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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.
101

Conodont Biostratigraphy in Middle Osagean to Upper Chesterian Strata, North-Central Oklahoma, U.S.A.

Hunt, John Edward 28 June 2018 (has links)
<p> The informally known &ldquo;Mississippian Limestone&rdquo; stratigraphic interval in north-central Oklahoma, U.S.A. bears no chronostratigraphic markers and has no formally established biostratigraphic framework to date. Conodonts collected from four &ldquo;Mississippian Limestone&rdquo; cores in Logan, Payne, and Lincoln Counties provide the means for better constraining the stratigraphic age of the interval over the area studied. Conodont extraction was conducted by acid digestion of whole-rock samples and heavy liquid density separation after which conodont genera and species types were identified from scanning electron microscopy. Biostratigraphically significant conodonts recovered in combination with chemostratigraphic work by Dupont (2016) and earlier studies by Thornton (1958), Curtis and Chaplin (1959), McDuffie (1959), Rowland (1964), Selk and Ciriacks (1968), and Harris (1975) indicate the &ldquo;Mississippian Limestone&rdquo; ranges from middle Osagean to late Chesterian in age. In general, conodont element recoveries were too low in quantity and too poor of quality for use as biostratigraphic markers. The relatively low recovery and poor preservation quality of the conodont elements are attributed primarily to the elements being reworked soon after deposition by frequent storms on a mid- to outer-ramp environment in a low-latitude carbonate ramp setting. The results of this investigation are most significant in that they help place Mississippian deposition over the area studied within the context of a global Carboniferous stratigraphy. The results also allow for the Mississippian interval in the study area to be more accurately related to time-correlative strata with similar or better age constraint for constructing more temporally meaningful depositional models of the Oklahoma basin.</p><p>
102

The Stability of Sand Waves in a Tidally-Influenced Shipping Channel, Tampa Bay, Florida

Gray, John Willis 05 June 2018 (has links)
<p>Tidally-influenced sandwaves are common coastal features present in various settings, including shipping channels. The main shipping channel in Tampa Bay under the Bob Graham Sunshine Skyway Bridge (a.k.a. the Skyway Bridge) contains such sandwave bedforms. Between the years 2000 and 2017, these bedforms have been surveyed with multibeam echosounders (MBES) on 21 occasions with ranging coverage and quality of returns. Surveys between 2000 and 2009 used a 300 kHz Kongsberg EM3000; surveys between 2015 and 2017 used a 400 kHz Reson Seabat 7125. For comparable surveys, bathymetry, backscatter, slope, curvature, planform curvature, and profile curvature maps were created and analyzed. Spectral analyses were completed on the same cross-section for usable surveys, providing a period and amplitude for the bedforms. Sediment samples were taken in September 2015 using a Shipek grab. The sediment samples were analyzed for grain size and carbonate content. A bottom-mounted ADCP recorded velocity data semi-continuously over the same time period. These data were analyzed in an effort to investigate the forcing mechanisms that influence the bedform morphology. Mean grain sizes in the shipping channel under the Skyway Bridge range from 0.01 ? (0.99 mm, coarse sand) to 1.55 ? (0.34 mm, medium sand). Calcium carbonate content ranges from 25% to 87%. The sediment sample site most representative of the sandwave bedforms has a mean grain size of 0.01 ? and a calcium carbonate content of 87%. The calculated mean current velocity required to initiate transport of the D50 and D84 grain size percentile of the representative sediment sample site is 0.70 m/s and 1.05 m/s, respectively. Analysis of the ADCP-recorded velocity data shows that the calculated D50 critical velocity is frequently reached by peak flood and peak ebb currents except during neap tides, while the D84 critical velocity is reached only intermittently, mostly during spring tides. Analysis of MBES backscatter shows similar spatial patterns in two larger MBES surveys in 2004 and 2015. Bathymetric analysis of the sandwaves shows consistent characteristics through time. Wave crest analysis reveals that bedforms migrate in both the ebb and flood directions. Spectral analysis shows primary wave spatial frequencies range from 0.13 m-1 to 0.22 m-1, and primary wave periods range from 4.5 m to 6.0 m. The predominant wavelength of sandwaves within the study area is about 5 m, with an average wave height of 0.47 m. The maximum wave height along the axial cross-section analyzed is 0.8 m, observed in April 2017. The sediments comprising the sandwave bedforms are likely winnowed by tidal currents resulting in larger grain size and carbonate content than other areas of the shipping channel and surrounding bay. Consistent patterns in MBES backscatter over time indicate that the sediment distribution pattern in the study area have not significantly changed. The size and shape of the bedforms in the shipping channel beneath the Skyway Bridge are have been in a quasi-dynamic equilibrium over the past 13 years. The bedforms are shown to migrate in both the ebb and flood directions despite an average faster ebb current velocity than a flood current velocity. More frequent and consistent MBES surveys as well as more continuous ADCP data availability would allow for better understanding of sediment transport via bedform migration in tidally-influenced environments.
103

