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  • Other Sources  (65)
  • AGU  (34)
  • American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)  (31)
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  • 2000-2004  (38)
  • 1980-1984  (27)
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  • 1
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    AGU
    In:  Professional Paper, Earthquake Prediction, Washington, D.C., AGU, vol. 4, no. 16, pp. 367-376, (ISBN 1-86239-165-3, vi + 330 pp.)
    Publication Date: 1981
    Keywords: Earthquake precursor: prediction research ; Earthquake precursor: Vp/Vs anomalies ; Dual Induction Latero logAT
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  • 2
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    AGU
    In:  Professional Paper, Dynamics of Plate Interiors, Roma, AGU, vol. 1, no. 231, pp. 145-153, (ISBN: 3-540-23712-7)
    Publication Date: 1980
    Keywords: Review article ; Stress
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  • 3
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    AGU
    In:  Bull., Polar Proj. OP-O3A4, Earthquake Prediction, Washington, D.C., AGU, vol. 4, no. Subvol. b, pp. 43-51, (ISBN 0080419208)
    Publication Date: 1981
    Keywords: Seismicity ; Earthquake precursor: prediction research
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  • 4
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    AGU
    In:  Washington, D.C., 277 pp., AGU, vol. 31, no. 3, pp. 2-203, (ISBN 0-87590-533-1)
    Publication Date: 2003
    Keywords: earth Core ; GeodesyY ; Earth rotation ; Handbook of geophysics ; Handbook of geodesy
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  • 5
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    AGU
    In:  Washington, D.C., AGU, vol. 4, no. Publ. No. 12, pp. 9, (3-540-24165-5, XXVI + 228 p.)
    Publication Date: 1981
    Keywords: Handbook of geophysics ; Earthquake precursor: prediction research ; Earthquake precursor: deformation or strain ; Seismicity ; Seismology
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  • 6
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    AGU
    In:  Bull., Polar Proj. OP-O3A4, Earthquake Prediction, Washington, D.C., AGU, vol. 4, no. 4, pp. 579-592, (ISBN 0080419208)
    Publication Date: 1981
    Keywords: Earthquake precursor: prediction research ; Earthquake asperities ; Recurrence of earthquakes ; Fault zone
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  • 7
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    AGU
    In:  Professional Paper, Open-File Rept., Chin. Geophys., Washington, D.C., AGU, vol. 2, no. 1, pp. 157-172, (ISBN 0080419208)
    Publication Date: 1982
    Keywords: Earthquake precursor: prediction research ; China
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  • 8
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    AGU
    In:  Bull., Open-File Rept., Earthquake Prediction, Washington, D.C., AGU, vol. 4, no. 16, pp. 181-207, (ISBN 1-86239-165-3, vi + 330 pp.)
    Publication Date: 1981
    Keywords: Earthquake precursor: prediction research ; Earthquake precursor: deformation or strain
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  • 9
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    AGU
    In:  Bull., Open-File Rept., Chin. Geophys., Washington, D.C., AGU, vol. 2, no. 1, pp. 109-138, (ISBN 1-86239-165-3, vi + 330 pp.)
    Publication Date: 1982
    Keywords: Earthquake precursor: prediction research
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  • 10
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    AGU
    In:  Washington, D.C., vii + 425 pp., AGU, vol. 30, no. Publ. No. 12, pp. 95-104, (ISBN 0-87590-532-3, AGU Code: GD0305323)
    Publication Date: 2002
    Keywords: Textbook of geophysics ; Plate tectonics ; Seismicity ; Seismology
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  • 11
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    AGU
    In:  Washington, D.C., AGU, vol. 12, no. ALEX(01)-FR-77-01, AFTAC Contract F08606-76-C-0025, pp. 329, (ISBN: 0-444-50309-9)
    Publication Date: 1984
    Keywords: Plate tectonics ; Geomagnetics ; Handbook of geophysics
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  • 12
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    AGU
    In:  Professional Paper, Earthquake Prediction, Washington, D.C., AGU, vol. 4, no. 16, pp. 543-565, (ISBN 1-4020-1729-4)
    Publication Date: 1981
    Keywords: Earthquake precursor: chemical (Rn, water(-level,...) ; China ; Earthquake precursor: others (animal behav., wobble, tides) ; Earthquake precursor: prediction research
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  • 13
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    AGU
    In:  Professional Paper, Earthquake Prediction, Washington, D.C., AGU, vol. 4, no. 16, pp. 141-151, (ISBN 1-4020-1729-4)
    Publication Date: 1981
    Keywords: Plate tectonics ; Seismicity ; Volcanology ; Earthquake precursor: prediction research ; Earthquake precursor: statistical anal. of seismicity ; Stefansson
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  • 14
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    AGU
