• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 37
  • 31
  • 16
  • 11
  • 4
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 127
  • 29
  • 21
  • 20
  • 14
  • 14
  • 13
  • 13
  • 13
  • 12
  • 12
  • 11
  • 11
  • 11
  • 10
  • 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.
41

CADEIA PRODUTIVA E STATUS DE CONSERVAÇÃO DAS ESPÉCIES DE TUBARÃO (CHONDRICHTHYES: ELASMOBRANCHII) DO ESTADO DO MARANHÃO COM BASE NO CONHECIMENTO TRADICIONAL DOS PESCADORES / PRODUCTION CHAIN AND CONSERVATION STATUS OF SHARK SPECIES (CHONDRICHTHYES: ELASMOBRANCHII) MARANHÃO THE STATE BASED ON TRADITIONAL KNOWLEDGE OF FISHERMEN

Martins, Ana Paula Barbosa 01 June 2013 (has links)
Made available in DSpace on 2016-08-17T15:00:38Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 DISSERTACAO_ANA PAULA BARBOSA MARTINS.pdf: 528858 bytes, checksum: c12daf76ca52d62185ed90c5ec646bf0 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2013-06-01 / FUNDAÇÃO DE AMPARO À PESQUISA E AO DESENVOLVIMENTO CIENTIFICO E TECNOLÓGICO DO MARANHÃO / Introduction: Sharks are essential to maintain the balance of the food chain of estuarine, marine, coastal and ocean ecosystems. These animals have specific biological and ecological characteristics that, when facing overexploitation situations, can result in critical conditions of vulnerability. In recent years such situations have increased exponentially, mainly due to the demand for shark fins in the Asian trade. Due to this tremendous fishing pressure, many species are already in imminent danger of extinction. To analyze this scenario, it is essential that the social actors involved in the exploitation are considered to assess the motivations of the communities in entering into such economic activity and to contextualize the environmental impacts. In this regard, the use of the fishermen knowledge is an important tool. Hypothesis: According to the current legislation in the country, direct fishing towards sharks and the trade of endangered species are prohibited activities. Therefore, it should be of common knowledge that the group is on major threat and the existence of an active productive chain of sharks in Maranhão is unlikely. Objectives: This study aims to determine the presence and to detail the productive chain of sharks in Maranhão, and suggests the regional conservation status of shark species in the state through ethno knowledge tools. Methods: Three municipalities of Maranhão s coast were chosen as sampling points based on shark fishing history. For each location, evaluations were performed through direct observation and the application of semi-structured questionnaires addressed to fishermen, traders and middlemen who work or have worked directly in exploratory shark activities. Answers cited by more than 50% of those interviewed are presented and discussed. Results: It was observed that the productive chain of sharks is active in the state, with fresh meat as the main commercialized product. A drastic drop in sales of shark fins, previously common in the state, was reported. Declines in several species populations have been widely reported, as well as their possible causes, showing that the environmental awareness in the communities exists, but is not practiced. Conclusions: The study described the productive chain of sharks in Maranhão and showed that the fishing community is aware of the imminent population collapse of several shark species, but rarely act for the conservation and maintenance of the group. / Introdução: Tubarões são organismos essenciais para a manutenção do equilíbrio das cadeias alimentares de ecossistemas estuarinos, marinhos, costeiros e oceânicos. Esses animais apresentam características biológicas e ecológicas específicas que, frente a situações de sobreexplotação, podem resultar em condições críticas de vulnerabilidade. Nos últimos anos, tais situações de sobreexplotação têm aumentado exponencialmente, nas quais a principal justificativa é a demanda por barbatanas de tubarões no comércio asiático. Devido a essa grande pressão pesqueira, muitas espécies já se encontram em perigo iminente de extinção. Para analisar esse cenário, é essencial que os atores sociais envolvidos na explotação sejam considerados para que os impactos ambientais possam ser contextualizados e para que seja possível avaliar as motivações das comunidades na realização dessa atividade econômica. Nesse contexto, a utilização do conhecimento dos pescadores é uma importante ferramenta. Hipótese: De acordo com a legislação nacional vigente, a pesca direcionada para a captura de tubarões e a comercialização de espécies ameaçadas são atividades proibidas. Assim, deverá ser de conhecimento geral o grau de ameaça do grupo, sendo improvável a existência de uma cadeia produtiva de tubarões ativa nos locais visitados. Objetivos: O presente estudo objetiva averiguar a presença e detalhar a cadeia produtiva de tubarões no Maranhão, além de sugerir o status de conservação regional das espécies de tubarão do Estado por meio de ferramentas de etnoconhecimento. Métodos: Três municípios do litoral maranhense foram escolhidos como pontos de amostragem com base no histórico de pesca de tubarões. Para cada local, foram realizadas avaliações por meio da observação direta e da aplicação de questionários semiestruturados direcionados aos pescadores, comerciantes e atravessadores que atuam ou atuaram diretamente em atividades exploratórias de tubarões. As respostas citadas por mais de 50% dos entrevistados foram apresentadas e discutidas no trabalho. Resultados: Foi observado que a cadeia produtiva de tubarões é ativa no Estado, sendo a carne fresca o principal produto comercializado. Também foi reportada uma queda drástica na comercialização das barbatanas, antes comum no litoral do Estado. O declínio populacional de diversas espécies foi amplamente relatado, assim como suas possíveis causas, evidenciando que a percepção ambiental nas comunidades existe, porém é pouco trabalhada. Conclusões: O estudo descreveu a cadeia produtiva de tubarões no Maranhão e evidenciou que as comunidades pesqueiras estão cientes do eminente colapso populacional de diversas espécies de tubarão, mas raramente agem em prol da conservação e manutenção do grupo.
42