Sedimentação na bacia do Pantanal Mato-Grossense, Centro-Oeste do Brasil /

Assine, Mario Luis. January 2003 (has links)
Resumo: O Pantanal é uma bacia sedimentar quaternária localizada na Bacia do Alto Rio Paraguai, na Região Centro-Oeste do Brasil. A sucessão estratigráfica mostra afinamento textural para o topo e preenchimento essencialmente siliciclástico. O trato de sistemas deposicionais é composto por uma planície fluvial meandrante como sistema distal de vários leques aluviais dominados por rios, dos quais o mais notável é o megaleque do rio Taquari. Na paisagem atual há muitas feições geomórficas herdadas de diferentes climas, que produziram registros de uma sucessão de eventos do Pleistoceno ao Holoceno. A geometria original de vários leques aluviais de rios entrelaçados está preservada como formas reliquiares, sendo facilmente reconhecíveis em imagens de satélite, onde são visíveis paleocanais distributários. Processos eólicos foram ativos em alguns lobos abandonados, enquanto outros lobos eram construídos, tendo sido provavelmente mais efetivos durante o período de máximo glacial. Lagoas bordejadas por dunas de areia em meia-lua, originalmente depressões de deflação, são formas eólicas reliquiares na paisagem do Pantanal. A paisagem tem continuamente mudado desde o fim do Pleistoceno, numa adaptação a um ambiente mais úmido e quente, dominante no Holoceno. O surgimento das modernas terras úmidas (wetlands) ocorreu na transição do Pleistoceno para o Holoceno, assim como a individualização dos sistemas lacustrinos. O Pantanal, como hoje o conhecemos, é uma vasta planície com gradiente topográfico muito baixo e de lento escoamento superficial das águas, por isso sazonalmente inundável nos meses de verão e outono. Apesar das mudanças climáticas, os leques aluviais permaneceram sistemas deposicionais ativos. Novos lobos foram formados ao mesmo tempo em que lobos antigos foram submetidos a processos de pedogênese e erosão por sistemas... (Resumo completo, clicar acesso eletrônico abaixo) / Abstract: The Pantanal is a Quaternary sedimentary basin located at the left margin of the Upper Paraguay River, west-central Brazil. Basin infilling was mainly by siliciclastic sediments and the stratigraphic succession exhibits an overall finingupward pattern. The depositional system tract is composed by a large meandering fluvial plain and several marginal alluvial fans, being the Taquari megafan the most striking feature. The present landscape is a complex tropical wetland, with geomorphic features derived from the present conditions and other inherited from successive Pleistocene and Holocene climates. During the Pleistocene, the sedimentary environment was dominated by braided alluvial fans, the original geometry of which is preserved as relict forms, permitting remarkable patterns of distributary paleochannels to be easily recognized in satellite images. Eolian processes were active in some abandoned lobes, contemporaneously with sedimentation in active fan lobes. Closed ponds bordered by lunette sand dunes, originally salt pans produced by eolian deflation, are relict eolian landforms in the Pantanal landscape. Eolian processes were probably more effective at the glacial maximum. Landscape has been changing in the Pantanal area since the end of the Pleistocene in adaptation to a more humid and warmer environment prevailing during Holocene. Initiation of the modern wetland has occurred during the Pleistocene / Holocene transition, with the change to a more humid climate and the individualization of lacustrine systems. The modern Pantanal wetland is a vast expanse of poorly drained lowlands that experiences annual flooding from summer to fall months. Although climatic fluctuations have occurred during all the Holocene, the alluvial fans have remained active depositional systems and lobes were formed by progradation and abandonment. Abandoned lobes were subjected... (Complete abstract click electronic address below)
104

