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On the reduction and interpretation of ocean-floor temperature and heat flow dataShih, Keh-gong 14 November 1967 (has links)
In this thesis, the interpretation and reduction of ocean heat
flow measurements are discussed on the basis of theoretical models.
The instrument effect x heat flow measurements is investigated for the
case of long period measurements by studying the heat conduction
along the measurement probe for both steady and unsteady state bottom
temperatures. This effect is found to be unimportant. Measurement
errors due to recent bottom temperature transients are studied
and the possible magnitude of such errors is estimated. Moreover,
effects of climatic variation on the ocean floor temperature are estimated
on the basis of diffusion models. It is shown that climatic variations
with periods longer than one thousand years will be unattenuated
and will affect the entire ocean floor.
The perturbation method is used to study the effects of an irregular
topography and a variable thickness of ocean floor sediments on the heat flow. Some special examples are given to provide a comparison
between the perturbation solutions and exact solutions of similar
problems. The perturbation method is also applied to a buried body
with different thermal conductivity from its surroundings and the reliability
of the perturbation solution is examined.
Heat flow anomalies due to heat transport by magma intruded
into crustal layers is studied by solving the heat conduction equation.
It is shown that magmatic intrusions can lead to very large surface
heat flow anomalies.
Finally, the possibility of deriving the ocean floor thermal gradient
on the basis of on-ship measurements performed on sediment
cores is investigated. The results appear positive. The temperature
variations in flowing wells and the temperature variation in a cylindrical
sediment core influenced by the movement of water along the
axis of the core are also studied. / Graduation date: 1968
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Magnetic and gravity interpretation of Yaloc-69 data from the Cocos plate areaLu, Richard Shih-Ming 21 April 1971 (has links)
Magnetic, gravity and bathymetry data were collected on an extended
cruise of the R/V Yaquina in 1969. The last set of data was obtained
from those track lines leaving the Panama Basin. The area
covered is mainly the Cocos plate (Molnar and Sykes, 1969). The data
is analyzed and compared with results of previous workers and the
geophysical implications considered.
Generally speaking, from the magnetic part of the data, both
direct and indirect methods show support of Vine and Matthew's
(1963) hypothesis of sea-floor spreading and the subsequent principles
of new global tectonics. The most northern magnetic anomaly profile
across the East Pacific rise (at 18.3°N) shows a spreading rate about
3 cm/yr. and the most southern one (at 12.8°N) shows a rate about
5.2 cm/yr. The Cocos plate has been assumed to move in a northeast-southwest
direction (N30°E to N45°E), and rotate with respect to the
Pacific plate about a pole at 40°N, 110°W with an angular velocity of
19.6x10⁻⁷ deg./yr. (Larson and Chase, 1970). New material comes
up from the west boundary - the East Pacific rise, and the south
boundary - the Galapogos rift, causing the Cocos plate to underthrust
the Americans plate at the middle American arc. Some of the points
of new global tectonics can not be detected from this set of data; further
detailed study of more track lines and sea bottom core samples
are needed. The results of both analytical methods for determining
the magnitude of induced and remanent magnetization in the second
layer shows some consistence with the work of Schaeffer and Schwarz
(1970), and Irving et al. (1970) at the Mid-Atlantic ridge near 45°N, in
which a thinner magnetization layer at the ridge and the attenuation of
magnetization intensity away from the ridge axis are suggested. Free-air
gravity anomaly profiles have been employed to determine the
crustal structure of two sections1 a ridge section at 12.8°N and a
trench section at 14°N. For the ridge section, if the anomalous mantle
was converted from normal mantle, the extension of anomalous mantle
into the normal mantle requires some uplift and/or lateral expansion
in the rise crest area. The tensional configuration suggested in the
trench crustal section agrees with the model proposed by Elsasser
(1968) for the differential movement between two lithospheric blocks.
This work gives some speculations that evidence which supports
the present new global tectonics theory is limited to a certain degree
of accuracy. Further study of the theory based upon physics, its
mechanism, and measurement techniques that would give more reliable
evidence have to be developed before it can be ascertained what
really happens beneath this wild, wild world. / Graduation date: 1971
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The numerical synthesis and inversion of acoustic fields using the Hankel transform with application to the estimation of the plane wave reflection coefficient of the ocean bottom /Mook, Douglas Robert. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, 1983. / Includes bibliographical notes.
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Sedimentary processes on the continental slope off New England /MacIlvaine, Joseph Chad, January 1973 (has links)
Thesis--Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. / "WHOI-73-58." "Prepared for the Office of Naval Research under contract N00014-66-CO241 ; NR 083-004." Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 201-210).
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The oceanographic and geoidal components of sea surface topography /Zlotnicki, Victor. January 1983 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, 1983. / Grant provided by NASA under Grant NAG 6-9. Includes bibliographical references (p. 187-193).
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Acoustic surveys of the sea floor near Hong Kong /Chan, Yin-lui, Yinia. January 1966 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hong Kong, 1967. / 8 fold. charts in pocket. Mimeographed.
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Studies using multi-region and open boundary conditions for terrain bottom-following ocean models /Martinho, Antonio S. January 2003 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph. D. in Physical Oceanography)--Naval Postgraduate School, March 2003. / Dissertation supervisor: Mary L. Batteen. Includes bibliographical references (p. 167-168). Also available online.
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A mathematical model for magma-hydrothermal systems in the oceanic crustSalstrand, Daniel Koewing 12 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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Resolving the heat-flow anomaly at the Galapagos Spreading CenterPatterson, Patricia Lynn 08 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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From seafloor spreading to uplift the structural and geochemical evolution of Macquarie Island on the Australian-Pacific plate boundary /Wertz, Karah Lynn. Mosher, Sharon, January 2003 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2003. / Supervisor: Sharon Mosher. Vita. Includes bibliographical references. Available also from UMI Company.
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