    In:  Bull., Polar Proj. OP-O3A4, Plate Tectonics. Selected Papers from Publications of the AGU, Washington, D.C., AGU, vol. 22, no. 4, pp. 444-455, (ISBN 0080419208)
    Publication Date: 1980
    Keywords: Crustal deformation (cf. Earthquake precursor: deformation or strain) ; Plate tectonics
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  • 15
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    AGU
    In:  Chinese Geophysics, Washington, D.C., AGU, vol. 2, no. 2, pp. 383-403, pp. L24604, (ISSN: 1340-4202)
    Publication Date: 1983
    Keywords: Earthquake ; Induced seismicity ; JAPAN
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  • 16
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    AGU
    In:  Professional Paper, Earthquake Prediction, Washington, D.C., AGU, vol. 4, no. 16, pp. 348-356, (ISBN 0080419208)
    Publication Date: 1981
    Keywords: Earthquake precursor: prediction research ; Seismicity ; Earthquake precursor: stresses ; Fault plane solution, focal mechanism ; Source
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  • 17
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    AGU
    In:  Bull., Polar Proj. OP-O3A4, Earthquake Prediction, Washington, D.C., AGU, vol. 4, no. XVI:, pp. 457-472, (ISBN: 3-540-23712-7)
    Publication Date: 1981
    Keywords: Earthquake precursor: prediction research ; Earthquake precursor: deformation or strain ; Geodesy
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  • 18
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    AGU
    In:  Bull., Polar Proj. OP-O3A4, Earthquake Prediction, Washington, D.C., AGU, vol. 4, no. 1, pp. 1-19, (ISBN: 3-540-23712-7)
    Publication Date: 1981
    Keywords: Seismicity ; Earthquake precursor: prediction research ; FROTH ; (abstract)
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  • 19
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    AGU
    In:  Bull., Polar Proj. OP-O3A4, Plate Boundary Zones, Washington, D.C., AGU, vol. 30, no. 2, pp. 173-190, (ISBN 0-87590-532-3, AGU Code: GD0305323)
    Publication Date: 2002
    Keywords: Crustal deformation (cf. Earthquake precursor: deformation or strain) ; Strain ; GSRM ; map ; Paleomagnetism ; Plate tectonics ; Seismicity
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  • 20
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    AGU
    In:  Bull., Polar Proj. OP-O3A4, Earthquake Prediction, Washington, D.C., AGU, vol. 4, no. Subvol. a, pp. 20-28, (ISBN 0080419208)
    Publication Date: 1981
    Keywords: Earthquake precursor: prediction research ; Earthquake precursor: statistical anal. of seismicity ; FROTH ; (book)
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  • 21
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    AGU
    In:  Bull., Open-File Rept., Geodynamics of the Eastern Pacific Region, Caribbean and Scotia Arcs, Washington, D.C., AGU, vol. 9, no. 1, pp. 113-125, (ISBN 0080419208)
    Publication Date: 1983
    Keywords: Plate tectonics ; Crustal deformation (cf. Earthquake precursor: deformation or strain) ; Subduction zone ; Review article ; Cabre
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  • 22
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    AGU
    In:  Bull., Open-File Rept., Earthquake Prediction, Washington, D.C., AGU, vol. 4, no. 1, pp. 422-440, (ISBN 0080419208)
    Publication Date: 1981
    Keywords: Earthquake precursor: prediction research ; Geodesy ; Earthquake precursor: deformation or strain
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  • 23
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    AGU
    In:  Professional Paper, Open-File Rept., Earthquake Prediction, Washington, D.C., AGU, vol. 4, no. 16, pp. 209-216, (ISBN 0080419208)
    Publication Date: 1981
    Keywords: Earthquake precursor: prediction research ; Earthquake precursor: deformation or strain
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  • 24
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    AGU
    In:  Bull., Open-File Rept., Earthquake Prediction, Washington, D.C., AGU, vol. 4, no. 16, pp. 441-456, (ISBN 1-86239-165-3, vi + 330 pp.)
    Publication Date: 1981
    Keywords: Tectonics ; Earthquake precursor: prediction research ; Earthquake precursor: deformation or strain ; Geodesy
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  • 25
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    AGU
    In:  Bull., Open-File Rept., Earthquake Prediction, Washington, D. C., AGU, vol. 65, no. 1, pp. 217-247, (ISBN 1-86239-165-3, vi + 330 pp.)
    Publication Date: 1981
    Keywords: Recurrence of earthquakes ; Fault zone ; Earthquake
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  • 26
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    AGU
    In:  Professional Paper, Open-File Rept., Earthquake Prediction, Washington, D.C., AGU, vol. 4, no. 2, pp. 117-125, (ISBN 0080419208)
    Publication Date: 1981
    Keywords: Seismicity
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  • 27
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    AGU
    In:  Professional Paper, Open-File Rept., Earthquake Prediction, Washington, D.C., AGU, vol. 4, no. 16, pp. 394-410, (ISBN 1-86239-165-3, vi + 330 pp.)
