Pisco (˜15°S); and two minor centers, Talara (˜4°S) and Ilo (˜17°S). The relative importance of each center seems to change according to the season. The highest phytoplankton concentration tended to be in the northern part of the coast during fall and winter and in the south through spring and summer.
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research - Solid Earth, 94 (B1). pp. 625-636.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-06
    Description: During a seismic reflection survey conducted by the California Consortium for Crustal Studies in the Basin and Range Province west of the Whipple Mountains, SE California, a piggyback experiment was carried out to collect intermediate offset data (12–31 km). These data were obtained by recording the Vibroseis energy with a second, passive recording array, deployed twice at fixed positions at opposite ends of the reflection lines. The reflection midpoints fall into a 3-km-wide and 15-km-long region in Vidal Valley, roughly parallel to a segment of one of the near-vertical reflection profiles. This data set makes three unique contributions to the geophysical study of this region. (1) From forward modeling of the observed travel times using ray-tracing techniques, a shallow layer with velocities ranging from 6.0 to 6.5 km/s was found. This layer dips to the south from 2-km depth near the Whipple Mountains to a depth of 5-km in Rice Valley. These depths correspond closely to the westward projection of the Whipple detachment fault, which is exposed 1 km east of the near-vertical profiles in the Whipple Mountains. (2) On the near-vertical profile, the reflections from the mylonitically deformed lower plate at upper crustal and mid crustal depths are seen to cease underneath a sedimentary basin in Vidal Valley. However, the piggyback data, which undershoot this basin, show that these reflections are continuous beneath the basin. Thus near-surface energy transmission problems were responsible for the apparent lateral termination of the reflections on the near-vertical reflection profile. (3) The areal distribution of the midpoints allows us to construct a quasi-three-dimensional image on perpendicular profiles; at the cross points we determined the true strike and dip of reflecting horizons. This analysis shows that the reflections from the mylonitically deformed lower plate dip to the southwest westward of the Whipple Mountains and dip to the south southward of the Turtle Mountains. The results of this study support the interpretation of crustal reflectivity in the near-vertical reflection profiles to be related to the mid-Tertiary episode of extension which produced the Whipple metamorphic core complex. This association geometrically suggests a more regionally distributed mechanism for crustal thinning as compared with single detachment fault models.
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Geophysical Research Letters, 14 (10). pp. 1061-1064.
    Publication Date: 2017-07-25
    Description: We present a method for objectively characterizing a swath of digitally sampled seafloor topography. Our method analyzes the distribution of surface slopes by compiling surface-normal vectors into a two-dimensional histogram using an equal-area projection. The direction of maximum variance (first principal axis) of the histogram is used to determine the azimuth of lineations in the topography, and the variance is used as a measure of seafloor roughness. We apply the method to short sections of Sea Beam swath data and find that the histogram parameters are effective in describing the behavior of the topography. In particular, similar patterns are observed for a sequence of histograms derived from data collected over the Mendocino and the Surveyor fracture zones in the northeast Pacific. Because the method does not require any data modification and is suitable for irregularly-shaped sample regions, it lends itself to real-time analysis.
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research - Solid Earth, 93 (B4). pp. 3025-3040.
    Publication Date: 2017-12-08
    Description: The Pacific seafloor is littered with small fragments of lithosphere captured from adjacent plates by past plate boundary reorganizations. One of the clearest examples of such a reorganization is documented in the Mathematician Seamounts region, where a distinctive geomorphology and well-developed magnetic anomalies are present. This reorganization involved a short-lived microplate between the failing Mathematician Ridge and a new propagating spreading center: the East Pacific Rise. It produced a transfer of a fragment of lithosphere from the Farallon to the Pacific plate, and also created a number of landforms and magnetic patterns, within and on the margins of the captured fragment; these make up the Mathematician paleoplate. In many cases, two sides of a microplate are active spreading ridges. A microplate evolves into a paleoplate when dual spreading ceases and full spreading resumes at the prevailing spreading ridge. We define a paleoplate as the area of the seafloor, from the axis of a failed rift to the boundary of resumed, full spreading. It includes a fragment of captured lithosphere and the lithosphere slowly accreted to it during the period of dual spreading, prior to complete abandonment of the failed rift. The Mathematician paleoplate has the following boundaries and components from west to east: the axis of the Mathematician failed rift, the fragment of captured Farallon plate, a complex rift initiation site at the Moctezuma Trough, a zone of slow spreading, and an as yet ill-defined eastern boundary where dual spreading stopped and full spreading resumed. The northern boundary of the paleoplate is the Rivera fracture zone; its southeastern boundary a now-inactive transform fault, the West O'Gorman fracture zone. In this case, as well as in other more poorly documented ones, relict landforms and magnetic patterns are carried on the aging lithosphere, away from the spreading ridge, recording a former geometry.
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 2 (3). pp. 289-298.
