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2. Forty-Sixth Rochester Mineralogical Symposium: Contributed Papers in Specimen Mineralogy—Part 2.
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MINERALOGY , *THERMOCHRONOMETRY , *PHYSIOGRAPHIC provinces , *MINERALS , *GEOLOGICAL time scales , *PLAGIOCLASE , *QUARTZ , *GARNET - Abstract
Heavy mineral separation reveals the presence of garnet-group minerals and magnetite as well as native gold. Magnetite crystals display the same variability in transport indicators as garnet, and there is a notable decrease in the size of individual crystals and the proportion of magnetite between samples relative to their downstream position. Crystals of smoky quartz and amazonite are present as well as a number of accessory minerals, including several beryllium mineral species. The single-crystal diffraction data of eight plutonic labradorite crystals and one metamorphic labradorite crystal show that they all have the incommensurately modulated structures, characterized by the satellite reflections ( I e i -reflections), which cannot be indexed by integer Miller indices. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2020
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3. Comments on the paper "very coarse-grained beaches as a response to generalized sea level drops in a complex active tectonic setting: Pleistocene marine terraces at the Cadiz coast, SW Spain".
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Aguirre, Julio
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BEACHES , *SEDIMENTARY basins , *GEOLOGICAL time scales , *GEOPHYSICS , *DATA analysis - Abstract
Abstract González-Acebrón et al. (2016) attributed the coastal deposits of Torre Bermeja-La Barrosa area (Cádiz, SW Spain) to the Early Pleistocene (1.3 Ma). They also considered that an extremely high-energy event, such as a tsunami, affected the basal deposits of the sequence. In this paper, both the chronological attribution and the stratigraphic-sedimentary model are discussed. Previous information shows that Sequence 1 is late Pliocene-lowermost Early Pleistocene based on biostratigraphic, magnetostratigraphic, and regional-scale stratigraphic correlation. In addition, stratigraphic, facies, and sedimentary analyses indicate that sediments attributed to Sequence 1 were formed due to south-easternward longshore currents reworking wave- and tidal-dominated coarse-grained delta sediments deposited further to the north. Highlights • Coarse-grained deposits cropping out at La Barrosa (Cádiz, SW Spain) are late Pliocene-lowermost Early Pleistocene in age. • They were formed in coastal settings related to longshore currents reworking of wave- and tide-dominated delta deposits • The age assignment and the sedimentary interpretation challenge results recently published by González-Acebrón et al. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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4. Reply to the comments by Pillai, S. P., George, B. G., Ray, J. S., and Kale, V. S., (GJ‐19‐0112) on Paper: "Depositional history and provenance of cratonic "Purana" basins in southern India: A multipronged geochronology approach to the Proterozoic Kaladgi and Bhima basins" by Joy et al., 2018
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Joy, Sojen, Patranabis‐Deb, Sarbani, Saha, Dilip, Jelsma, Hielke, Maas, Roland, Söderlund, Ulf, Tappe, Sebastian, Linde, Gert, Banerjee, Amlan, Krishnan, Unni, and Somerville, I.
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KALE , *JOY , *PROVENANCE (Geology) , *GEOLOGICAL time scales , *CARBONATES , *HISTORY - Abstract
We thank Patil Pillai et al. for preparing a critique on our article (Joy et al., 2018). Patil Pillai et al. contest the analytical procedure utilized for the carbonates and "geological information" documented in our research article and raise concerns on our conclusions. We hereby provide our reply to each of their comments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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5. Comments on the paper 'Stratigraphy and geochronology of Quaternary marine terraces of Tasmania, Southeastern Australia: implications on neotectonism' by Jaeryul Shin, Geosciences Journal, 17, 429-443.
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McIntosh, Peter
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STRATIGRAPHIC geology , *GEOLOGICAL time scales , *MARINE terraces , *MARINE sediments , *LAST Glacial Maximum - Abstract
The uplift rates calculated for Tasmania by Shin (2013) are not supported by the data presented in his paper. The OSL ages obtained indicate a Last Glacial age and fluvial origin for many of the deposits analysed. OSL ages obtained on sediments at Mary Ann Bay in southern Tasmania confirm recent research indicating a Last Glacial age and aeolian deposition of the sands rather than marine (Last Interglacial) deposition. Anomalously high uplift rates for southern Tasmania, proposed by earlier researchers and Shin (2013), are discounted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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6. Comment to paper: Evaluating the temporal link between the Karoo LIP and climatic–biologic events of the Toarcian Stage with high-precision U–Pb geochronology by Bryan Sell, Maria Ovtcharova, Jean Guex, Annachiara Bartolini, Fred Jourdan, Jorge E. Spangenberg, Jean-Claude Vicente, Urs Schaltegger in Earth and Planetary Science Letters 408 (2014) 48–56
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Corfu, F., Svensen, H., and Mazzini, A.
