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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.
1

Seismic sequence stratigraphy of the intra-Barrow Group, Barrow Sub-basin, Northwest Shelf, Australia.

King, Emma Jean January 2008 (has links)
Regional exploration in the Barrow Sub-basin has dominantly focused on structural traps in the Top Barrow Group. A lack of recent discoveries has focused attention more towards the economic potential of the Early Cretaceous intra-Barrow Group plays. The aim of this study was to interpret the seismic sequence stratigraphy and depositional history of the intra-Barrow Group within the Barrow Sub-basin, with emphasis on the identification of stratigraphic traps and potential locations of economic seal/reservoir couplets within the study area. The study area lies south of Barrow Island, and contains the topsets, foresets and toesets of the ‘Barrow delta’, which are an amalgamation of Mesozoic sandprone fluvial, coastal deltaic and deepwater successions. The final stages of the break-up of Gondwana impacted on the structural development of the Barrow Sub-basin, when a large shelf-margin fluvial/deltaic system built out toward the north to northeast, contributing to northerly shelf margin accretion, with largescale clinoform features and associated depositional environments. The dataset comprises the Flinders 3D seismic survey 1267 km² and 35 well logs. Eleven seismic sequences are identified and a seismic sequence stratigraphic framework tied to the wells has been developed, via detailed sequence stratigraphic mapping, integrated with 3D visualisation techniques with the use of Petrel. These eleven second-order sequences are further subdivided into lowstand, transgressive and highstand systems tracts. The movement of the palaeo-shelf break, slope and base of slope can be traced throughout each sequence, displaying an overall trend of building out in a north to northeast direction. A series of palaeo- geographic maps for each sequence has been developed to illustrate the basin’s evolution. The seismic sequences identified display progradation, followed by aggradation, then downstepping, concluding with progradation and aggradation. A high-resolution sequence stratigraphic study of Seismic Sequence 1 showed that several higher-order sequences can be identified, including numerous lowstand systems wedges, along with associated channel features, which could be targeted as new plays. The sequence stratigraphic framework developed, palaeo-geographic reconstructions and all other interpretations made for this project have been integrated to assess the prospectivity of the intra-Barrow Group over the study area, resulting in the identification of a number of leads and prospectivity summaries for each of the 11 Seismic Sequences identified within the intra-Barrow Group. / http://proxy.library.adelaide.edu.au/login?url= http://library.adelaide.edu.au/cgi-bin/Pwebrecon.cgi?BBID=1313353 / Thesis (M.Sc.(Petrol.G&G))-- University of Adelaide, Australian School of Petroleum, 2008
2

Seismic sequence stratigraphy of the intra-Barrow Group, Barrow Sub-basin, Northwest Shelf, Australia.

King, Emma Jean January 2008 (has links)
Regional exploration in the Barrow Sub-basin has dominantly focused on structural traps in the Top Barrow Group. A lack of recent discoveries has focused attention more towards the economic potential of the Early Cretaceous intra-Barrow Group plays. The aim of this study was to interpret the seismic sequence stratigraphy and depositional history of the intra-Barrow Group within the Barrow Sub-basin, with emphasis on the identification of stratigraphic traps and potential locations of economic seal/reservoir couplets within the study area. The study area lies south of Barrow Island, and contains the topsets, foresets and toesets of the ‘Barrow delta’, which are an amalgamation of Mesozoic sandprone fluvial, coastal deltaic and deepwater successions. The final stages of the break-up of Gondwana impacted on the structural development of the Barrow Sub-basin, when a large shelf-margin fluvial/deltaic system built out toward the north to northeast, contributing to northerly shelf margin accretion, with largescale clinoform features and associated depositional environments. The dataset comprises the Flinders 3D seismic survey 1267 km² and 35 well logs. Eleven seismic sequences are identified and a seismic sequence stratigraphic framework tied to the wells has been developed, via detailed sequence stratigraphic mapping, integrated with 3D visualisation techniques with the use of Petrel. These eleven second-order sequences are further subdivided into lowstand, transgressive and highstand systems tracts. The movement of the palaeo-shelf break, slope and base of slope can be traced throughout each sequence, displaying an overall trend of building out in a north to northeast direction. A series of palaeo- geographic maps for each sequence has been developed to illustrate the basin’s evolution. The seismic sequences identified display progradation, followed by aggradation, then downstepping, concluding with progradation and aggradation. A high-resolution sequence stratigraphic study of Seismic Sequence 1 showed that several higher-order sequences can be identified, including numerous lowstand systems wedges, along with associated channel features, which could be targeted as new plays. The sequence stratigraphic framework developed, palaeo-geographic reconstructions and all other interpretations made for this project have been integrated to assess the prospectivity of the intra-Barrow Group over the study area, resulting in the identification of a number of leads and prospectivity summaries for each of the 11 Seismic Sequences identified within the intra-Barrow Group. / http://proxy.library.adelaide.edu.au/login?url= http://library.adelaide.edu.au/cgi-bin/Pwebrecon.cgi?BBID=1313353 / Thesis (M.Sc.(Petrol.G&G))-- University of Adelaide, Australian School of Petroleum, 2008
3