    Publication Date: 1981
    Keywords: Earthquake precursor: prediction research ; Earthquake precursor: deformation or strain
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  • 28
    Publication Date: 2017-01-04
    Description: Long sediment cores recovered from the deep portions of Lake Titicaca are used to reconstruct the precipitation history of tropical South America for the past 25,000 years. Lake Titicaca was a deep, fresh, and continuously overflowing lake during the last glacial stage, from before 25,000 to 15,000 calibrated years before the present (cal yr B.P.), signifying that during the last glacial maximum (LGM), the Altiplano of Bolivia and Peru and much of the Amazon basin were wetter than today. The LGM in this part of the Andes is dated at 21,000 cal yr B.P., approximately coincident with the global LGM. Maximum aridity and lowest lake level occurred in the early and middle Holocene (8000 to 5500 cal yr B.P.) during a time of low summer insolation. Today, rising levels of Lake Titicaca and wet conditions in Amazonia are correlated with anomalously cold sea-surface temperatures in the northern equatorial Atlantic. Likewise, during the deglacial and Holocene periods, there were several millennial-scale wet phases on the Altiplano and in Amazonia that coincided with anomalously cold periods in the equatorial and high-latitude North Atlantic, such as the Younger Dryas.
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  • 29
    Publication Date: 2017-07-07
    Description: Massive microbial mats covering up to 4-meter-high carbonate buildups prosper at methane seeps in anoxic waters of the northwestern Black Sea shelf. Strong 13C depletions indicate an incorporation of methane carbon into carbonates, bulk biomass, and specific lipids. The mats mainly consist of densely aggregated archaea (phylogenetic ANME-1 cluster) and sulfate-reducing bacteria (Desulfosarcina/Desulfococcusgroup). If incubated in vitro, these mats perform anaerobic oxidation of methane coupled to sulfate reduction. Obviously, anaerobic microbial consortia can generate both carbonate precipitation and substantial biomass accumulation, which has implications for our understanding of carbon cycling during earlier periods of Earth's history.
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  • 30
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science, 301 (5638). p. 1343.
    Publication Date: 2017-03-31
    Description: In vertebrates, genes of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC), with their pronounced polymorphism, potentially represent outstanding examples for the selective advantages of genetic diversity (1). Theoretical models predicted that, within an individual, MHC alleles can be subjected to two opposing selective forces, resulting in an optimal number of genes at intermediate individual MHC diversity (2, 3). Diversifying selection increases heterozygosity and enables wider recognition of pathogens (4). This process is opposed by the need to delete T cells that react with self peptide–MHC combinations (5) from the repertoire, which has been proposed as a possible mechanism constraining expansion of MHC genes. Because too high MHC diversity might delimit T cell diversity, it might also impose limitations on the efficiency of pathogen recognition. However, empirical evidence demonstrating fitness benefits in terms of parasite resistance caused by this type of optimal MHC diversity has been lacking. Therefore, we tested whether three-spined sticklebacks (Gasterosteus aculeatus L.) carrying an intermediate level of individual MHC diversity also displayed the strongest level of resistance against parasite infection. Sticklebacks are particularly suited to test MHC optimality, because MHC class II genotypes can differ markedly in the number of MHC class IIB alleles (6). We caught fish from an outbred population and used these to breed six sibships of immunologically naïve fish (i.e., they had no previous contact to parasites). Immunogenetic diversity ranged from three to nine MHC class IIB alleles found in reverse-transcribed messenger RNA (mRNA) [see (6) for details on genotyping]. The MHC genotypes within these sibships segregated above and below the hypothesized optimal number of ∼5 MHC class IIB alleles, which had previously been estimated in an epidemiological field survey (7). In individual infection treatments, fish from all sibships were simultaneously exposed to three of the most abundant parasite species identified in the field (Fig. 1A) (8). After two rounds of infection, separated by an interval of 8 weeks, we found a significant minimal mean infection rate at an intermediate number of individual MHC class IIB variants [i.e., 5.82 expressed alleles (Fig. 1B)]. This result was also confirmed when sibships were considered separately [i.e., 4.96 alleles (Fig. 1C)] (9). The strong pattern only appeared when infection with all three parasites was accounted for simultaneously. This may not be surprising, because single alleles are expected to correlate with single diseases and multiple alleles can contribute to resistance against several infectious agents (2).
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 31
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science, 301 (5638). p. 1343.