Water and Sanitation Policy in Selected Case Studies: Equatorial Guinea, Malawi, and Mauritania

Cohen, Byron 01 January 2016 (has links)
What are the policy-relevant factors that condition WASH sector performance in Sub-Saharan Africa? Close examination of three case study countries, Equatorial Guinea, Malawi, and Mauritania, reveals interesting insights. Delivery of WASH services is shaped to a large extent by the overall quality and structure of a country’s government. More specifically, having an excessive profusion of policy-making and policy-implementing actors can hinder WASH sector performance. Furthermore, governments may face strong incentives to invest more heavily in providing WASH services to urban areas over rural areas, and to invest more heavily in the water sub-sector than in the sanitation sub-sector. Adequate financing of WASH investment appears to be a necessary but not sufficient condition for performance in both the water and sanitation subsectors. Additionally, monitoring and evaluation appears to be a crucial factor in formulating and implementing effective policies. In the rural water subsector, a country’s institutional setup and technology choice can have a major impact on water source maintenance and operability.
43

Indirect investigations of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning changes in the South Atlantic Ocean in numerical models for the 20th century / Indirect investigations of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning changes in the South Atlantic Ocean in numerical models for the 20th century

Signorelli, Natália Tasso 29 August 2013 (has links)
The South Atlantic has a relevant role on the AMOC variability as it includes two main conduits of its upper-ocean return flow: the NBUC and the IWBC that carry, mainly, the SACW and the AAIW and are originated from the bifurcation of the SEC. One of the hypotheses of this work is that analyzing the bifurcation variability it is possible to get an index of the AMOC changes. Another hypothesis is that in a global warming scenario, changes in the hydrological cycle would drive modifications in the water masses that are part of the AMOC, and thus, contribute to its variability. Four global model results were used, with different forcing and spatial resolution. Results show that changes in the bifurcation are linked to modications in the currents both caused by variations in the wind stress curl. Good correlations were found between the SEC bifurcation at the surface and the AMOC. The NBUC seems to be the link between them. Shallowing of the SACW core is related to an increase of the salinity on neutral surfaces. The AAIW is occupying less space in the water column due to an increasing of the salinity in the neutral surfaces at 11°S, while the opposite happens at 27°S / The South Atlantic has a relevant role on the AMOC variability as it includes two main conduits of its upper-ocean return flow: the NBUC and the IWBC that carry, mainly, the SACW and the AAIW and are originated from the bifurcation of the SEC. One of the hypotheses of this work is that analyzing the bifurcation variability it is possible to get an index of the AMOC changes. Another hypothesis is that in a global warming scenario, changes in the hydrological cycle would drive modifications in the water masses that are part of the AMOC, and thus, contribute to its variability. Four global model results were used, with different forcing and spatial resolution. Results show that changes in the bifurcation are linked to modications in the currents both caused by variations in the wind stress curl. Good correlations were found between the SEC bifurcation at the surface and the AMOC. The NBUC seems to be the link between them. Shallowing of the SACW core is related to an increase of the salinity on neutral surfaces. The AAIW is occupying less space in the water column due to an increasing of the salinity in the neutral surfaces at 11°S, while the opposite happens at 27°S
44