William James Barrow a biographical study of his formative years and his role in the history of Library and archives conservation from 1931-1941 /

Roggia, Sally, January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Columbia University, 1999. / Includes bibliographical references.
4

A summer climate study for Barrow Strait, N.W.T. /

Conway, Frederick J. January 1976 (has links)
No description available.
5

A summer climate study for Barrow Strait, N.W.T. /

Conway, Frederick J. January 1976 (has links)
No description available.
6

CLASS/ACT EMBODIED PRACTICES FOR PERFORMATIVE PEDAGOGY

Irving, Chauntee 01 January 2019 (has links)
Class/Act: Embodied Practices for Performative Pedagogy is a personal and practical exploration of embodiment’s role in higher education acting pedagogy. In my thesis, I propose that embodied acting practices rooted in phenomenology and corporeal dramaturgy surpass conventional acting curricula. Embodied training is often confused with movement curricula and is regularly considered a shallow and/or unintelligent means to approaching acting work. However, I will argue the efficiency and effectiveness of embodied teaching techniques in four parts. Part One: Seeing is a retrospective of how my personal experiences outside of the classroom have drawn me toward embodied aesthetics. Part Two: Knowing unveils my research of embodiment, its origins, and its impact on theatrical disciplines. Part Three: Being/Doing is an in-depth look into diverse schools of acting and how they fall short of fully embracing embodied practices. Part Four: Becoming is an introduction to my creation of an embodied business approach for actors called Professional Embodied Preparation (PEP) and continues the discussion of embodiment’s transformative influence and integration into the higher education curricula. Throughout the thesis, I hope to prove that embodied acting pedagogy is an essential tool for providing greater efficiency, proficiency, and auto-didacity for the pre-professional actor in the academic classroom and beyond.
7

A systematization of the separatist principles of Henry Barrow and John Greenwood taken from their ecclesiastical writings, 1587-1593

Barrett, Charles M. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Bob Jones University, 2006. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 245-252).
8

Urbanization, climate, and frozen ground in Barrow, Alaska

Klene, Anna Elizabeth. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Delaware, 2005. / Principal faculty advisor: Frederick Nelson, Dept. of Geography. Includes bibliographical references.
9

A systematization of the separatist principles of Henry Barrow and John Greenwood taken from their ecclesiastical writings, 1587-1593

Barrett, Charles M. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Bob Jones University, 2006. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 245-252).
10

Chironomids Then and Now: Climate Change Effects on a Tundra Food Web in the Alaskan Arctic

Lackmann, Alec Ray January 2019 (has links)
Although climate change is a global phenomenon, the Arctic is warming faster than any other region on earth. These climatic changes have driven rapid regional changes over the past half-century in both the physical landscape and the ecosystems therein. One such ecological interaction is between migratory shorebird survival and local insect emergence. Annually, tens of millions of migratory shorebirds travel to the Arctic to rear their young in the relative absence of predators, but in a relative abundance of food (insects). Over evolutionary time, these trophic levels have coupled: shorebird chicks tend to hatch during the period of highest terrestrial insect availability. However, climate change is currently uncoupling this food-web synchrony, creating potential for trophic mismatch. In the High Arctic near Utqiaġvik (formerly Barrow), Alaska, trophic mismatch between nesting shorebirds and their insect food base is already detectable. In this ecosystem, flies in the Family Chironomidae (non-biting midges) dominate the prey trophic level in the avian food web. We have found that the pre-emergence development of one particular midge, Trichotanypus alaskensis, defies conventional wisdom of the Family, as this species molts to an additional fifth larval instar prior to pupation and emergence (all other chironomids are known to have four larval instars). We discovered an Utqiaġvik midge that reproduces asexually, a species that was not documented in the 1970s. Utilizing controlled temperature rearings of Utqiaġvik midge larvae, we discovered that as temperatures rise, emerging chironomid adults are generally smaller in size. We have found that chironomid pre-emergence developmental rates follow a positive exponential relationship as temperatures increase, can vary by taxon, yet are consistent across field and lab settings for a given taxon. At Utqiaġvik in the 2010s, chironomid emergence occurs 8-12 days earlier than it did in the 1970s. These findings shape our understanding of trophic mismatch in this arctic food web. / Arctic Landscape Conservation Cooperative; NDSU Graduate School Dissertation Fellowship; U.S. National Fish and Wildlife Foundation; Environmental and Conservation Sciences Program; Department of Biological Sciences

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