    Publication Date: 2017-12-14
    Description: In vertebrates, genes of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC), with their pronounced polymorphism, potentially represent outstanding examples for the selective advantages of genetic diversity (1). Theoretical models predicted that, within an individual, MHC alleles can be subjected to two opposing selective forces, resulting in an optimal number of genes at intermediate individual MHC diversity (2, 3). Diversifying selection increases heterozygosity and enables wider recognition of pathogens (4). This process is opposed by the need to delete T cells that react with self peptide–MHC combinations (5) from the repertoire, which has been proposed as a possible mechanism constraining expansion of MHC genes. Because too high MHC diversity might delimit T cell diversity, it might also impose limitations on the efficiency of pathogen recognition. However, empirical evidence demonstrating fitness benefits in terms of parasite resistance caused by this type of optimal MHC diversity has been lacking. Therefore, we tested whether three-spined sticklebacks (Gasterosteus aculeatus L.) carrying an intermediate level of individual MHC diversity also displayed the strongest level of resistance against parasite infection. Sticklebacks are particularly suited to test MHC optimality, because MHC class II genotypes can differ markedly in the number of MHC class IIB alleles (6). We caught fish from an outbred population and used these to breed six sibships of immunologically naïve fish (i.e., they had no previous contact to parasites). Immunogenetic diversity ranged from three to nine MHC class IIB alleles found in reverse-transcribed messenger RNA (mRNA) [see (6) for details on genotyping]. The MHC genotypes within these sibships segregated above and below the hypothesized optimal number of ∼5 MHC class IIB alleles, which had previously been estimated in an epidemiological field survey (7). In individual infection treatments, fish from all sibships were simultaneously exposed to three of the most abundant parasite species identified in the field (Fig. 1A) (8). After two rounds of infection, separated by an interval of 8 weeks, we found a significant minimal mean infection rate at an intermediate number of individual MHC class IIB variants [i.e., 5.82 expressed alleles (Fig. 1B)]. This result was also confirmed when sibships were considered separately [i.e., 4.96 alleles (Fig. 1C)] (9). The strong pattern only appeared when infection with all three parasites was accounted for simultaneously. This may not be surprising, because single alleles are expected to correlate with single diseases and multiple alleles can contribute to resistance against several infectious agents (2).
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 32
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science, 224 (4652). pp. 990-992.
    Publication Date: 2019-03-19
    Description: Study of Nautilus belauensis i its natural habitat in Palau, West Caroline Islands, shows that growth is slow (0.1 millimeter of shell per day on the average) and decreases as maturity is approached and that individuals may live at least 4 years beyond maturity. Age estimates for seven animals marked and recaptured between 45 and 355 days after release range from 14.5 to 17.2 years. These data indicate that the life-span of Nautilus may exceed 20 years and that its life strategy is very different from that of other living cephalopods.
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  • 33
    Publication Date: 2016-09-09
    Description: Using inorganic carbon measurements from an international survey effort in the 1990s and a tracer-based separation technique, we estimate a global oceanic anthropogenic carbon dioxide (CO2) sink for the period from 1800 to 1994 of 118 ± 19 petagrams of carbon. The oceanic sink accounts for ∼48% of the total fossil-fuel and cement-manufacturing emissions, implying that the terrestrial biosphere was a net source of CO2 to the atmosphere of about 39 ± 28 petagrams of carbon for this period. The current fraction of total anthropogenic CO2 emissions stored in the ocean appears to be about one-third of the long-term potential.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 34
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science, 216 (4550). pp. 1128-1131.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-08
    Description: Large euhedral crystals of calcium carbonate hexahydrate were recovered from a shelf basin of the Bransfield Strait, Antarctic Peninsula, at a water depth of 1950 meters and sub-zero bottom water temperatures. The chemistry, mineralogy, and stable isotope composition of this hydrated calcium carbonate phase, its environment of formation, and its mode of precipitation confirm the properties variously attributed to hypothetical precursors of the glendonites and thereby greatly expand their use in paleoceanographic interpretation.
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  • 35
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science, 300 (5624). pp. 1424-1427.
    Publication Date: 2016-09-09
    Description: A tomographic image of the upper mantle beneath central Tibet from INDEPTH data has revealed a subvertical high-velocity zone from ~ 100- to ~ 400- kilometers depth, located approximately south of the Bangong-Nujiang Suture. We interpret this zone to be downwelling Indian mantle lithosphere. This additional lithosphere would account for the total amount of shortening in the Himalayas and Tibet. A consequence of this downwelling would be a deficit of asthenosphere, which should be balanced by an upwelling counterflow, and thus could explain the presence of warm mantle beneath north-central Tibet.
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  • 36
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science, 301 (5634). pp. 790-793.