    Publication Date: 2018-01-11
    Description: Methane carbon isotopic composition ranged from −76.9 to −62.6‰ in a tidal freshwater estuary (the White Oak River, North Carolina, United States) with site specific seasonal variations ranging from 6 to 10‰. During warmer months, tidally induced bubble ebullition actively transported this methane to the atmosphere. At two sites, these seasonally varying fluxes ranged from 1.2 ± 0.3 to 1.3 ± 0.3 mol CH4 m−2yr−1 (19.2 to 20.8 g CH4m−2yr−1), with flux-weighted average isotopic compositions at two sites of −66.3 ± 0.4 and −69.5 ± 0.6‰. The carbon isotopic composition of naturally released bubbles was shown to be indistinguishable from the sedimentary methane bubble reservoir at three sites, leading to the conclusion that isotopic fractionation did not occur during the ebullition of methane. The hypothesis was developed that ebullitive methane fluxes are depleted in 13CH4 relative to fluxes transported via molecular diffusion or through plants, as zones of 13C enriching microbial methane oxidation are bypassed.
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  In: Dynamics of Passive Margins. , ed. by Scrutton, R. A. Geodynamics series, 6 . AGU (American Geophysical Union), Washington, DC, pp. 59-71.
    Publication Date: 2016-04-11
    Description: Sedimentation rates (corrected for compaction) from along the passive continental margin of Africa between the Equatorial Fracture Zone and Somalia are used to compare the rates of subsidence of the continental crust since early Mesozoic time. Three distinctive subsidence histories can be identified which correspond with basinal areas that have different structural styles: rifted (west coast), sheared (Equatorial and Agulhas fracture zones) and sunk (zones of vertical tectonics in eastern Africa). A comparison of subsidence rates with other tensional margins (NE USA and the North Sea) and a consideration of the plate tectonic history of the African margins leads to the proposal of a geo and thermodynamic model that takes cognizance of the worldwide mid-Cretaceous rheological discontinuity between taphrogenic and epeirogenic basin formation recognized by Kent, and the more generally accepted, purely plate tectonic driven model of margin subsidence. The new suggestion involves a lower Mesozoic worldwide rise in the geothermal gradient in the lithosphere which produces metamorphism of the base of the continental crust and initiates taphrogenesis along lineaments throughout Gondwanaland. A lowering of the geothermal gradient in the lower Cretaceous produces a switch to epeirogenic subsidence, driven solely by sediment loading and thermal contraction, by Aptian/Albian times. The thermal event facilitated continental separation, and sea floor spreading commenced locally at various times along the active taphrogenic belts. Local thermal and tectonic aberrations associated with this phenomenon over print onto the worldwide pattern of marginal basin subsidence. A further rise in the geothermal gradient may have been responsible for renewed taphrogenesis in eastern Africa in Tertiary times.
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research - Oceans, 92 (C3). pp. 2953-2969.
    Publication Date: 2016-04-14
    Description: The renewal of the deep water of the East Atlantic and its large-scale internal circulation are studied on the basis of the distributions of potential temperature, silicate, ΣCO2, and 14C. An isopycnal multibox model including advection, mixing, and sources and sinks is set up and described. Tracer data are input for the model, and balance equations for the various properties for the boxes of the model serve as constraints for the determination of water fluxes, mixing coefficients, and source parameters. Extremal values for various model parameters that are consistent with the tracer data (satisfy the balance equations within the estimated tolerances) are calculated by linear programming techniques. 14C data are seen to be valuable in determining absolute flow rates. Model results confirm the importance of the Romanche Facture Zone for the renewal of east Atlantic deep water. Eastward flows through the Romanche Fracture Zone were found to be between 2.6 and 5.1 Sv. Flows through the Vema Fracture Zone amount to at most 20% of the Romanche Fracture Zone inflow. Contributions of Antarctic Bottom Water at the southern end of the East Atlantic (Walvis Ridge) and of Iceland Scotland Overflow Water at the northern end are very small (〈 5% of equatorial inflow). Diapycnal mixing coefficients are between 1 and 10 cm2/s, and values for the dissolution rates of silicate and carbon are in the expected range.
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  • 74
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 94 (C3). p. 3181.
    Publication Date: 2018-04-17
    Description: The regions containing the two zonal currents of the subtropical gyre in the eastern North Atlantic, the Azores Current and the North Equatorial Current (NEC), have quite different physical characteristics. Associated with the Azores Current are strong horizontal thermohaline gradients that can be located easily both at the surface and at depth with temperature data alone, thus making satellite IR imagery and expendable bathythermograph profiles suitable for observing it. During winter, the surface expression of the Azores Current is often found to the north of the strongest subsurface gradients. In contrast to the Azores Current and to the central water mass boundary just to the south, the NEC has relatively weak horizontal temperature and salinity gradients, requiring density information in order to identify it. There is no clear surface manifestation found with the NEC. Common to both currents, though, is that each transports O(8 Sv) in the upper 800 m of the ocean near 27°W, with the largest velocities being in the upper 400 m.
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  • 75
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 90 (C6). p. 11811.
    Publication Date: 2018-02-26
    Description: Large diurnal sea surface warming exceeding 1°C is common in the western North Atlantic Ocean and is often of large horizontal extent. These events correlate closely with very light winds and high insolation. In the area investigated, 17°–40°N and 55°–80°W, the largest warming is found in the western portion of the ridge associated with the Azores-Bermuda high, where the lowest wind speeds are observed. The distribution of warming events shows that the largest number occur between June and August, when insolation is highest and percent cloud cover and wind speed are low. The most probable latitude of warming events moves north from approximately 25°N in spring to near 30°N in summer, a shift similar to that seen in the minimum of the climatological winds. Local areas have a probability as high as 30% for diurnal warming in excess of 1°C in the summer. The net heat flux into the ocean, calculated by using monthly mean values for low latitudes in the summer, excluding diurnal warming events, is biased consistently high by as much as 5 W/m2 relative to the same values calculated with warming events included.