Wave dynamics of the stratosphere and mesosphere

Moss, Andrew January 2017 (has links)
Gravity waves play a fundamental role in driving the large-scale circulation of the atmosphere. They are influenced both by the variation in their sources and the filtering effects of the winds they encounter as they ascend through the atmosphere. In this thesis we present new evidence that gravity waves play a key role in coupling the troposphere, stratosphere and mesosphere. In particular, we examine the connection of gravity waves to two important large-scale oscillations that occur in the atmosphere, namely the Madden-Julian Oscillation (MJO) in the troposphere and the Mesospheric Semi-Annual Oscillation (MSAO). We present the first ever demonstration that the MJO acts to modulate the global field of gravity waves ascending into the tropical stratosphere. We discover a significant correlation with the MJO zonal-wind anomalies and so suggest that the MJO modulates the stratospheric gravity-wave field through a critical-level wave-filtering mechanism. Strong evidence for this mechanism is provided by consideration of the winds encountered by ascending waves. The Ascension Island meteor radar is used for the first time to measure momentum fluxes over the Island. These measurements are then used to investigate the role of gravity-wave in driving a dramatic and anomalous wind event that was observed to occur during the first westward phase of the MSAO in 2002. Gravity waves are shown to play an important role in driving this event, but the observations presented here also suggest that the current theory of the mechanism describing these anomalous mesospheric wind events is not valid. Both of these studies highlight the critical importance of gravity waves to the dynamics of the atmosphere and highlight the need for further work to truly understand these waves, their processes and their variability.
45

Comparação dos efeitos do eletrojato equatorial nos dados magnetotelúricos bi e tridimensionais