Geo-chemical studies in the Lewisian

Holland, James Grenville January 1965 (has links)
No description available.
105

The relationship between intrusive magmatism, volcanism, and massive sulphide mineralisation at Rio Tinto, Spain

Halsall, Carol Elaine January 1989 (has links)
No description available.
106

Sedimentology, tectonic control and resource potential of the Upper Devonian - Lower Carboniferous Horton Group, Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia

Hamblin, Anthony P January 1989 (has links)
Abstract not available.
107

Diatoms as recorders of sea ice in the Bering and Chukchi Seas: Proxy development and application

Caissie, Beth E 01 January 2012 (has links)
The recent, rapid decline in Arctic summer sea ice extent has prompted questions as to the rates and magnitude of previous sea ice decline and the affect of this physical change on ice-related ecosystems. However, satellite data of sea ice only extends back to 1978, and mapped observations of sea ice prior to the 1970s are sparse at best. Inventories of boreal ecosystems are likewise hampered by a paucity of investigations spanning more than the past few decades. Paleoclimate records of sea ice and related primary productivity are thus integral to understanding how sea ice responds to a changing climate. Here I examine modern sedimentation, decadal-scale climate change in the recent past, and centennial- to millennial-scale changes of the past 400 ka using both qualitative and quantitative diatom data in concert with sedimentology and organic geochemistry. Diatom taxonomy and corresponding ecological affinities are compiled in this study and updated for the Bering Sea region and then used as recorders of past climate changes. In recent decades, the Pacific Decadal Oscillation and the strength of the Aleutian Low are reflected by subtle changes in sediment diatom assemblages at the Bering Sea shelf-slope break. Farther back in time, the super-interglacial, marine isotope stage (MIS) 11 (428 to 390 ka), began in Beringia with extreme productivity due to flooding of the Bering Land Bridge. A moisture-driven advance of Beringian glaciers occurred while eustatic sea level was high, and insolation and seasonality both decreased at the global peak of MIS 11. Atlantic/Pacific teleconnections during MIS 11 include a reversal in Bering Strait throughflow at 410 ka and a relationship between North Atlantic Deep Water Formation and Bering Sea productivity. Finally, concentrations of the biomarker-based sea ice proxy, IP25, are compared to sea ice concentration across the Bering and Chukchi seas. Changes in the concentration of IP25 in the sediments may be driven by the length of time that the epontic diatom bloom lasts. When combined with a sediment-based proxy for sea surface temperatures, IP 25 can be used to reconstruct spring ice concentration.
108

Stratigraphy and sedimentation of Pottsville rocks near Beach City, Ohio /

Gray, Henry Hamilton January 1954 (has links)
No description available.
109

Numerical experiments on continental lithosphere extension

Henderson, Jeremy Robert January 1982 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Earth and Planetary Science, 1982. / Microfiche copy available in Archives and Science / Bibliography: leaves 31-32. / by Jeremy Robert Henderson. / M.S.
110

Response to Comment on "Sedimentary DNA from a submerged site reveals wheat in the British Isles 8000 years ago"

Smith, O., Momber, G., Bates, R., Garwood, P., Fitch, Simon, Pallen, M., Gaffney, Vincent, Allaby, R.G. January 2015 (has links)
No / Bennett questions the rigor of the dating of our sample from which sedimentary ancient DNA was obtained and the reliability of the taxonomic identification of wheat. We present a further radiocarbon date from S308 that confirms the lateral consistency of the palaeosol age. The suggestion of taxonomic false positives in our data illustrates a misinterpretation of the phylogenetic intersection analysis.

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