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CLIMATE change , *URANIUM-lead dating , *BIOLOGICAL systems , *GEOLOGICAL time scales , *PLANETARY science - Published
- 2016
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7. Introducing the Anthropocene: The human epoch: This article belongs to Ambio's 50th Anniversary Collection. Theme: Anthropocene.
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Steffen, Will
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EARTH system science ,SOLAR radiation management ,CARBON cycle ,GEOLOGICAL time scales ,ANTHROPOCENE Epoch ,GLOBAL environmental change ,BIOSPHERE - Abstract
One was the Planetary Boundaries framework, introduced by Johan Rockström and colleagues in 2009, which aims to provide a natural-science based framework for describing a Holocene-like state of the Earth System and the intrinsic boundaries of the Earth System that should not be transgressed if such a stable state is to be maintained (Rockström et al. [10]). Introducing the Anthropocene: The human epoch: This article belongs to Ambio's 50th Anniversary Collection. The other is the polycentric governance systems approach introduced by the late Elinor Ostrom ([9]), which, in the context of the S et al. paper, was proposed as a more appropriate governance system for the Anthropocene than the present governance systems that are driving us deeper towards a planetary crisis. The SCM paper foreshadowed the debate on the start date for the Anthropocene, which became prominent from 2009 with the formation then of the Anthropocene Working Group to explore the Anthropocene as a potential new interval in the Geologic Time Scale (AWG [1]). [Extracted from the article]
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- 2021
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8. Reviews and synthesis: Carbon capture and storage monitoring - an integrated biological, biophysical and chemical approach.
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Hicks, N., Vik, U., Taylor, P., Ladoukakis, E., Park, J., Kolisis, F., Stahl, H., and Jakobsen, K. S.
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CARBON sequestration ,CARBON dioxide mitigation ,GEOLOGICAL time scales ,SEDIMENTS ,MARINE ecology ,BIOGEOCHEMISTRY - Abstract
Carbon capture and storage (CCS) is a developing technology that seeks to mitigate against the impact of increasing anthropogenic carbon dioxide (CO
2 ) production by capturing CO2 from large point source emitters. After capture the CO2 is compressed and transported to a reservoir where it is stored for geological time scales. Potential leakages from CCS projects, where stored CO2 migrates through the overlaying sediments, are likely to have severe implications on benthic and marine ecosystems. Nonetheless, prokaryotic response to elevated CO2 concentrations has been suggested as one of the first detectable warnings if a CO2 leakage should occur. Applying properties of prokaryotic communities (i.e. community composition and metabolic status) as a novel CO2 monitoring application is highly reliable within a multidisciplinary framework, where deviations from the baseline can easily be identified. In this paper we review current knowledge about the impact of CO2 leakages on marine sediments from a multidisciplinary-based monitoring perspective. We focus on aspects from the fields of biology, geophysics, and chemistry, and discuss a case study example. We argue the importance of an integrative multidisciplinary approach, incorporating biogeochemistry, geophysics, microbial ecology and modelling, with a particular emphasis on metagenomic techniques and novel bioinformatics, for future CCS monitoring. Within this framework, we consider that an effective CCS monitoring programme will ensure that large-scale leakages with potentially devastating effects for the overlaying ecosystem are avoided. Furthermore, the multidisciplinary approach suggested here for CCS monitoring is generic, and can be adapted to other systems of interest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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9. Roger Cooper: paleobiologist and geologist.
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Crampton, James S., Jongens, Richard, and Cooper, Alan
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GEOLOGICAL time scales ,PALEOGEOGRAPHY ,SCIENTIFIC literature ,GEOLOGY ,GEOLOGISTS ,NATURAL history ,EARTH sciences ,PROVENANCE (Geology) - Abstract
In the same year as that paper, Roger published a wide-ranging standalone discussion of various aspects of New Zealand terrane concepts, age, content, interpretation, and paleogeography, including descriptions of the Brook Street Terrane and other Eastern Province terranes (Cooper [13]). Roger Cooper (1939-2020) was one of the pre-eminent New Zealand paleontologists and geologists of the twentieth century. At the same time, and in collaboration with Professor Pete Sadler (University of California, Riverside), Roger pioneered the use of innovative, quantitative methods in biostratigraphic correlation and timescale calibration, in the context both of New Zealand sedimentary basin analysis (Cooper et al. [15]) and international timescale calibration. Much of this research was concerned with graptolites (e.g. Cooper [8], [10]; Cooper and McLaurin [22]) but, in collaboration with others, his interests quickly expanded to include conodonts, brachiopods, molluscs, trilobites and graptolites from New Zealand, Australia, Antarctica and Spitsbergen (e.g. Cooper and Druce [16]; Shergold et al. [48]). Roger's career at the New Zealand Geological Survey began in 1969 and was focussed initially on the taxonomy, biostratigraphy, evolution, biogeography and paleobiology of early Paleozoic fossils in New Zealand. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2023
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10. Scaling down the Earth's history: Visual materials for popular education by Nérée Boubée (1806–1862).