PONTES, Altem Nascimento 01 November 1995 (has links)
Submitted by Cleide Dantas (cleidedantas@ufpa.br) on 2014-06-12T13:42:26Z No. of bitstreams: 2 license_rdf: 23898 bytes, checksum: e363e809996cf46ada20da1accfcd9c7 (MD5) Dissertacao_ComparacaoEfeitosEletrojato.pdf: 19652715 bytes, checksum: 6ae97b0886be3a40c3f5c2510c0ee42a (MD5) / Rejected by Irvana Coutinho (irvana@ufpa.br), reason: Indexar os assuntos on 2014-08-07T16:23:18Z (GMT) / Submitted by Cleide Dantas (cleidedantas@ufpa.br) on 2014-08-27T16:03:30Z No. of bitstreams: 2 license_rdf: 23898 bytes, checksum: e363e809996cf46ada20da1accfcd9c7 (MD5) Dissertacao_ComparacaoEfeitosEletrojato.pdf: 19652715 bytes, checksum: 6ae97b0886be3a40c3f5c2510c0ee42a (MD5) / Approved for entry into archive by Irvana Coutinho (irvana@ufpa.br) on 2014-09-10T16:37:09Z (GMT) No. of bitstreams: 2 license_rdf: 23898 bytes, checksum: e363e809996cf46ada20da1accfcd9c7 (MD5) Dissertacao_ComparacaoEfeitosEletrojato.pdf: 19652715 bytes, checksum: 6ae97b0886be3a40c3f5c2510c0ee42a (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2014-09-10T16:37:09Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2 license_rdf: 23898 bytes, checksum: e363e809996cf46ada20da1accfcd9c7 (MD5) Dissertacao_ComparacaoEfeitosEletrojato.pdf: 19652715 bytes, checksum: 6ae97b0886be3a40c3f5c2510c0ee42a (MD5) Previous issue date: 1995 / FADESP - Fundação de Amparo e Desenvolvimento da Pesquisa / PETROBRAS - Petróleo Brasileiro S.A. / Este trabalho trata da comparação dos efeitos do eletrojato equatorial nos dados magnetotelúricos bi e tridimensionais. Ele compõe-se fundamentalmente de duas partes: Na primeira, que consiste na comparação dos efeitos dos modelos bi e tridimensionais (linha de corrente e eletrojato gaussiano), determinamos as dimensões que deve apresentar uma estrutura tridimensional para que a resposta magnetotelúrica proveniente dessa estrutura, nas polarizações YX e XY, possa ser substituída pela resposta magnetotelúrica proveniente de uma estrutura bidimensional nos modos TE e TM respectivamente, para a resistividade aparente e fase. Os resultados mostram, para um embasamento condutivo ou resistivo, que é necessário aumentar a dimensão da estrutura tridimensional na direção principal acima de dezesseis vezes, em relação à dimensão inicial, para que a resposta magnetotelúrica proveniente dessa estrutura na polarização YX, possa ser substituída pela resposta magnetotelúrica proveniente de uma estrutura bidimensional no modo TE; no caso da polarização ser XY, essa substituição ocorrerá, no modo TM bidimensional, se aumentarmos a dimensão da estrutura tridimensional na direção principal acima de vinte e seis vezes em relação à dimensão inicial. Na segunda parte, que consiste na determinação dos efeitos do eletrojato equatorial Onwumechilliano, posicionamos a estrutura tridimensional a 10 km, 100 km, 300 km, 500 km, 1000 km e 1500 km, respectivamente, de distância do eletrojato. Dessa forma, determinamos a distância na qual os efeitos do eletrojato equatorial Onwumechilliano sobre as sondagens magnetotelúricas são praticamente desprezíveis. Verificamos que, posicionando a estrutura tridimensional a 1500 km de distância da fonte, para embasamento condutivo, o eletrojato não afeta as sondagens magnetotelúricas. Quando o embasamento é resistivo, o eletrojato afeta as sondagens magnetotelúricas, mesmo posicionando-se a estrutura tridimensional a 1500 km de distância da fonte. De um modo geral, constatamos que o eletrojato equatorial afeta as sondagens magnetotelúricas para freqüências inferiores a 10-2 Hz, tanto na resistividade aparente quanto na fase e em ambas as polarizações, principalmente, quando o embasamento é resistivo. Observamos também que o efeito galvânico é mais pronunciado na polarização YX que na XY. / This work deals with the comparison between the effects of the equatorial electrojet in two and three-dimensional magnetotelluric data. It is composed of two parts: in the first part, which consists in comparing the effects of two-dimensional with three-dimensional models (current line and gaussian electrojet), we determine the dimensions that a three-dimensional structure should have so that the MT response of that structure, in YX and XY polarizations, can be replaced by the MT response of a 2D structure in TE and TM modes, for apparent resistivity and phase. The results show that the dimension of the 3D structure in the main direction must be over 16 times its length in the initial dimension, so that the MT response of that structure in YX polarization can be replaced by the MT response at a 2D structure in TE mode. If the polarization is XY the main dimension must be 26 times the initial dimension. In the second part, which consists in determining the effects of the Onwumechillian equatorial electrojet, we placed the 3D structure at 10 km, 100 km, 300 km, 500 km, 1000 km and 1500 km, from the electrojet. In this way we determine the distance at which the effects of the Onwumechillian equatorial electrojet on the MT soundings are practically negligible. We observe that, for a conductive basement, the equatorial electrojet does not affect the MT soundings if the 3D structure is placed at 1500 km from the source. When the basement is resistive, the electrojet affects the MT soundings even if the structure is at 1500 km away from the source. We verified that the equatorial electrojet affects the MT soundings in frequencies under 10-2Hz, in both resistivity and phase and in both polarizations. We also observed that the galvanic effect is stronger on the YX than on the XY polarization.
46

Dynamics of Equatorial Spread <i>F</i> Using Ground-Based Optical and Radar Measurements