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  • 76
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research - Solid Earth, 88 (B11). p. 9475.
    Publication Date: 2016-03-02
    Description: We have compiled both laboratory and worldwide field data on electrical conductivity to help understand the physical implications of deep crustal electrical profiles. Regional heat flow was used to assign temperatures to each layer in regional electrical conductivity models; we avoided those data where purely conductive heat flow suggested temperatures more than about 1000°C, substantially higher than solidus temperatures and outside the range of validity of heat flow models. The resulting plots of log conductivity σ versus 1/T demonstrate that even low-conductivity layers (LCL) have conductivities several orders of magnitude higher than dry laboratory samples and that the data can be represented by straight line fits. In addition, technically active regions show systematically higher conductivities than do shield areas. Because volatiles are usually lost in laboratory measurements and their absence is a principal difference between laboratory and field conditions, these materials probably account for the relatively higher conductivities of rocks in situ in the crust; free water in amounts of 0.01–0.1% in fracture porosity could explain crustal conductivities. Other possibilities are graphite, hydrated minerals in rare instances, and sulfur in combination with other volatiles. As most of the temperatures are less than 700°C, partial melting seems likely only in regions of highest heat flow where the conductive temperature profiles are inappropriate. Another result is that at a given temperature, crustal high-conductivity layers (HCL) are more conductive by another order of magnitude and show more scatter than do LCL's. Because the differences between HCL's and LCL's are independent of temperature, we must invoke more than temperature increases as a cause for large conductivity increases; increased fluid concentration in situ seems a probable cause for enhanced conductivities in HCL's. From the point of view of these observations, it does not matter whether the fluids are in communication with the surface or trapped at lithostatic pressures.
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  • 77
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research - Solid Earth, 90 (B8). 6709-6736 .
    Publication Date: 2016-04-18
    Description: Heat flow in the Imperial Valley and adjacent crystalline rocks is very high (∼140 mW m−2). Gravity and seismic studies suggest the crust is about 23.5 km thick with the lower half composed of gabbro and the upper fourth composed of low-density sediments. Conduction through such a crust resting directly on asthenosphere would give the observed heat flow if there were no extension or sedimentation. However, both processes must have been active, as the Imperial Valley is part of the Salton Trough, a pull-apart sedimentary basin that evolved over the past 4 or 5 m.y. To investigate the interrelations of these factors, we consider a one-dimensional model of basin formation in which the lower crustal gabbro and upper crustal sediments accumulated simultaneously as the crust extended and sedimentation kept pace with isostatic subsidence. For parameters appropriate for the Salton Trough, increasing the extension rate has little effect on surface heat flow because it increases effects of heating by intrusion and cooling by sedimentation in a compensating manner; it does, however, result in progressively increasing lower crustal temperatures. Analytical results suggest that the average extensional strain rate during formation of the trough was ∼20–50%/m.y. (∼1014 s−1); slower rates are inadequate to account for the present composition of the crust, and faster rates would probably cause massive crustal melting. To achieve the differential velocities of the Pacific plate at one end of the trough and North American plate at the other with this strain rate, extension must have, on the average, been distributed (or shifted about) over a spreading region ∼150 km wide. This is about 10 times wider than the present zone of active seismicity, suggesting that the seismic pattern is ephemeral on the time scale for the trough's formation. Narrow spreading zones are typical where sustained spreading is compensated by basaltic intrusion to form the thin oceanic crust, but where such spreading occurs in thicker continental crust, broader zones of distributed extension (with smaller strain rates) may be required for heat balance. The Salton Trough model suggests that distributed extension can be associated with substantial magmatic additions to the crust; their effect on crustal buoyancy has important implications for the relation between crustal extension and subsidence.
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  • 78
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research - Solid Earth, 90 (B12). pp. 10043-10072.
    Publication Date: 2016-05-04
    Description: Petrological, geochemical, and geophysical gradients along the SE volcanic zone in Iceland imply systematic variations in melting and crystallization conditions and in magma supply and eruption rates. At the southern tip of the zone, in Vestmannaeyjar, alkali basalt magmas are generated by small degrees of melting under a thick lithosphere. Farther north, in the Hekla-Katla region, greater degrees of melting result in the generation of transitional basalt magmas. Magma supply rates exceed eruption rates, and melts begin to accumulate at the base of the crust, as indicated by magnetotelluric evidence. Uniform rare earth element patterns in the Hekla-Katla basalts may be explained by homogenization in the melt accumulation zone or by uniform melting conditions. Infrequent replenishment of magma reservoirs in this region leads to mixing of compositionally diverse magmas and, consequently, to basalts with diverse phenocryst compositions and textures. Even farther north, in central Iceland, the melting anomaly associated with the SE zone has developed to the same degree as it has beneath the SW axial rift zone, leading to similar magmatic conditions. High magma supply rates and low cooling rates inhibit fractionation and lead to the eruption of voluminous olivine tholeiites. In these areas a broad spectrum of melt compositions is generated by variable degrees of melting over a wide depth range. The compositional diversity, e.g., in large ion lithophile element enrichment, is masked somewhat by reequilibration and mixing of melts on ascent and in the melt accummulation zone. Compositional diversity may be preserved, however, in the melt accummulation zone in a lateral direction away from the rift axis since distal parts of the melt zone are fed only by melts segregating at greater depths. The variations in magmatic conditions along the SE zone, which are analogous to those inferred along propagating rifts, may be related to a mantle blob that ascended beneath central Iceland 2–3 m.y. ago, spread out laterally and triggered a southward propagating rift.