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Figueirôa, Silvia F de M
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GEOLOGICAL time scales ,SCIENTIFIC knowledge ,GEOLOGY education ,TRAVEL guidebooks - Abstract
Spatial and temporal scales are essential components of geological sciences; both are almost always imbricated in complex ways, challenging geoscientific knowledge among nonspecialists and students. The present paper focuses on the efforts made by the French naturalist Simon-Suzanne Nérée Boubée (1806–62) regarding popular education on geology. Though Boubée is poorly known nowadays, he experienced some prestige during his lifetime. He worked as an independent teacher, offering private as well as free public courses. Boubée, as a nineteenth-century science popularizer, repeatedly insisted on his disposition for "spreading science for all." He extensively published books and journals on geology, all aimed at popularizing geological scientific knowledge, considered to be of paramount relevance. This paper analyzes three visual examples extracted from his works: the Tableau Mnémonique des Terrains Primitifs, destiné au géologue voyageur, avec son explication (1831), the Tableau de l'État du Globe à ses différents âges (1832), and the Tableau figuratif de la structure minérale du globe, ou résumé synoptique du Cours de géognosie de M. N. Boubée (1839), supplemented with images from the travel guide Deux Promenades au Mont Doré (1834). Our goal is to understand Boubée's efforts to synthesize information, scaling down geologic time and space into foldable materials that made geological knowledge cognitively and materially accessible to laypeople. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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11. Volcanic activity around Taipei, Taiwan: new data and perspectives on the Tatun Volcano Group.
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Chang, Su-Chin, Chu, Mei-Fei, Wang, Jui-Pin, Lai, Yu-Ming, Song, Sheng-Rong, Hemming, Sidney R., Ng, Samuel Wai-Pan, and Chow, Timothy Dylan
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HAZARD mitigation ,VOLCANIC eruptions ,METROPOLITAN areas ,GEOLOGICAL time scales ,VOLCANOES - Abstract
The Tatun Volcano Group (TVG) is located at the northern end of Taiwan, ~ 15 km from the center of Taipei, a metropolitan area of over seven million inhabitants. A volcanic eruption by the TVG of any type or scale could cause catastrophic human and economic impacts. This paper summarizes previous geochemical, geophysical, and geochronological reports and highlights why the widely accepted age model does not comport with the latest observations. This study also reports novel
40 Ar/39 Ar ages for two andesite samples and one basalt sample from the TVG. A sample collected from Chihsingshan yields a robust40 Ar/39 Ar age of 0.081 ± 0.005 Ma. This provides the first direct evidence of TVG volcanic activity after 0.1 Ma. Two samples yield 0.28 ± 0.02 Ma for Tatunshan and 0.159 ± 0.017 Ma for Honglushan. The younger ages refute previously proposed age models for the TVG. Along with new drone photos and LiDAR images, the age data help resolve eruptive history and advance understanding of volcanic hazards and hazard mitigation in Taiwan and surrounding areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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12. Geochronology, geochemistry, and geological significance of early Jurassic intrusive rocks in the Lesser Xing'an- Zhangguangcai Range, northeast China.
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Zhao, Zhonghai, Li, Zhongju, Li, Haina, Cheng, Binbin, and Yin, Yechang
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GEOCHEMISTRY ,GEOLOGICAL time scales ,OROGENIC belts ,CONTINENTAL margins ,GABBRO - Abstract
The Lesser Xing'an—Zhangguangcai Range of northeast China is located in the eastern segment of the Central Asian Orogenic Belt (CAOB), which records intense magmatism during the Mesozoic. The petrogenesis and geodynamic setting of the Early Jurassic intrusive rocks in this region are unclear. In this paper, we present new zircon U–Pb age and whole-rock geochemical data for these intrusive rocks to investigate their origins and tectonic setting. Zircon U–Pb dating suggests these intrusive rocks were emplaced during the Early Jurassic (197–187 Ma). The granites are enriched in silica and alkali, and depleted in MgO and CaO. They are metaluminous to weakly peraluminous, and have high A/CNK values and low zircon saturation temperatures (T
Zr ~ 779°C), suggesting they are highly fractionated I-type granites derived by partial melting of lower crustal materials. The granites exhibit negative Nb, Ta, P, Eu, and Ti anomalies due to fractional crystallization. The diorites and gabbros have low SiO2 contents and high Mg# values, and are enriched in light rare earth and large-ion lithophile (Ba, K, and Sr) elements, and depleted in heavy rare earth and high field strength (Nb, Ta, and Ti) elements. The geochemical characteristics show that the mafic magmas were derived by partial melting of mantle that had been metasomatized by subduction-related fluids. Based on the geochemical characteristics of coeval intrusive rocks and the regional geological setting, we suggest the Early Jurassic intrusive rocks in the Lesser Xing'an—Zhangguangcai Range were formed along an active continental margin, possibly as a result of bidirectional subduction of the Mudanjiang Oceanic plate between the Jiamusi and Songnen—Zhangguangcai Range massifs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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13. Middle Silurian–Middle Devonian Magmatic Rocks in the Eastern Segment of the Northern Margin of the North China Craton: Implications for Regional Tectonics.