    Publication Date: 2015-08-27
    Description: Recent insights into bacterial genome organization and function have improved our understanding of the nature of pathogenic bacteria and their ability to cause disease. It is becoming increasingly clear that the bacterial chromosome constantly undergoes structural changes due to gene acquisition and loss, recombination, and mutational events that have an impact on the pathogenic potential of the bacterium. Even though the bacterial genome includes additional genetic elements, the chromosome represents the most important entity in this context. Here, we will show that various processes of genomic instability have an influence on the many manifestations of infectious disease
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  • 37
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    AGU
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 106 (B3). pp. 4017-4036.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-23
    Description: The best place to seek evidence of the style of past magma flow through a conduit is in the country rock. Heat flow has been studied in country rock adjacent to two Tertiary dolerite sills intruding the Caledonian schists and quartzites, on the Isle of Mull, Scotland. Radiogenic 40Ar loss within mica grains in the thermal aureoles of the intrusions has been measured at high spatial resolution using the Ultra-Violet Laser Ablation Micro-Probe, to discriminate between a history of prolonged magma flow, a history of conductive cooling following laminar flow, and instantaneous emplacement of the intrusions. The 40Ar/39Ar mica data and thermal modeling suggest that a prolonged period of magma flow of 3–5 months resulted in extensive argon loss from the micas, country rock melting, and mineral breakdown adjacent to a 6-m sill. These features were absent from the wall rocks of a smaller 2.7-m-thick sill, which exhibited even less argon loss than might have been predicted for an instantaneous intrusion. If the heat loss from the 6-m sill observed in one locality had been repeated along its length, it would have formed an important magma conduit to the Mull volcano, but dolerite is not a common flow composition on Mull. If on the other hand, the heat loss from the sill varies along strike, it constitutes strong evidence for channelling and heterogeneous flow within the sill.
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  • 38
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science, 289 (5479). pp. 609-611.
    Publication Date: 2015-11-24
    Description: Kimberlite eruptions bring exotic rock fragments and minerals, including diamonds, from deep within the mantle up to the surface. Such fragments are rapidly absorbed into the kimberlite magma so their appearance at the surface implies rapid transport from depth. High spatial resolution Ar-Ar age data on phlogopite grains in xenoliths from Malaita in the Solomon Islands, southwest Pacific, and Elovy Island in the Kola Peninsula, Russia, indicate transport times of hours to days depending upon the magma temperature. In addition, the data show that the phlogopite grains preserve Ar-Ar ages recorded at high temperature in the mantle, 700°C above the conventional closure temperature.
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  • 39
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science, 302 (5646). pp. 862-866.
    Publication Date: 2015-11-24
    Description: The Alpine Iceman provides a unique window into the Neolithic-Copper Age of Europe. We compared the radiogenic (strontium and lead) and stable (oxygen and carbon) isotope composition of the Iceman's teeth and bones, as well as 40Ar/39Ar mica ages from his intestine, to local geology and hydrology, and we inferred his habitat and range from childhood to adult life. The Iceman's origin can be restricted to a few valleys within ∼60 kilometers south(east) of the discovery site. His migration during adulthood is indicated by contrasting isotopic compositions of enamel, bones, and intestinal content. This demonstrates that the Alpine valleys of central Europe were permanently inhabited during the terminal Neolithic.
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  • 40
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science, 306 (5700). p. 1377.
    Publication Date: 2016-09-08
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  • 41
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science, 303 . pp. 210-213.
    Publication Date: 2014-12-02
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  • 42
    Publication Date: 2020-07-23
    Description: We conducted a seismic refraction experiment across Flemish Cap and into the deep basin east of Newfoundland, Canada, and developed a velocity model for the crust and mantle from forward and inverse modeling of data from 25 ocean bottom seismometers and dense air gun shots. The continental crust at Flemish Cap is 30 km thick and is divided into three layers with P wave velocities of 6.0–6.7 km/s. Across the southeast Flemish Cap margin, the continental crust thins over a 90-km-wide zone to only 1.2 km. The ocean-continent boundary is near the base of Flemish Cap and is marked by a fault between thinned continental crust and 3-km-thick crust with velocities of 4.7–7.0 km/s interpreted as crust from magma-starved oceanic accretion. This thin crust continues seaward for 55 km and thins locally to ~1.5 km. Below a sediment cover (1.9–3.1 km/s), oceanic layer 2 (4.7–4.9 km/s) is ~1.5 km thick, while layer 3 (6.9 km/s) seems to disappear in the thinnest segment of the oceanic crust. At the seawardmost end of the line the crust thickens to ~6 km. Mantle with velocities of 7.6–8.0 km/s underlies both the thin continental and thin oceanic crust in an 80-km-wide zone. A gradual downward increase to normal mantle velocities is interpreted to reflect decreasing degree of serpentinization with depth. Normal mantle velocities of 8.0 km/s are observed ~6 km below basement. There are major differences compared to the conjugate Galicia Bank margin, which has a wide zone of extended continental crust, more faulting, and prominent detachment faults. Crust formed by seafloor spreading appears symmetric, however, with 30-km-wide zones of oceanic crust accreted on both margins beginning about 4.5 m.y. before formation of magnetic anomaly M0 (~118 Ma).