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  • 79
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 92 (C12). pp. 12993-13002.
    Publication Date: 2019-04-04
    Description: Reducing the large volume of TIROS-N series advanced very high resolution radiometer-derived data to a practical size for application to regional physcial oceanographic studies is a formidable task. Such data exist on a global basis for January 1979 to the present at approximately 4-km resolution (global area coverage data, ≈2 passes per day) and in selected areas at high resolution (local area coverage and high-resolution picture transmission data, at ≈1-km resolution) for the same period. An approach that has been successful for a number of studies off the east coast of the United States divided the processing into two procedures: preprocessing and data reduction. The preprocessing procedure can reduce the data volume per satellite pass by over 98% for full-resolution data or by ≈84% for the lower-resolution data while the number of passes remains unchanged. The output of the preprocessing procedure for the examples presented is a set of sea surface temperature (SST) fields of 512 × 1024 pixels covering a region of approximately 2000 × 4000 km. In the data reduction procedure the number of SST fields (beginning with one per satellite pass) is generally reduced to a number manageable from the analyst's perspective (of the order of one SST field per day). This is done in most of the applications presented by compositing the data into 1- or 2-day groups. The phenomena readily addressed by such procedures are the mean position of the Gulf Stream, the envelope of Gulf Stream meandering, cold core Gulf Stream ring trajectories, statistics on diurnal warming, and the region and period of 18°C water formation. The flexibility of this approach to regional oceanographic problems will certainly extend the list of applications quickly.
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  • 80
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Geophysical Research Letters, 15 (4). pp. 385-388.
    Publication Date: 2015-06-10
    Description: Replacement dolomitization by seawater has been modeled in order to quantify the Sr-isotope signature in Cenozoic dolomites as a function of precursor mineralogy and 87Sr/86Sr ratio, reaction stoichiometry and 87Sr/86Sr ratio of the dolomitizing fluids. High Sr carbonates, such as aragonite, may introduce a significant precursor memory into an otherwise seawater dominated Sr-isotope signature if small quantities of seawater per unit volume of precursor carbonate are involved. Dolomitization of low Sr carbonates (i.e. low-Mg calcite) are shown to create an isotopic signature indistinguishable from that of the seawater involved in the reaction. Therefore, by comparison with the Sr-isotope evolution curve of seawater, the- 87Sr/86Sr ratios of the dolomites can be used to record the oldest possible age of dolomitization and the youngest age of deposition. The implications for this approach have been applied to data obtained from a dolomitized core from Little Bahama Bank, Bahamas. Two periods of dolomitization are recognized, one in the early Late Miocene involving Middle Miocene or older rocks, and a second one around 2.4 Ma ago affecting early Pliocene carbonates.
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  • 81
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Paleoceanography, 4 (6). pp. 681-691.
    Publication Date: 2015-09-01
    Description: Li/Ca ratios in modern brachiopod shells generally correlate inversely with growth temperature, ranging from ∼20 µmol/mol at 30°C to ∼50 µmol/mol at 0°C with no apparent interspecific offsets. Causes of the temperature effect on Li/Ca ratios are not yet understood. Cenozoic brachiopod Li/Ca ratios average ∼30 µmol/mol, similar to the average observed in modern brachiopods. Relatively constant Li/Ca ratios for Eocene to Pleistocene nonluminescent brachiopod shells, consistent with previous observations of Cenozoic planktonic foraminifera, support the conclusion of little variation in Cenozoic seawater Li/Ca. Nonluminescent portions of Permian and Carboniferous brachiopods have Li/Ca ratios substantially lower (generally 〈10 µmol/mol) than modern, Cenozoic, or Devonian samples. Mass balance considerations, constrained by δ18O of brachiopods, suggest that low Li concentrations in Permo-Carboniferous seawater could be the result of a lower flux of dissolved Li from the continents and/or a higher flux of Li from seawater to clastic marine sediments. Nonluminescent Devonian brachiopods from a single hand specimen have Li/Ca ratios around 70% of the modern average. These Li/Ca ratios can be explained by either somewhat higher temperature with constant seawater Li/Ca, somewhat lower seawater Li/Ca at constant temperature, or a combination of slightly elevated temperature and slightly lower seawater Li/Ca.
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  • 82
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Reviews of Geophysics and Space Physics, 23 (2). pp. 165-182.
    Publication Date: 2016-01-11
    Description: A variety of observations of intense, long-lived oceanic vortices are interpreted as examples of a distinct phenomenon, which is given the name Submesoscale, Coherent Vortices (SCV's). The distinguishing characteristics of SCV's are defined and illustrated by example, and a survey is made of the different SCV types presently known. On the basis of extant theoretical and modeling solutions, interpretations are made of the dynamics associated with SCV existence, movement, endurance, interactions with other currents, generation, and contributions to the transport of chemical properties in the ocean.