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Li, Bin, Chen, Jingsheng, Yang, Fan, Liu, Miao, Zang, Yanqing, and Zhang, Chao
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VOLCANIC ash, tuff, etc. ,TONALITE ,GEOCHEMISTRY ,GEOLOGICAL time scales ,URANIUM-lead dating - Abstract
This paper presents a detailed study including LA-ICP-MS zircon U-Pb dating, geochemical, zircon Hf isotope, and whole rock Sr-Nd isotope analysis of magmatic rocks from the Yitong County, Jilin Province, NE China. These data are used to better constrain the Middle Silurian–Middle Devonian tectonic evolution in the eastern segment of the northern margin of the North China Craton (NCC). Zircon U-Pb dating results show that the Ximangzhang tonalite formed in the Late Silurian (425 ± 6 Ma); the basalt, andesite, and metamorphic olivine-bearing basalt in the Fangniugou volcanic rocks formed in the Middle Silurian (428 ± 6.6 Ma) and Middle Devonian (388.4 ± 3.9 Ma, and 384.1 ± 4.9 Ma). The Late Silurian tonalites are characterized by high SiO
2 and Na2 O and low K2 O, MgO, FeOT, and TiO2 , with an A/CNK ratio of 0.91–1.00, characteristic of calc-alkaline I-type granite. They are enriched in Rb, Ba, Th, U, and K, and depleted in Nb, Sr, P, and Ti, with positive εNd (t) (+0.35) and εHf (t) (+0.44 to +6.31) values, suggesting that they mainly originated from the partial melting of Meso–Neoproterozoic accretionary lower crustal material (basalt). The Middle Silurian basalts are characterized by low SiO2 , P2 O5 , TiO2 , and Na2 O and high Al2 O3 , FeOT, and K2 O, enriched in Rb, Ba, Th, U, and K and depleted in Nb, Ta, Sr, P, and Ti, indicative of shoshonitic basalt. The Late Silurian tonalites have positive εNd (t) (+4.91 to +6.18) values and primarily originated from depleted mantle magmas metasomatized by subduction fluids, supplemented by a small amount of subducted sediments and crustal materials. The Middle Devonian volcanic rocks exhibit low SiO2 , TiO2 , and Na2 O and high K2 O, and MgO, enriched in Rb, K, and LREEs and depleted in Nb, Ta, Sr, and HREEs, characteristic of shoshonitic volcanic rocks. Their εNd (t) (+2.11 to +3.77) and εHf (t) (+5.90 to +11.73) values are positive. These characteristics indicate that the Middle Devonian volcanic rocks primarily originated from depleted mantle magmas metasomatized by subduction fluids, with the addition of crustal materials or subducted sediments during their formation. Based on regional geological data, it is believed that the study area underwent the following evolutionary stages during the Silurian–Devonian period: (1) active continental margin stage of southward subduction of the Paleo–Asian Ocean (PAO) (443–419 Ma); (2) arc-continent collision stage (419–405 Ma); (3) post-collision extension stage (404–375 Ma); (4) active continental margin stage, with the PAO plate subducting southward once again (375–360 Ma). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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14. A New Possible Way to Detect Axion Antiquark Nuggets.
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Lazanu, Ionel and Parvu, Mihaela
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GEOLOGICAL time scales ,DARK matter ,THERMOLUMINESCENCE ,ANTIMATTER ,LOW temperatures ,AXIONS - Abstract
The axion anti-quark nugget (A Q ¯ N) model was developed to explain in a natural way the asymmetry between matter and antimatter in Universe. In this hypothesis, a similitude between the dark and the visible components exists. The lack of observability of any type of dark matter up to now, in particular A Q ¯ Ns, requires finding new ways of detecting these particles, if they exist. In spite of strong interaction with visible matter, for such objects a very small ratio of cross section to mass is expected and thus huge detector systems are necessary. This paper presents a new idea for the direct detection of the A Q ¯ Ns using minerals as natural rock deposits acting as paleo-detectors, where the latent signals of luminescence produced by interactions of A Q ¯ Ns are registered and can be identified as an increased and symmetrical deposited dose. The estimates were made for minerals widely distributed on Earth, for which the thermoluminescence (TL) signal is intense and if the thermal conditions are constant and with low temperatures, the lifetime of the latent signals is kept for geological time scales. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Research on a 3D Seismic Horizon Automatic-Tracking Method Based on Corrugated Global Diffusion.