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  • 43
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science, 306 (5699). pp. 1169-1172.
    Publication Date: 2016-06-15
    Description: Measurements of the age difference between coexisting benthic and planktic foraminifera from western equatorial Pacific deep-sea cores suggest that during peak glacial time the radiocarbon age of water at 2-kilometers depth was no greater than that of today. These results make unlikely suggestions that a slowdown in deep-ocean ventilation was responsible for a sizable fraction of the increase of the ratio of carbon-14 (14C) to carbon in the atmosphere and surface ocean during glacial time. Comparison of 14C ages for coexisting wood and planktic foraminifera from the same site suggests that the atmosphere to surface ocean 14C to C ratio difference was not substantially different from today's.
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  • 44
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science, 291 (5504). pp. 603-605.
    Publication Date: 2016-09-09
    Description: The North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) dictates climate variability from the eastern seaboard of the United States to Siberia and from the Arctic to the subtropical Atlantic, especially during winter. It strongly affects agricultural yields, water management, fish inventories, and terrestrial ecology. In their Perspective, Hurrell, Kushnir, and Visbeck report recent research into the NAO discussed at an American Geophysical Union Chapman Conference at the end of 2000. Much remains to be learned about the NAO, but it seems increasingly less likely that natural variability is the cause for the recent upward NAO trend.
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  • 45
    Publication Date: 2020-07-23
    Description: Seismic reflection and refraction data from the SE Greenland margin provide a detailed view of a volcanic rifted margin from Archean continental crust to near-to-average oceanic crust over a spatial scale of 400 km. The SIGMA III transect, located ∼600 km south of the Greenland-Iceland Ridge and the presumed track of the Iceland hot spot, shows that the continent-ocean transition is abrupt and only a small amount of crustal thinning occurred prior to final breakup. Initially, 18.3 km thick crust accreted to the margin and the productivity decreased through time until a steady state ridge system was established that produced 8–10 km thick crust. Changes in the morphology of the basaltic extrusives provide evidence for vertical motions of the ridge system, which was close to sea level for at least 1 m.y. of subaerial spreading despite a reduction in productivity from 17 to 13.5 km thick crust over this time interval. This could be explained if a small component of active upwelling associated with thermal buoyancy from a modest thermal anomaly provided dynamic support to the rift system. The thermal anomaly must be exhaustible, consistent with recent suggestions that plume material was emplaced into a preexisting lithospheric thin spot as a thin sheet. Exhaustion of the thin sheet led to rapid subsidence of the spreading system and a change from subaerial, to shallow marine, and finally to deep marine extrusion in ∼2 m.y. is shown by the morphological changes. In addition, comparison to the conjugate Hatton Bank shows a clear asymmetry in the early accretion history of North Atlantic oceanic crust. Nearly double the volume of material was emplaced on the Greenland margin compared to Hatton Bank and may indicate east directed ridge migration during initial opening.
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  • 46
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science (299). pp. 389-392.
    Publication Date: 2016-09-09
    Description: Overexploitation threatens the future of many large vertebrates. In the ocean, tunas and sea turtles are current conservation concerns because of this intense pressure. The status of most shark species, in contrast, remains uncertain. Using the largest data set in the Northwest Atlantic, we show rapid large declines in large coastal and oceanic shark populations. Scalloped hammerhead, white, and thresher sharks are each estimated to have declined by over 75% in the past 15 years. Closed-area models highlight priority areas for shark conservation, and the need to consider effort reallocation and site selection if marine reserves are to benefit multiple threatened species.
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  • 47
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science, 289 (5454). p. 1837.
    Publication Date: 2016-09-09
    Description: The Redfield ratio [carbon:nitrogen:phosphorus (C:N:P)] of particle flux to the deep ocean is a key factor in marine biogeochemical cycling. Changes in oceanic carbon sequestration have been linked to variations in the Redfield ratio on geological time scales, but this ratio generally is assumed to be constant with time in the modern ocean. However, deep-water Redfield ratios in the northern hemisphere show evidence for temporal trends over the past five decades. The North Atlantic Ocean exhibits a rising N:P ratio, which may be related to increased deposition of atmospheric nitrous oxides from anthropogenic N emissions. In the North Pacific Ocean, increasing C:N and C:P ratios are accompanied by rising remineralization rates, which suggests intensified export production. Stronger export of carbon in this region may be due to enhanced bioavailability of aeolian iron. These findings imply that the biological part of the marine carbon cycle currently is not in steady state.