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  • 83
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research - Solid Earth, 94 (B4). pp. 4619-4633.
    Publication Date: 2015-07-31
    Description: Turrialba volcano, the southeasternmost volcano in the Central American arc, is constructed of medium to high-K calcalkaline basalts, andesites, and dacites, plus rare basalts with unusually high Nb concentrations. The compositions of these high-Nb basalts are more similar to those of intraplate basalts than they are to typical calcalkaline or arc-tholeiitic basalts. The association of calcalkaline and high-Nb basalts is rare in arc front volcanoes, seemingly being restricted to volcanoes that overlie Oligocene or younger subducting crust or that overlie the edges of subducting plates. The calcalkaline and high-Nb basalts at Turrialba have generally similar major element, trace element, and isotopic compositions but differ significantly in their Ba/La and La/Nb ratios. The geochemical similarities imply that they were derived from similar ocean island basalt sources. Their geochemical differences suggest that residual rutile stabilized by a large ion lithophile element bearing slab-derived fluid was present during calcalkaline basalt genesis but not during high-Nb basalt genesis. To explain the stability of rutile in a calcalkaline melt with a relatively low TiO2 concentration, we use a model that involves two stages of melting for both basalt types. Silica saturated high degree melts with mid-ocean ridge basalt like incompatible element concentrations generated by upwelling mantle are used as mixing end-members for both the calcalkaline and the high-Nb basalts. The calcalkaline basalts represent mixtures of the high-degree melts and oxidized small-degree melts generated by amphibole breakdown in mantle overlying the subducting slab. This small-degree melt has high incompatible element concentrations and is saturated in rutile. Arc-related lamprophyric rocks have compositions that are appropriate for these small-degree melts. High-Nb basalts are mixtures of the high-degree melts and more reduced small-degree melts that are undersaturated in rutile. These reduced melts may migrate around or through the subducting slab into the wedge to become involved in arc magma genesis.
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  • 84
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  In: The carbon cycle and atmospheric CO2: Natural variations archean to present; Proceedings of the Chapman Conference on Natural Variations in Carbon Dioxide and the Carbon Cycle, Tarpon Springs, FL, January 9-13, 1984. AGU (American Geophysical Union), Washington, DC, pp. 303-317.
    Publication Date: 2015-08-03
    Description: A 340,000-year record of benthic and planktonic oxygen and carbon isotope measurements from an equatorial Pacific deep-sea core are analyzed. The data provide estimates of both global ice volume and atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration over this period. The frequencies characteristic of changes in the earth-sun orbital geometry dominate all the records. Examination of phase relationships shows that atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration leads ice volume over the orbital bandwidth, and is forced by orbital changes through a mechanism, at present not fully understood, with a short response time. Changes in atmospheric CO2 are not primarily caused by glacial-interglacial sea level changes, which had been hypothesized to affect atmospheric CO2 through the effect on ocean chemistry of changing sedimentation on the continental shelves. Instead, variations in atmospheric CO2 should be regarded as part of the forcing of ice volume changes.
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  • 85
    Publication Date: 2016-05-30
    Description: Hole 504B is by far the deepest hole yet drilled into the oceanic crust in situ, and it therefore provides the most complete “ground truth” now available to test our models of the structure and evolution of the upper oceanic crust. Cored in the eastern equatorial Pacific Ocean in 5.9-m.y.-old crust that formed at the Costa Rica Rift, hole 504B now extends to a total depth of 1562.3 m below seafloor, penetrating 274.5 m of sediments and 1287.8 m of basalts. The site was located where the rapidly accumulating sediments impede active hydrothermal circulation in the crust. As a result, the conductive heat flow approaches the value of about 200 mW/m² predicted by plate tectonic theory, and the in situ temperature at the total depth of the hole is about 165°C. The igneous section was continuously cored, but recovery was poor, averaging about 20%. The recovered core indicates that this section includes about 575 m of extrusive lavas, underlain by about 200 m of transition into over 500 m of intrusive sheeted dikes; the latter have been sampled in situ only in hole 504B. The igneous section is composed predominantly of magnesium-rich olivine tholeiites with marked depletions in incompatible trace elements. Nearly all of the basalts have been altered to some degree, but the geochemistry of the freshest basalts is remarkably uniform throughout the hole. Successive stages of on-axis and off-axis alteration have produced three depth zones characterized by different assemblages of secondary minerals: (1) the upper 310 m of extrusives, characterized by oxidative “seafloor weathering“; (2) the lower extrusive section, characterized by smectite and pyrite; and (3) the combined transition zone and sheeted dikes, characterized by greenschist-facies minerals. A comprehensive suite of logs and downhole measurements generally indicate that the basalt section can be divided on the basis of lithology, alteration, and porosity into three zones that are analogous to layers 2A, 2B, and 2C described by marine seismologists on the basis of characteristic seismic velocities. Many of the logs and experiments suggest the presence of a 100- to 200-m-thick layer 2A comprising the uppermost, rubbly pillow lavas, which is the only significantly permeable interval in the entire cored section. Layer 2B apparently corresponds to the lower section of extrusive lavas, in which original porosity is partially sealed as a result of alteration. Nearly all of the logs and experiments showed significant changes in in situ physical properties at about 900–1000 m below seafloor, within the transition between extrusives and sheeted dikes, indicating that this lithostratigraphic transition corresponds closely to that between seismic layers 2B and 2C and confirming that layer 2C consists of intrusive sheeted dikes. A vertical seismic profile conducted during leg 111 indicates that the next major transition deeper than the hole now extends—that between the sheeted dikes of seismic layer 2C and the gabbros of seismic layer 3, which has never been sampled in situ—may be within reach of the next drilling expedition to hole 504B. Therefore despite recent drilling problems deep in the hole, current plans now include revisiting hole 504B for further drilling and experiments when the Ocean Drilling Program returns to the eastern Pacific in 1991.