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Su, Mingjun, Qian, Feng, Cui, Shengkai, Yuan, Cheng, and Cui, Xiangli
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AUTOMATIC tracking ,GEOLOGICAL time scales ,ARTIFICIAL satellite tracking ,BASE pairs ,PROBLEM solving - Abstract
The core challenges to automatic full-horizon tracking are how to establish a potential local connection relationship between the horizon points, conduct accurate global diffusion in a three-dimensional space, and finally, how to form a complex horizon surface. The existing attribute-based horizon-tracking methods based on waveform similarity, dip guidance, and RGT (relative geological time) can not solve the problems of local connection and global diffusion at the same time. In view of this challenge, this paper proposes an automatic 3D seismic horizon-tracking method based on global corrugated diffusion, which can completely integrate local connection and global diffusion so that all horizons in the whole data volume can be interpreted simultaneously. For the problem of local horizon-point connection, this paper uses the correlation between seismic trace pairs based on DTW (dynamic time warping) correlation to mine the connection mode between horizon points. For the global diffusion problem, this paper proposes the realization of global modeling based on the relationship between seismic samples, constructing a complex 3D horizon through a central ripple-diffusion process. The example shows that the horizon tracked by this method well reflects the original stratum occurrence and stratum-contact relationship, retains the structural details, accurately reflects the structural shape, and realizes automatic tracking across faults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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16. Carbonate diagenesis: A celebration of the work of John Anthony Dawson (Tony) Dickson.
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Wright, V. P., Saller, A., and Wood, R.
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DIAGENESIS ,CARBONATES ,CARBONATE rocks ,GEOLOGICAL time scales ,CALCITE crystals - Abstract
Magnesian Limestone zoned dolomite (red and non-luminescent zones) now partly dedolomitized), calcite (yellow luminescence), blue luminescent albite has non-luminescent overgrowths) Mansfield Quarry, Nottinghamshire. Modern tropical carbonate sediments are generally aragonite and high-Mg calcite with high porosities (Enos & Swatsky, [16]), yet ancient carbonates (Miocene and older) are generally calcite or dolomite with far lower porosity. Dissolution of aragonite and Mg calcite with precipitation of calcite cements with 2-8 mol% MgCO SB 3 sb occur in sea water undersaturated with respect to aragonite and high-Mg calcite, but supersaturated with respect to low-Mg calcite. The Xiong et al. compilation shows that the cycles of aragonite/high-Mg calcite were more variable than previously recognised, with the first inferred transition from a high-Mg calcite to low-Mg calcite sea occurring during early Cambrian stage 3. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2023
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17. Tianshan Orogen along the Silk Road (Volume 3): Orogen links, geochemistry, geochronology, mineral deposits, and environments.
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Li, Sanzhong, Suo, Yanhui, Li, Rongxi, Yu, Shengyao, Yang, Gaoxue, and Somerville, I.
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OROGENIC belts ,GEOCHEMISTRY ,GEOLOGICAL time scales ,MINES & mineral resources ,SILK Road - Abstract
This special issue (Volume 3) belongs to the special issues on the orogens along the Silk Road. We selected 34 papers to focus on the mineral deposits, orogeny‐links, geochemistry, geochronology, and environments related to the Tianshan Orogen of the Silk Road. We hope that these papers will highlight more geological research along the Silk Road to promote the construction and development of the Road and Belt. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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18. New Data on the U–Pb (LA-ICP-MS) Isotopic Age of Zircon from Intrusive Rocks of the Kuru-Tegerek Skarn Au–Cu–Mo Deposit, Middle Tien Shan, Kyrgyzstan.
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Soloviev, S. G., Kryazhev, S. G., Semenova, D. V., Kalinin, Yu. A., and Bortnikov, N. S.