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  • 48
    Publication Date: 2016-09-09
    Description: In the Campeche Knolls, in the southern Gulf of Mexico, lava-like flows of solidified asphalt cover more than 1 square kilometer of the rim of a dissected salt dome at a depth of 3000 meters below sea level. Chemosynthetic tubeworms and bivalves colonize the sea floor near the asphalt, which chilled and contracted after discharge. The site also includes oil seeps, gas hydrate deposits, locally anoxic sediments, and slabs of authigenic carbonate. Asphalt volcanism creates a habitat for chemosynthetic life that may be widespread at great depth in the Gulf of Mexico.
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  • 49
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science, 303 (5660). 957b-957.
    Publication Date: 2013-02-04
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  • 50
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science, 213 (4512). pp. 1113-1114.
    Publication Date: 2019-01-21
    Description: During an almost yearlong period of observations made with a current meter in the fracture zone between the Falkland Islands (Islas Malvinas) and South Georgia, several overflow events were recorded at a depth of 3000 meters carrying cold bottom water from the Scotia Sea into the Argentine Basin. The outflow bursts of Scotia Sea bottom water, a mixing product of Weddell Sea and eastern Pacific bottom water, were associated with typical speeds of more than 28 centimeters per second toward the northwest and characteristic temperatures below 0.6°C. The maximum 24-hour average speed of 65 centimeters per second, together with a temperature of 0.29°C, was encountered on 14 November 1980 at a water depth of 2973 meters, 35 meters above the sea floor.
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  • 51
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science, 294 (5550). pp. 2308-2309.
    Publication Date: 2016-06-10
    Description: The last glacial period was far from quiet. During so-called Heinrich events, large armadas of icebergs were shed from the ice sheet that covered much of North America. The tracks of debris left by the melting icebergs can still be seen in sediment cores from the North Atlantic. In their Perspective, Broecker and Hemming report from a recent miniconference that attempted to chart the climatic impacts of these events.
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  • 52
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science, 291 (5508). pp. 1497-1499.
    Publication Date: 2016-06-10
    Description: During the Medieval Warm Period (800 to 1200 A.D.), the Vikings colonized Greenland. In his Perspective, Broecker discusses whether this warm period was global or regional in extent. He argues that it is the last in a long series of climate fluctuations in the North Atlantic, that it was likely global, and that the present warming should be attributed in part to such an oscillation, upon which the warming due to greenhouse gases is superimposed.
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  • 53
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science, 300 (5625). pp. 1519-1522.
    Publication Date: 2016-06-15
    Description: Two hypotheses have been put forward to explain the large and abrupt climate changes that punctuated glacial time. One attributes such changes to reorganizations of the ocean's thermohaline circulation and the other to changes in tropical atmosphere-ocean dynamics. In an attempt to distinguish between these hypotheses, two lines of evidence are examined. The first involves the timing of the freshwater injections to the northern Atlantic that have been suggested as triggers for the global impacts associated with the Younger Dryas and Heinrich events. The second has to do with evidence for precursory events associated with the Heinrich ice-rafted debris layers in the northern Atlantic and with the abrupt Dansgaard-Oeschger warmings recorded in the Santa Barbara Basin.
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  • 54
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science, 294 (5549). pp. 2152-2155.
    Publication Date: 2016-06-10
    Description: We have reconstructed the glacial-age distribution of carbonate ion concentration in the deep waters of the equatorial ocean on the basis of differences in weight between glacial and Holocene foraminifera shells picked from a series of cores spanning a range of water depth on the western Atlantic's Ceara Rise and the western Pacific's Ontong Java Plateau. The results suggest that unlike today's ocean, sizable vertical gradients in the carbonate ion concentration existed in the glacial-age deep ocean. In the equatorial Pacific, the concentration increased with depth, and in the Atlantic, it decreased with depth. In addition, the contrast between the carbonate ion concentration in deep waters produced in the northern Atlantic and deep water in the Pacific appears to have been larger than in today's ocean.
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  • 55
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science, 302 . pp. 1923-1925.