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  • 86
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Paleoceanography, 3 (4). pp. 509-515.
    Publication Date: 2016-06-15
    Description: A radiocarbon-calibrated box model for today's ocean suggests that a lag of about 1750 years should exist between the arrival of the midpoint of the deglaciation 18O signal in the deep Atlantic Ocean and its arrival in the deep Pacific Ocean. In order to assess the actual lag, we have carried out accelerator radiocarbon measurements on two cores from the Atlantic Ocean and one core from the Pacific Ocean. Although the results are not definitive, there is a suggestion that the actual time lag was about 1000 years.
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  • 87
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 3 (3). pp. 215-239.
    Publication Date: 2016-06-16
    Description: In an attempt to create a scenario for the cause of the glacial to interglacial CO2 change recorded in air trapped in polar ice, we call on an increase in the alkalinity of polar surface waters. In this way we circumvent a major deficiency of the polar nutrient scenarios of Sarmiento and Toggweiler (1984), Siegenthaler and Wenk (1984) and Knox and McElroy (1984). Namely, our scenario does not require a drop in the nutrient content of polar surface waters in conformity with the demonstration by Boyle (1988a, b) that the cadmium content of planktonic foraminifera from polar regions did not decrease from late glacial to Holocene time. The rise in alkalinity required by our model is a natural consequence of the demise, during glacial time, of North Atlantic Deep Water as a major force in ocean circulation and of the nutrient maximum deepening of Boyle (1988b). Rather than being original, our hypothesis builds on the concept basic to the polar nutrient hypotheses, namely that the CO2 partial pressure in polar waters controls that for both the atmosphere and warm surface ocean. It also requires the alkalinity increase in surface waters produced by Boyle's nutrient deepening.
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  • 88
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research - Solid Earth, 87 (B11). pp. 9259-9278.
    Publication Date: 2016-08-02
    Description: The basement morphology and sediment thickness of the Hess Rise, an oceanic plateau in the central North Pacific, have been mapped on the basis of seismic reflection profiles. The acoustic stratigraphy on and around the rise is correlated with the lithostratigraphy at Deep Sea Drilling Project sites 464, 310, 465, and 466. A total sediment isopach chart of the rise reveals small-scale departures from the expected sedimentary pattern (thick sediment in shallow areas; thin sediment in deep areas). Sediment-filled basement depressions result from mass transport; thin sediment (〈50 m) occurs on steep scarps, basement ridges, and areas affected by bottom currents. A pre-Senonian sediment isopach chart shows a thickening from less than 50 m to more than 250 m of sediment from the northeast to the southwest. This trend seems explainable only in terms of the time-transgressive nature of seafloor formed at a mid-ocean ridge. The axial trend of the rise (N30°W) parallels nearby Mesozoic magnetic lineations and seems to be isochronous as deduced from the Deep Sea Drilling Project data. The Hess Rise began developing in late Aptian time along a segment of the Pacific-Farallon Ridge. Important events in the history of the rise are late-stage volcanism on the southern margin of the rise along the Mendocino Fracture Zone, tectonism and volcanism about 85 Ma that resulted in a major regional unconformity (reflector C), and another period of tectonism and volcanism between 65 and 43 Ma that coincided with the formation of the Emperor Seamounts and created structural benches on the western side of the rise. A significant change in the paleoenvironment that apparently occurred around the Paleogene-Neogene boundary (∼25–20 Ma) caused pronounced changes in the depositional environment and resulted in another major regional unconformity (reflector A).
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  • 89
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Paleoceanography, 2 (6). pp. 543-559.
    Publication Date: 2016-09-05
    Description: A suit of sediment cores close to and south of the Strait of Gibraltar (12°-36°N, 500–2800 m water depth) were analyzed for stable isotopes in epibenthic foraminifers Cibicidoides wuellerstorfi and Planulina ariminensis. During peak glacial times, the data exhibit higher δ13C values of up to 1.6‰ at intermediate depths near the Strait of Gibraltar (36°N). The values decrease to the south as evidenced by our data, but also to the north as revealed by data of intermediate depth cores north of 38°N (in Duplessy et al. [1987]). Thus, the distribution pattern of δ13C provides crucial evidence for an increased influence of nutrient depleted Mediterranean Outflow Water (MOW) on the glacial northeast Atlantic hydrography. During oxygen isotope Terminations I and II, the meridional carbon isotope gradient indicates a significantly decreased but still active MOW. As deduced from the δ18O fluctuations, the temperatures of the MOW in the Atlantic were lower during glacial times by as much as 5°C. During glacial times and during Termination I the maximum δ13C values of the MOW correlate with minimum values of the North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) and vice versa. This inverse response to climatic change of the carbon isotope signals of both water masses indicates, that the supply of saline MOW to the north Atlantic may be less important for the formation of NADW than previously assumed.