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METALLOGENY ,SKARN ,GEOLOGICAL time scales ,ZIRCON ,LASER ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry ,METAMORPHIC rocks - Abstract
The paper presents new isotopic U–Pb data (LA-ICP-MS method) of zircon from the main types of intrusive rocks at the Kuru-Tegerek gold-copper-molybdenum skarn deposit situated in the Chatkal segment of the Middle Tien Shan. This and other gold, copper, tungsten and molybdenum deposits are parts of the extended Late Paleozoic metallogenic belt of Tien Shan. The concordant isotopic U–Pb values obtained for zircon autocrysts from the rocks of sequential intrusive phases span over the interval from approximately 323 to 311 Ma. This interval comprises the crystallization of gabbro-diorite (from 323.5 ± 2.5 Ma to 323.2 ± 6.8 Ma) and tonalite (from 321.4 ± 3.8 Ma to 311 ± 3.8 Ma). The age dates obtained for these zircon autocrysts correspond to the emplacement of these moderate-potassic intrusions in the Late Carboniferous and are almost coincident with the isotopic dates previously known for the high-potassic intrusions of the porphyry Cu–Au–Mo deposits of the Almalyk mineralized cluster (Kurama segment of the Middle Tien Shan), which were also emplaced in the Late Carboniferous (about 330–310 Ma). This corresponds to the subduction tectonic regime occurred in this region in relation to the steep-dipping (in the Kurama segment) or flat (in the Chatkal segment) subduction of a tectonic plate toward the north, under the structures of the Kazakhstan–North Tien Shan continental massif and accreted segments of the Middle Tien Shan. The intrusive rocks studied at the Kuru-Tegerek deposit contain also zircon xenocrysts (including these in the core of complex crystals) with the isotopic U–Pb age of some 1.9–2.1 Ga. These dates are in agreement with the age of metamorphic rocks in the Tarim craton basement and indicate the presence of the ancient continental crust in this segment of the Middle Tien Shan. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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19. Contrasting Recording Efficiency of Chemical Versus Depositional Remanent Magnetization in Sediments.
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Roud, Sophie C. and Gilder, Stuart A.
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REMANENCE ,GEOMAGNETISM ,SEDIMENTARY rocks ,SEDIMENTATION & deposition ,MAGNETIC fields ,GEOLOGICAL time scales - Abstract
How and when sedimentary rocks record Earth's magnetic field is complex. Most studies assume a time‐progressive lock‐in mechanism during sediment deposition called depositional remanent magnetization (DRM). However, magnetic minerals can also form in situ, recording a chemical remanent magnetization (CRM) that is discontinuous in time. Disentangling the two mechanisms represents a major hurdle, and differences in their recording efficiencies remain unexplored. Here, our theoretical solutions demonstrate that CRM intensities exceed DRM by a factor of six when acquired in the same magnetic field. Novel experiments growing greigite (Fe3S4) in sediments and subsequent redeposition under identical magnetic field conditions confirm the predicted difference in recording efficiency. Thus, if left unrecognized, CRM leads to overestimated paleointensity and deserves more attention when interpreting Earth's magnetic history from sedimentary records. Recognition of fundamental differences between CRM and DRM characteristics provide a way forward to distinguish the recording mechanisms through routine laboratory protocols. Plain Language Summary: Remanent magnetizations preserved in sedimentary rocks serve as a continuous record of Earth's magnetic field history and play a fundamental role in understanding the Earth system. It is commonly assumed that magnetic minerals align with the magnetic field as a particle settles through the water column, known as a depositional remanent magnetization (DRM). However, diagenesis can lead to chemical growth of magnetic minerals, known as a chemical remanent magnetization (CRM). CRM lacks stratigraphic continuity and can obscure or completely overprint the original magnetization any time after sediment deposition, leading to a magnetic record that is uncorrelated with the age of the rock. Yet, CRMs go largely unrecognized. Theory and experiments in our paper document that CRMs record the magnetic field six times more efficiently than DRMs. Our work provides a way to distinguish the two through routine laboratory protocols. Key Points: Recording efficiency of chemical remanent magnetization (CRM) is six times higher than depositional remanent magnetization (DRM)Undetected chemical remanences lead to overestimated relative paleointensity estimatesComparison of natural and laboratory magnetization and demagnetization behavior help identify chemical remanent magnetizations in sediments [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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20. Origin of Himalayan Eocene Adakitic Rocks and Leucogranites: Constraints from Geochemistry, U-Pb Geochronology and Sr-Nd-Pb-Hf Isotopes.