Chapagain, Narayan P. 01 May 2011 (has links)
The Earth's equatorial ionosphere most often shows the occurrence of large plasma density and velocity fluctuations with a broad range of scale sizes and amplitudes. These night time ionospheric irregularities in the F-region are commonly referred to as equatorial spread F (ESF) or plasma bubbles (EPBs). This dissertation focuses on analysis of ground-based optical and radar measurements to investigate the development and dynamics of ESF, which can significantly disrupt radio communication and GPS navigation systems. OI (630.0 nm) airglow image data were obtained by the Utah State University all-sky CCD camera, primarily during the equinox period, from three different longitudinal sectors under similar solar flux conditions: Christmas Island in the Central Pacific Ocean, Ascension Island in South Atlantic, and Brasilia and Cariri in Brazil. Well-defined magnetic field-aligned depletions were observed from each of these sites enabling detailed measurements of their morphology and dynamics. These data have also been used to investigate day-to-day and longitudinal variations in the evolution and distribution of the plasma bubbles, and their nocturnal zonal drift velocities. In particular, comparative optical measurements at different longitudinal sectors illustrated interesting findings. During the post midnight period, the data from Christmas Island consistently showed nearly constant eastward bubble velocity at a much higher value (~80 m/s) than expected, while data from Ascension Island exhibited a most unusual shear motion of the bubble structure, up to 55 m/s, on one occasion with westward drift at low latitude and eastward at higher latitudes, evident within the field of view of the camera. In addition, long-term radar observations during 1996-2006 from Jicamarca, Peru have been used to study the climatology of post-sunset ESF irregularities. Results showed that the spread F onset times did not change much with solar flux and that their onset heights increased linearly from solar minimum to solar maximum. On average, radar plume onset occurred earlier with increasing solar flux, and plume onset and peak altitudes increased with solar activity. The F-region upward drift velocities that precede spread F onset increased from solar minimum to solar maximum, and were approximately proportional to the maximum prereversal drift peak velocities.
47

Reproduction and recruitment of scleractinian corals on equatorial reefs in Mombasa, Kenya

Mangubhai, Sangeeta Unknown Date (has links)
This study examined patterns of coral reproduction and recruitment on lagoonal reefs adjacent to Mombasa in Kenya, at latitude 4ºS. Very little detailed research has been done on the reproductive patterns of scleractinian corals on equatorial reefs, where it has been suggested that seasonality and spawning synchrony may break down due to the weak environmental cues that are thought to govern the onset and timing of reproduction. Gametogenic data were collected for three faviid (Echinopora gemmacea, Platygyra daedalea and Leptoria phrygia) and three Acropora species (A. tenuis, A. valida and Acropora sp.1) in the Mombasa Marine National Park and Reserve between April 2003 – May 2005. A further 20 species of Acropora were identified (9 species represented range extensions) and marked to examine intra- and inter-specific spawning synchrony within this genus. In comparison to other regions, the overall pattern of coral reproduction in Kenya was found to be asynchronous, with spawning occurring over 9 months of the year from August – April, with some level of ‘temporal reproductive isolation’ occurring between species in relation to the main lunar month and lunar quarter when spawning occurred. Proximate cues governing the timing of reproduction could not be clearly discerned in Kenya with spawning occurring during both rising and maximum temperatures, during both neap and spring tides and across all lunar phases. Acropora species spawned over a 7-month period between October – April and faviid species over a 5-month period from December - April. The timing of reproduction in Acropora varied both within and among species, with the main release of gametes occurring from January – March when sea surface temperatures were at their summer maximum. Individual species released gametes over 2-5 months. The greatest overlap in spawning Acropora species occurred in February, which coincided with the spawning months of P. daedalea and E. gemmacea and suggests that some degree of multispecific spawning is a characteristic of Kenyan reefs. Within the main spawning period individual Acropora species had their main spawning in different lunar months. Acropora species released gametes in all lunar quarters, with the highest number of colonies and species spawning in the 3rd lunar quarter (i.e. in the 7 nights after full moon). Spawning in the faviids was more synchronised than Acropora species with the majority of faviid corals spawning in the 3rd lunar quarter. Single annual cycles of gametogenesis were recorded in E. gemmacea, A. tenuis, L.phrygia, most colonies of A. valida and Acropora sp.1, and in 84% of P. daedalea colonies. Biannual cycles of gametogenesis were recorded in 16% of P.daedalea colonies, which included two morphotypes identified in the Mombasa lagoon through morphometric and genetic studies. The presence of different oocyte sizes in L.phrygia during gametogenesis suggested that in some colonies there were two slightly overlapping oogenic cycles, which terminated in spawning within 1-2 months of each other. Overlapping oogenic cycles have not previously been recorded in hermaphroditic broadcast spawning corals in the tropics. The findings from Kenya support the hypothesis of protracted breeding seasons and a breakdown of spawning synchrony nearer the equator. It is hypothesised that the high fecundities recorded in faviid and Acropora species in Kenya compared to other regions, may allow reef corals to stagger their reproduction over 2-5 months, without incurring a significant reduction in fertilisation rates. Spat from the Family Pocilloporidae dominated settlement tiles in the Marine National Park and Reserve comprising 93.7% of spat, which contrasts with other tropical reefs where Acroporidae spat dominate. Patterns of settlement of Acroporidae spat generally coincided with the timing and extended spawning season in Acropora species in Kenya. The density and relative composition of coral recruits and juvenile corals on natural substrata recorded during this study were similar to those recorded before the 1997-98 bleaching event. There is no evidence to suggest that Kenya’s reefs have undergone a phase-shift in community structure, and reef recovery is occurring post-bleaching with mean percent hard coral cover currently at 25%. The slow rate of recovery of Kenya’s reefs is likely to reflect the scale of the mortality, source and availability of coral larvae as well as post-settlement processes operating at individual sites. In the medium-term, the recovery of Kenya’s reefs appears to be more strongly dependent on larvae from local reefs.
48