    Publication Date: 2016-09-09
    Description: Climate policy needs to address the multidecadal to centennial time scale of climate change. Although the realization of short-term targets is an important first step, to be effective climate policies need to be conceived as long-term programs that will achieve a gradual transition to an essentially emission-free economy on the time scale of a century. This requires a considerably broader spectrum of policy measures than the primarily market-based instruments invoked for shorter term mitigation policies. A successful climate policy must consist of a dual approach focusing on both short-term targets and long-term goals
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  • 56
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    AGU
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 108 (B10). p. 2506.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-23
    Description: Microseism recordings from four European broadband stations and from three seismic arrays in Scotland, Norway, and Germany are compared with model wave data of the oceanic wave field in the North Atlantic and local ocean wave data from the Norwegian coast at 60�N, both measured during February–March 2000. Two approaches have been tested to locate generation areas of microseismic energy: a new amplitude correlation technique and beam backprojection from the three seismic arrays. Both techniques reveal that the main generation areas are located in specific regions off the coast of Southwest Norway and North Scotland. Seismic stations distant from these generation areas record a superposition of seismic energy from different source regions. Those close to a specific source region also show a high correlation with it. Both techniques give upper limits for the extent of the generation area of the strongest storm on 6/7 March at the southwest Norwegian coast of about 500 km. By using marine X-band radar measurements of the two-dimensional wave height spectrum, we estimate that the relative change of the extension of the generation area off the coast of southwest Norway during several storms is less than a factor of 3. This indicates that the size of the generation area is controlled by static features as coastline or bathymetry, and not by the extent of the storms. Microseism energy appears to be mainly controlled by the wave height in distinct and identifiable generation regions, so that the wave climate in these regions can be studied using historical records of microseisms.
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  • 57
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science, 303 (5664). pp. 1622-1624.
    Publication Date: 2019-03-06
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  • 58
    Publication Date: 2021-07-05
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  • 59
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science, 293 (5536). pp. 1845-1848.
    Publication Date: 2021-07-07
    Description: For goal-directed arm movements, the nervous system generates a sequence of motor commands that bring the arm toward the target. Control of the octopus arm is especially complex because the arm can be moved in any direction, with a virtually infinite number of degrees of freedom. Here we show that arm extensions can be evoked mechanically or electrically in arms whose connection with the brain has been severed. These extensions show kinematic features that are almost identical to normal behavior, suggesting that the basic motor program for voluntary movement is embedded within the neural circuitry of the arm itself. Such peripheral motor programs represent considerable simplification in the motor control of this highly redundant appendage.
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  • 60
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    AGU
    In:  Reviews of Geophysics, 40 (1).
    Publication Date: 2020-06-03
    Description: The radiogenic isotope composition of dissolved trace metals in the ocean represents a set of relatively new and not yet fully exploited tracers with a large potential for oceanographic and paleoceanographic research on timescales from the present back to at least 60 Ma. The main topic of this review are those trace metals with oceanic residence times on the order of or shorter than the global mixing time of the ocean (Nd, Pb, Hf, and, in addition, Be). Their isotopic composition in the ocean has varied as a function of changes in paleocirculation, source provenances, style and intensity of weathering on the continents, as well as orogenic processes. The relative importance of these processes for each trace metal is evaluated, which is a prerequisite for reliable interpretation of their time series in terms of changes in paleocirculation or weathering inputs. This analysis of processes includes a discussion of the long-term isotopic evolution of Sr and Os, which are well mixed in the ocean and have thus not been influenced by circulation changes. The radiogenic isotope evolution of those trace metals with intermediate oceanic residence times can be used as paleoceanographic proxies to reconstruct paleocirculation and weathering inputs into the ocean. This is demonstrated by studies from different ocean basins, mainly carried out on ferromanganese crusts, which show that radiogenic trace metal isotopes provide important new insights and can complement results obtained by other well-established paleoceanographic tracers such as carbon isotopes.
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  • 61
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science, 289 (5484). pp. 1538-1542.
    Publication Date: 2016-09-09
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  • 62
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science, 297 . pp. 2223-2224.
    Publication Date: 2016-09-09
    Description: Atlantic climate variability is an important driving force of climate in the surrounding land areas. In his Perspective, Visbeck explores recent advances toward understanding and predicting climate variability in the tropical Atlantic and the North Atlantic, and elucidating the role played by the ocean's circulation.
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  • 63
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    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    In:  Science, 292 (5514). pp. 90-92.
    Publication Date: 2016-02-18
    Description: Evidence is presented that North Atlantic climate change since 1950 is linked to a progressive warming of tropical sea surface temperatures, especially over the Indian and Pacific Oceans. The ocean changes alter the pattern and magnitude of tropical rainfall and atmospheric heating, the atmospheric response to which includes the spatial structure of the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO). The slow, tropical ocean warming has thus forced a commensurate trend toward one extreme phase of the NAO during the past half-century.
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  • 64
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    AGU
    In:  Oceans and rapid past and future climate changes: North-South connections
    Publication Date: 2022-03-21
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart
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    AGU
    In:  Oceans and rapid past and future climate changes: North-south connections
    Publication Date: 2022-03-21
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart
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