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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

The effects of margin requirements on stock prices in the short term /

Jeong, Eun-Bo January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
12

Gravity anomalies, flexure and the thermo-mechanical evolution of the West Iberia Margin and its conjugate of Newfoundland

Cunha, Tiago January 2008 (has links)
The West Iberia (WIM) and Newfoundland (NFM) continental margins formed over a succession of rift events related to the opening of the North Atlantic between the Late Triassic and the Early Cretaceous. They are characterized by a variable width Ocean- Continent Transition (Zone) where exhumed and serpentinized mantle has been cored. Results from 1-D well backstripping along the Portuguese shelf suggest 40-45% greater extension factors (β) than previous estimates. In addition, the age and duration of both the Late Triassic-earliest Jurassic and the Late Jurassic rifting episodes have been better constrained. It appears, for example, that the Late Jurassic rift propagates northwards along the margin, as inferred for the continental break-up during the Early Cretaceous. Combined backstripping and gravity modelling techniques (POGM), together with new bathymetry and sediment thickness grids, have been used to estimate the effective elastic thickness, T<sub>e</sub>, of the lithosphere. Results along closely space profiles in the WIM reveal that T<sub>e</sub> decreases from 15-40 km over unthinned Variscan basement to ≤ 15 km over stretched continental and transitional crust. Along strike, a good correlation is found between the modelled mechanical structure and the segmentation of the Variscan basement onshore. Discrepancies between observed and calculated anomalies are discussed in terms of other processes that affected the margin, such as serpentinization and inversion. Thermo-mechanical rheological modelling techniques have also been tested. The compiled software inputs the β's constrained from POGM to determine the thermal structure of the margin, which, in turn, has been used to construct models of rheology and, hence, T<sub>e</sub>. The models predict an increase in the T<sub>e</sub> of thinned continental lithosphere with age since rifting, between < 20 and > 35 km, and suggest that processes such as ductile shearing and mantle serpentinization might have permanently weakened the lithosphere. Results from POGM along conjugate profiles off WI and NF reveal a greater longterm strength of extended continental and transitional basement in the NFM (T<sub>e</sub>'s of 10-40 km). This analysis further supports the hypothesis that the low T<sub>e</sub>'s modelled in the WIM might be related to its complex structural framework. In order to explain the large asymmetries observed in the amount of basement subsidence (500-1300 in) between the WI and NF margins a lithospheric-scale "simple shear" rift model is proposed for the latest stages of rifting and continental break-up.
13

A geophysical investigation of crustal structure and segmentation of the central Antarctic Peninsula

Johnson, Ashley Charles January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
14

Management options for hedgerow vegetation : combining weed control with habitat improvement for predatory arthropods

Dunkley, Felicity Ann January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
15

The free-air gravity anomaly edge effect and the mechanical properties of the lithosphere

Marr, Catherine January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
16

Herbicide effects on a plant community and on monocultures of different densities

Humphry, Roger William January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
17

Development of submarine canyon systems on active margins : Hikurangi Margin, New Zealand : a thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Geology in the University of Canterbury /

Mountjoy, Joshu. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Canterbury, 2009. / Typescript (photocopy). Includes bibliographical references. Also available via the World Wide Web.
18