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  • 90
    Publication Date: 2016-09-07
    Description: Based on detailed reconstructions of global distribution patterns, both paleoproductivity and the benthic δ13C record of CO2, which is dissolved in the deep ocean, strongly differed between the Last Glacial Maximum and the Holocene. With the onset of Termination I about 15,000 years ago, the new (export) production of low- and mid-latitude upwelling cells started to decline by more than 2-4 Gt carbon/year. This reduction is regarded as a main factor leading to both the simultaneous rise in atmospheric CO2 as recorded in ice cores and, with a slight delay of more than 1000 years, to a large-scale gradual CO2 depletion of the deep ocean by about 650 Gt C. This estimate is based on an average increase in benthic δ13C by 0.4–0.5‰. The decrease in new production also matches a clear 13C depletion of organic matter, possibly recording an end of extreme nutrient utilization in upwelling cells. As shown by Sarnthein et al., [1987], the productivity reversal appears to be triggered by a rapid reduction in the strength of meridional trades, which in turn was linked via a shrinking extent of sea ice to a massive increase in high-latitude insolation, i.e., to orbital forcing as primary cause.
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  • 91
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 94 (C4). pp. 4757-4762.
    Publication Date: 2019-02-27
    Description: A 4-year expendable bathythermograph data set (1984–1987) from the area between southern Brazil and the Antarctic Peninsula provides information on the interannual variability of front locations. Two boundaries of subtropical water at different depths are identified north and south of the Brazil Current-Falkland (Malvinas) Current confluence zone. The northern Subtropical Front is displaced over a large part of the Argentine Basin from one observational period to the other. The shallow southern Subtropical Front appears fixed to the Falkland Escarpment. The Polar Front and Subantarctic Front locations do not vary much, except for one case where a cold core eddy in the Polar Frontal Zone causes a large northward displacement of the Subantarctic Front.
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  • 92
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 93 (C7). pp. 8111-8118.
    Publication Date: 2017-09-26
    Description: The eastern part of the North Atlantic subtropical gyre is found in the region between the Azores and the Cape Verde Islands. A study of the gyre structure in the area east of 35°W between 8°N and 41°N is presented. The geostrophic flow field determined from historical temperature-salinity data sets by objective analysis indicates seasonal variations in shape but no significant changes in the magnitude of volume transports. The eastern part of the gyre has a larger east-west and smaller north-south extension in summer compared with the winter season. The center shifts by about 2° latitude to the south from winter to summer. Long-term temperature time series (6.5 years) from a mooring near the Azores are consistent with these results, showing always a consistent temperature increase at the beginning of the year which is apparently due to the displacement of the northeastern part of the gyre. A comparison between the mean flow fields and fields obtained from individual zonal sections indicates large deviations north and south of the gyre but small deviations within the gyre.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 93
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 94 (C5). pp. 6159-6168.
    Publication Date: 2017-09-26
    Description: The Azores Current, south of the Azores Archipelago, is part of the subtropical North Atlantic gyre. Using an international hydrographic data set, we analyze mean and seasonal geostrophic transport fields in the upper 800 m of the ocean in order to determine the origin of the Azores Current in the western basin and seasonal changes in the related flow. Geostrophic currents are obtained by using the method applied by Stramma (1984) in the eastern basin. The Azores Current is found to originate in the area of the Southwest Newfoundland Rise (Figure 10). In winter an almost uniform current connects this region of origin with the Azores Current, while a branching into two current bands is observed in summer, with the southern band forming a marked cyclonic loop. Within the upper 800 m, all of the transport in the northern band and about 70% of the transport in the southern band recirculates in the eastern basin. Additionally, expendable bathythermograph data from the Azores Current region indicate an increase of eddy potential energy from winter to summer.
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  • 94
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 94 (C3). pp. 3201-3210.
    Publication Date: 2020-10-20
    Description: Two buoy types have been tested with respect to their drift performance under drogued and undrogued conditions. Additionally, forces acting on the buoys were measured directly. Quadratic drag laws have been confirmed for the drag in water and the combined drag of wind and waves. Stokes drift contributes about one half to the wind factor of 0.023, which is obtained for undrogued buoys in the Atlantic. The forces on a windowshade drogue are given by a linear relation between force and water velocity for speeds exceeding 10 cm/s. They have been extrapolated to speeds of less than 10 cm/s by both a linear and a quadratic relationship. Correlations between drift and wind speed in the Atlantic suggest that the linear law is a better approximation under realistic conditions. According to these measurements in the Atlantic the described buoy-drogue system with a windowshade drogue in 100-m depth is a good current-measuring device. Slippage is negligible for wind speeds of less than 15 m/s and is less than 2 cm/s under gale conditions. Undrogued buoys are strongly affected by wind and cannot be used for the analysis of currents without correction, even under light winds.