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Liu, Hang, Li, Wenchang, Cao, Huawen, Zhang, Xiangfei, Li, Yang, Gao, Ke, Dong, Lei, Zhang, Kai, and Liu, Xin
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EOCENE Epoch ,GEOLOGICAL time scales ,RARE earth metals ,GEOCHEMISTRY ,METAMORPHIC rocks ,POTASSIUM ,TRACE elements - Abstract
Within the Himalayan collisional belt, granites occur along two subparallel belts, namely, the Tethyan Himalayan Sequence (THS) and the Greater Himalayan Crystalline Complex (GHC). In this study, Eocene adakitic rocks and leucogranite are found only in the northern Himalayas, so further research is required to constrain their origin. Here, we present zircon U–Pb and monazite U–Th–Pb ages, Sr–Nd–Pb and Hf isotopes, and whole-rock major and trace elements for Liemai muscovite granite in the eastern Himalayan region. The U–(Th)–Pb results show that Liemai muscovite granite was emplaced at 43 Ma, and that its geochemical characteristics are similar to those of adakitic rocks of the same age (Dala, Quedang, Ridang, etc.). Combined with previous studies, both Eocene adakitic rocks and leucogranite are high-potassium calc-alkaline peraluminous granites. The former is relatively rich in large-ion lithophile elements (LILEs), such as Ba and Sr, and relatively deficient in high-field-strength elements (HFSEs), such as Nb, Ta, Zr, and Y, with weak or no Eu anomalies, and the average light rare earth element (LREE)/heavy rare earth element (HREE) ratio is 17.8. The latter is enriched in LILEs (such as Rb) and U, Ta, and Pb, and depleted in HFSEs (such as Nb and Zr), La, and Nd, with obvious negative Sr, Ba, and Eu anomalies and a mean LREE/HREE ratio of 10.7. The
87 Sr/86 Sr of the former is in the range of 0.707517–0.725100, εNd (t) ranged from −1.2 to −14.7, the average is −11.6, εHf (t) ranged from −0.5 to −65, the average is −12.2. The average values of (206 Pb/204 Pb) i, (207 Pb/204 Pb) i and (208 Pb/204 Pb) i are 18.788, 15.712 and 39.221, respectively; The87 Sr/86 Sr of the latter is in the range of 0.711049~0.720429, εNd (t) ranged from −9.8 to −13.8, the average is −12.3, εHf (t) ranged from −4.2 to −10, the average is −6.7. The isotopic characteristics indicate that adakitic rocks and leucogranites are derived from the ancient lower crust, and both may be derived from metamorphic rocks of the GHC. In this paper, the origin of the two is associated with the transformation of the Himalayan tectonic system during the Eocene, and it is inferred that the deep crust may have altered the tectonic environment (temperature and pressure), resulting in an obvious episodic growth trend of leucogranite and significant development of adakitic rocks from 51 to 40 Ma. From 40 to 35 Ma, the development of Eocene magmatic rocks was hindered, and adakitic rocks disappeared. It is proposed that the genetic difference is related to the transition from high to low angles of the subducting plate in the crustal thickening process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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21. Influence of electrical and thermal ageing on the mineral insulating oil performance for power transformer applications.
- Author
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Ranga, C., Kumar, A., and Chandel, R.
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MINERAL oils ,INSULATING oils ,POWER transformers ,GEOLOGICAL time scales ,INSULATING materials ,MAINTENANCE costs - Abstract
In the present work, a new electrothermal combined stress test cell has been designed and fabricated to conduct accelerated electrothermal ageing. The fabricated test cell includes all possible real working conditions of the transformers. The effects of accelerated electrothermal ageing on the performance of power transformers with thermally upgraded Kraft (TUK), Nomex-910 and Nomex-410 solid dielectrics in conjunction with mineral oil have been investigated. The accelerated electrothermal ageing has been performed for a temperature range of 100°C to 220°C, along with 10 kV electrical stress. Subsequently, several electrical, thermal, mechanical and chemical properties of transformer oil and different paper dielectrics have been determined. It has been observed from the diagnostic test results that Nomex impregnated mineral oil samples have better electrothermal performance as well as oxidation stability when compared to the thermally upgraded Kraft oil samples. Therefore, Nomex insulating materials in conjunction with mineral oil are suggested as alternative solid dielectrics for power transformers in order to achieve better oxidation stability, improved thermal performance for long service runs and reduced operating and maintenance costs. It is envisioned that the present experimental study will be very beneficial to utility managers and end-users of power transformers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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22. Editorial for Special Issue "Composition, Geochronology and Geodynamic Implications of Igneous Rock".
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Khromykh, Sergey V.
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GEOLOGICAL time scales ,IGNEOUS rocks ,RARE earth metals ,CRUST of the earth ,THERMODYNAMICS ,DIORITE - Abstract
Magmatism is a very important manifestation of the deep activity of the Earth. The geochronology and geochemistry of the Zhaojinggou monzogranite pluton indicate that magmas were derived from the late Paleoproterozoic to Mesoproterozoic lower crustal mafic materials. It was established a magma plumbing system that provides new constraints for magma evolution. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
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23. Editor History, Forthcoming Papers.
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EDITORIAL boards , *PUBLISHING , *PUBLISHED articles , *AUTHOR-publisher relations , *GEOLOGICAL time scales - Published
- 2014
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24. Petrogenesis and Tectonic Implications of the Oligocene Dalongtan Shoshonitic Syenite Porphyry in Central Yunnan, Southeastern Tibetan Plateau: Constraints from Geochronology, Geochemistry and Sr-Nd-Hf Isotopes.