Yield protection as a risk management strategy

Aizikovitz, Jacob January 1900 (has links)
Master of Agribusiness / Department of Agricultural Economics / Christine Wilson / Risk management is critical in crop production as the challenges farmers face on a year to year basis are quite variable due to Mother Nature. There are many tools a farmer can utilize to help manage risk such as crop insurance and forward contracting or hedging. In recent years with lower prices, these tools have been more heavily used than they were a few years ago when corn and soybean prices were $8 and $15 per bushel, respectively. Margins in crop production are tight when market prices are low and input prices are high relative to market prices, and due to land cost. In order for farmers to produce greater profit, they must find ways to lower expenses or produce more bushels to increase their revenue. As margins tighten, farmers typically try to lower expenses to be more profitable rather than trying to increase bushels that would ultimately increase their revenue. When farmers try to reduce expenses, agricultural retailers experience lower revenues holding all else equal; distributors have lower revenues because the retailer is not selling as much, and the manufacturers experience lower revenues because the retailer and distributor are not moving the inventory compared to when farmer margins are larger. This thesis examines how yield protection for grain corn can be utilized as a risk management tool for crop production farmers. This thesis explores how increasing bushels and ultimately increasing revenue by protecting the bushels the crop is physically able to produce, can help manage producer risk. This thesis uses yield protection as a tool alongside crop insurance and marketing, rather than as a tool to replace crop insurance or marketing. Data used for yield protection is replicated fungicide, fungicide with an adjuvant, and fungicide with insecticide, that were evaluated against the untreated check over multiple locations and years across the Midwestern United States. Fungicide data were chosen because it is truly the definition of yield protection, protecting the crop against disease. Fungicides are usually the first products cut from a farmer’s crop production program to help reduce expenses and maintain profitability as margins tighten. The results found in this study are consistent with work conducted at Iowa State University. Results exhibited an increase in corn yield, but were not consistently statistical significant across treatments and location. In conclusion, the average yield increase was not enough over multiple years to pay for itself, and it lacked sufficient evidence. Yield protection does not fit a risk management strategy annually. However, yield protection should be utilized when specific thresholds on disease or insects are present to warrant this strategy.
19

Robert Hooke and the foundation of geology : a comparison of Steno and Hooke and the Hooke imprint on the Huttonian theory ; and, the tectonic evolution of the Oregon continental margin : rotation of segment boundaries and possible spacetime relationships in the Central High Cascades /

Drake, Ellen T. January 1981 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Oregon State University, 1981. / Typescript (photocopy). Includes bibliographical references. Also available via the World Wide Web.
20

Mesozoic rifting along the eastern seaboard of North America : insights from the seismic velocity structure of the Newfoundland margin and the northern Gulf of Mexico

Eddy, Drew Richard 10 February 2015 (has links)
Passive margins along the eastern seaboard of North America formed during early Mesozoic continental rifting and seafloor spreading, tectonic processes that are not fully understood. Seismic refraction and reflection data at the northeastern and north-central Gulf of Mexico and the Grand Banks of Newfoundland, Canada, are used to interpret the deep seismic velocity structure of sediments, crust, and mantle. These interpretations allow for a better understanding of continental rifting, mantle upwelling, magmatism, and seafloor spreading. Magma-poor rifting of the Newfoundland-Iberian margin developed a wide continent-ocean transition zone (COT). I present an analysis of 2-D marine seismic refraction and reflection data from the SCREECH project, including a shear velocity model to constrain the composition of the Newfoundland COT. Comparing SCREECH Line 2 Vp/Vs ratios with depth to potential lithologies supports a COT comprised of hyperextended continental crust and serpentinized mantle. Reconstructions of the opening of the Gulf of Mexico basin are impeded by a lack of seafloor magnetic anomalies and an abundance of sediments that obscure acquisition of seismic refraction datasets. Accordingly, the roles of mantle upwelling, magmatism, and lithospheric extension in this small ocean basin are poorly known. I present new 2-D marine seismic refraction data from the U.S. Gulf of Mexico collected during the 2010 GUMBO project. Rifting in the eastern Gulf of Mexico developed above a zone of anomalously high mantle potential temperatures that led to abundant magmatism. Syn-rift basins in continental crust, high velocity lower crust, a narrow zone of crustal thinning, and seaward-dipping reflectors support this interpretation. Oceanic crust here is thick despite slow seafloor-spreading rates, implying continuation of a thermal anomaly after rifting. In the north-central Gulf of Mexico, transitional crust is consistently thin (~10 km) across a wide zone. Velocity-depth comparisons, asymmetry of the north-central Gulf with the Yucatán margin, and dating of onshore xenoliths support either stretched and magmatically intruded continental crust or a multi-stage episode of seafloor spreading with ridge jumps. I contend that although tectonic inheritance may ultimately influence the location of a passive margin, the rifting process is largely controlled by mantle potential temperature and upwelling rate. / text

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