Climate Response of the Equatorial Pacific to Global Warming

Di Nezio, Pedro N. 01 January 2008 (has links)
The climate response of the equatorial Pacific to increased greenhouse gases is investigated using numerical experiments from five climate models participating in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Fourth Assessment Report. Changes in the heat budget of the surface layer in response to CO2 doubling (2xCO2) are analyzed in experiments with full-coupled ocean dynamics; and compared to experiments with uncoupled ocean dynamics. In full-coupled experiments, weaker ocean zonal currents driven by a slowing down of the Walker circulation reduce the ocean heat flux divergence throughout the equatorial Pacific. The resulting ocean dynamical heating enhances the surface warming due to increased clear-sky surface radiation in response to 2xCO2. The total radiative plus ocean dynamical heating are stabilized by evaporation and cloud feedbacks over the warm pool and by increased ocean vertical heat transport over the cold tongue. Increased near-surface thermal stratification enhances vertical heat transport in the cold tongue despite a reduction in vertical velocity. This ocean dynamical cooling is the dominant negative term in the heat budget changes over the eastern Pacific; and represents a strengthening of the processes leading to the annual cycle of the cold tongue, which increases by 0.4 K as a result. The stratification response is found to be a permanent feature of the equilibrium climate potentially linked to both thermodynamical and dynamical changes within the equatorial Pacific. To conclude, the relationship between the heat budget changes and the SST response is discussed along with implications for detecting these signals in the modern observational record.
49

Late Quaternary Paleoclimatology and Paleoceanography of the Amazon Continental Margin, Brazil