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  • 95
    Publication Date: 2016-06-16
    Description: It has long been recognized that the transition from the last glacial to the present interglacial was punctuated by a brief and intense return to cold conditions. This extraordinary event, referred to by European palynologists as the Younger Dryas, was centered in the northern Atlantic basin. Evidence is accumulating that it may have been initiated and terminated by changes in the mode of operation of the northern Atlantic Ocean. Further, it appears that these mode changes may have been triggered by diversions of glacial meltwater between the Mississippi River and the St. Lawrence River drainage systems. We report here Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS) radiocarbon results on two strategically located deep-sea cores. One provides a chronology for surface water temperatures in the northern Atlantic and the other for the meltwater discharge from the Mississippi River. Our objective in obtaining these results was to strengthen our ability to correlate the air temperature history for the northern Atlantic basin with the meltwater history for the Laurentian ice sheet.
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  • 96
    Publication Date: 2016-06-15
    Description: Radiocarbon ages for benthic and planktonic foraminifera from the late glacial sections of two Atlantic and two Pacific cores are reported. The differences for benthic-planktonic pairs suggest that the radiocarbon age for deep Atlantic water was somewhat larger than today's (i.e., 600±250, as opposed to 400 years) and that the radiocarbon age for deep Pacific water was also slightly larger than today's (2100±400, as opposed to 1600, years). Our results suggest that during glacial time, the deep Pacific was, as it is today, significantly depleted in radiocarbon relative to the deep Atlantic. As many questions remain unanswered regarding the reliability of this approach, these conclusions must be considered to be preliminary.
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  • 97
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 1 (1). pp. 15-29.
    Publication Date: 2016-06-15
    Description: The only viable explanations put forth to date for the glacial to interglacial change in atmospheric CO2 content suggested from measurements of the CO2 content of gas extracted from ice cores involve changes in the ocean's nutrient cycles. Any nutrient change capable of creating the 80 µatm changes in atmosphere CO2 pressure suggested by the ice core results also creates significant change in the deep ocean's CO3= content. Evidence from deep sea sediments suggests that these CO3= changes are compensated on the time scale of a few thousand years by reductions or increases in amount of CaCO3 accumulating in deep sea sediments. This compensation process has two important consequences. First, it significantly increases the magnitude of the CO2 change per unit of nutrient forcing. Second, it causes a delay in the response of the atmospheric CO2 change. While the first of these consequences is a boon to those seeking to explain the CO2 change, the second may prove to be a curse. The ice core CO2 record shows no evidence of a significant lag between the CO2 response and the polar warming. In any case it is important that we improve our knowledge of the magnitude and timing of the CaCO3 preservation events which mark the close of episodes of glaciation and of the dissolution events which mark the onset of these episodes.
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  • 98
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  In: The Carbon Cycle and Atmospheric CO: Natural Variations Archean to Present. , ed. by Sundquist, E. T. and Broecker, W. S. Geophysical Monograph, 32 . AGU (American Geophysical Union), Washington, pp. 469-486.
    Publication Date: 2016-07-20
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 99
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research - Oceans, 87 (C3). pp. 2045-2056.
    Publication Date: 2016-07-12
    Description: The distribution of 234Th, 230Th, and 228Th between dissolved and particulate forms was determined in 17 seawater samples from the Guatemala and Panama basins. Sampling was carried out in situ with battery-powered, submersible pumping systems in which the seawater first passed through a Nuclepore filter (1.0-μm pore size) and then through a cartridge packed with Nitex netting that was impregnated with MnO2 to scavenge the dissolved Th isotopes. Natural 234Th was used as the tracer for monitoring the efficiency of scavenging. For all three isotopes, most of the activity was found in the dissolved form. On the average 4% of the 234Th, 15% of the 228Th, and 17% of the 230Th occurred in the particulate form, though the percentages were found to be strongly dependent on particle concentration. These distributions are not consistent with chemical scavenging models that assume irreversible uptake of Th on particle surfaces. The results can be explained, however, if continuous exchange of Th isotopes between seawater and the particle surfaces is assumed. Vertical profiles of both particulate and dissolved 230Th show increasing concentrations with depth, as required by the assumption of reversible exchange. Some of the dissolved 230Th profiles, however, show a reversal of this trend near the bottom, indicating accelerated scavenging near the water/sediment interface. Kinetics of both adsorption and desorption can be examined if at least two Th isotopes are measured in the same samples. Results show that reaction times are short (a few months) compared to the residence time of suspended matter in the deep ocean (several years), indicating that particles suspended in the deep sea are close to equilibrium with respect to exchange of metals at their surfaces.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 100
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 91 (C8). pp. 9739-9748.
    Publication Date: 2019-04-04
    Description: Shipboard hydrographic measurements and moored current meters are used to infer both the large-scale and mesoscale water mass distribution and features of the general circulation in the Canary Basin. We found a convoluted current system dominated by the time-dependent meandering of the eastward flowing Azores Current and the formation of mesoscale eddies. At middepths, several distinctly different water masses are identified: Subpolar Mode and Labrador Sea Water are centered in the northwest, Subantarctic Intermediate Water is centered in the southeast, and the saltier, warmer Mediterranean tongue lies between them. Mesoscale structures of these water masses suggest the presence of middepth meanders and detached eddies which may be caused by fluctuations of the Azores Current.
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