Nace, Trevor January 2012 (has links)
<p>The tropics are a significant source of heat and moisture export, which drive global circulation patterns, thus it is vital to systematically understand the land, ocean and sedimentological interactions within the tropics. The Brazilian continental margin is an ideal region to characterize the tropics due to its unique local oceanography and proximity to the atmospheric engine that is the Amazon Basin. A combination of: 1) terrestrial organics and hydrology; 2) oceanographic temperature, isotopic composition, and salinity and 3) early diagenesis and geochemistry of sedimentary interstitial water and methane hydrate, provide a detailed understanding of the primary constituents that influence the South American tropics.</p><p>Sedimentological, organic and paleoceanographic reconstructions of the Amazon Basin, Brazilian Nordeste, and western equatorial Atlantic have been undertaken on two sediment cores located on the Brazilian continental slope representing 30 and 110 ka, respectively. High-resolution XRF analyses of Fe, Ti, K and Ca are used to define the sedimentological history of the Amazon Basin and northern Nordeste. Here we present elemental ratios of Ti/Ca and Fe/K, in addition to magnetic susceptibility, to determine variability in Amazon Basin and Nordeste hydrology. Bulk organic proxies d13C and d15N of sedimentary organic carbon are used to define the organic history of the Amazon Basin. Peaks in Ti/Ca and Fe/K ratios largely correlate in both the Amazon Basin and in the Nordeste Record. These excursions correlate with commonly modeled global slowdown of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC) during increased northern hemisphere glaciation. Differences in the Fe/K and Ti/Ca records suggest periods of increased chemical weathering independent of precipitation driven sediment discharge in the Brazilian Nordeste. Bulk organic geochemistry indicates the vegetative history of the Amazon Basin has been relatively stable during the late Quaternary.</p><p>High-­resolution stable oxygen isotopic analysis and Mg/Ca paleothermometry undertaken on the near-­surface-dwelling planktic foraminiferal species Globierinoides ruber provide a picture of paleoceanographic forcings in the western equatorial Atlantic. The Nordeste core exhibits a rapid warming of ~3.5ºC between the last glacial maximum and the early Holocene. Furthermore, in almost all cases during the last glacial stage, there was a 0.5 to 2ºC warming of the western equatorial Atlantic during the periods of high Ti/Ca ratios that correlate with slowdown of AMOC. Thus, as observed in some previous studies, the western equatorial Atlantic was warm and the adjacent southern tropical continent was wet coincident with increased glaciation in the high latitude northern hemisphere.</p><p>Interstitial pore waters were analyzed from the Amazon Fan and Brazilian continental slope to determine early diagenesis, methane hydrate potential and its geographic variability. Interstitial waters were measured for total Mg, Ca, SO4, alkalinity, Cl, and d18O, combined with seismic bottom simulating reflectors (BSRs) to investigate early diagenesis. Interpolated maps of sulfate reduction, sedimentation rate and maximum alkalinity were produced to examine geographic variability in early diagenesis and methane hydrates. Inorganic precipitation of calcium and magnesium, likely via dolomite and siderite, correlates with a decrease in alkalinity through inorganic carbonate precipitation and methanogenesis, but alternatively increases through redox pathways, specifically sulfate reduction.</p><p>Through multiple lines of evidence it is likely that there is extensive methane hydrate occurrence on the Amazon continental shelf. A combination of: 1) A rapid linear decline in sulfate at an unusually shallow depth; 2) Uncommonly high sedimentation rates and terrestrial organic carbon input; 3) Significant variability in what should be conservative chloride concentrations; 4) Large variability in interstitial oxygen isotopes; 5) Widespread occurrence of BSRs provide substantial support for the presence of methane hydrates. Sulfate reduction rates are lowest along the main Amazon channel, with highest values distal of the main channel. Sedimentation rates are relatively low on the continental shelf and surrounding the main channel and highest toward the distal end of the main channel. Sulfate reduction rates provide key insights to the potential geographic variability of methanogenesis and methane hydrate formation. Given the tremendous influx of sediment from the Amazon River, this region is prone to massive sediment failures, subsequent release of methane hydrates, as well as significant potential for natural gas hydrates.</p> / Dissertation
50

Rifting of the Guinea Margin in the Equatorial Atlantic from 112 to 84 MA: Implications of Paleo-Reconstructions for Structure and Sea-Surface Circulation

Edge, Russ January 2014 (has links)
The Guinea Plateau is a shallow-marine, flat-lying bathymetric province situated along the equatorial West African margin, offshore Republic of Guinea. The Guinea Plateau and the conjugate Demerara Plateau hold particular geologic significance, as they represent the final point of separation between the African and South American continents during Gondwana break-up. Recent interpretation of both 2-D and 3-D seismic surveys along the Guinean margin have illuminated subsurface features related to Early Cretaceous crustal extension. Seismic structural investigations on these datasets suggest that the majority of extension is accommodated along large-scale listric normal faults located on a relatively narrow (<50 km) continental slope (up to ~39% extension). Minimal faulting reveals that little upper-crustal extension has occurred on the Guinea Plateau. Additionally, multiple 2-D seismic profiles image the transition from continental crust on the plateau and slope, to oceanic crust in the deeper marine basin. This continent-ocean boundary is the most representative boundary when testing the accuracy of plate reconstructions. Mapping of both the continent-ocean boundary and fracture zones across the equatorial Atlantic suggests that the Demerara Plateau and the South American plate are too far south in previous pre-rift reconstructions. A revised model introduces 20 km of Early Cretaceous NNW-oriented contraction across the Amazon Basin; an area of relative weakness where both geologic and geophysical data support such accommodation. Sea-surface flow models, which used this revised reconstruction and interpreted paleo-bathymetric data, predict upwelling throughout the newly formed equatorial seaway, and later along the West African margin during periods of regional organic-rich black shale deposition. With reduced decomposition of organic matter strongly correlated to upwelling, being able to predict these zones is of particular significance to petroleum companies, who have recently started exploring both the equatorial South American and West African coastlines.

Page generated in 0.0387 seconds