- Author
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Yang, Hang, Liu, Anlin, Wu, Peng, and Wang, Feng
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SYENITE ,GEOLOGICAL time scales ,PORPHYRY ,MAFIC rocks ,ISOTOPE geology ,PLATINUM group ,PLATEAUS ,OXYGEN - Abstract
Shoshonitic rocks are widely distributed in post-collisional settings and provide key information on deep geodynamic mechanisms and magmatic evolution. In this paper, we present petrographic, zircon U-Pb age-related, trace elemental, Hf isotopic, bulk-rock elemental, and Sr-Nd isotopic data of the Dalongtan shoshonitic syenite porphyries (DSSPs) in central Yunnan, southeastern Tibet. The DSSPs formed at 33.2 ± 0.3 Ma in a post-collisional setting. They define linear trends on Harker diagrams, and they display similar trace element patterns and enriched bulk-rock Sr-Nd isotopes [(
87 Sr/86 Sr)i = 0.70964–0.70968, εNd (t) = −12.9 to −12.7] and zircon Hf isotopes (εHf (t) = −15.7 to −13.1) to the coeval mantle-derived potassic mafic rocks. This suggests that the DSSPs were fractionated from the lithospheric mantle-derived mafic magmas. The DSSPs, along with the coeval felsic and mafic magmatic rocks (37.2–32.3 Ma), exhibit a planar distribution on the SE Tibet and predate the left-lateral shearing of the Ailaoshan–Red River shear zone (ARSZ) (32–22 Ma), suggesting that there are no genetic relationships between them. The DSSPs have geochemical characteristics similar to those of A-type granites, with high total alkalinity (10.39–11.17 wt.%), HFSE concentrations (Zr + Nb + Ce + Y = 890.2–1054.3 ppm), Ga/Al ratios (10,000 × Ga/Al = 2.95–3.46), whole-rock zircon saturation temperatures (906–947 °C), and oxygen fugacity (ΔFMQ = +3.30–+4.65), indicating that they are products of the high-temperature melting of the lithosphere as a result of asthenosphere upwelling in extensional settings. Based on our data and regional observations, it is proposed that the generation of the DSSPs may be linked to the convective thinning of the thickened lithospheric mantle following the India–Asia collision. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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25. Nature and timing of Sn mineralization in southern Hunan, South China: Constraints from LA-ICP-MS cassiterite U-Pb geochronology and trace element composition.
- Author
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Ren, Tao, Li, Huan, Algeo, Thomas J., Girei, Musa Bala, Wu, Jinghua, and Liu, Biao
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CASSITERITE ,METALLOGENY ,GEOLOGICAL time scales ,RARE earth metals ,TRACE elements ,LASER ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry - Abstract
Accurately determining the timing and mechanism of metallogenesis of ore deposits is essential for developing a robust genetic model for their exploration. In this paper, we analyze the formation conditions of cassiterite in five major deposits of southern Hunan Province, one of the most important tungsten-tin (W-Sn) provinces in South China, using a combination of cathodoluminescence imaging, in situ U-Pb geochronology, and trace-element concentration data. In situ cassiterite U-Pb geochronology constrains the main period of Sn mineralization to between 155.4 and 142.0 Ma, demonstrating a temporal and genetic relationship to silicic intrusive magmatism in the same area. Three stages of magmatic activity and metallogenic evolution are recognized: (1) Early Paleozoic and Triassic: the initial enrichment stage of tungsten and tin; (2) Jurassic: the metasomatic mineralization stage; and (3) Cretaceous: the magmatic-hydrothermal superposition stage. The cassiterite in these deposits takes four forms, i.e., quartz vein-type, greisen-skarn-type, greisen-type, and granite-type, representing a progression characterized by the increasing content and decreasing range of variation of high field strength elements (HFSEs), and reflecting a general increase in the degree of evolution of the associated granites. Rare earth element (REE) concentrations suggest that precipitation of cassiterite was insensitive to the redox state of the fluid and that precipitation of cassiterite in the southern Hunan Sn deposits did not require a high-f
O2 environment. These findings provide new insights into tin mineralization processes and exploration strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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26. USE OF PHOTOGRAMMETRY TO SURVEY IRON AGE ROCK ART MOTIFS IN THE CÔA VALLEY: THE VERMELHOSA ROCK 3 CASE STUDY (VILA NOVA DE FOZ CÔA, PORTUGAL).
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Botica, Natália, Luís, Luís, and Bernardes, Paulo
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ROCK art (Archaeology) ,GEOLOGICAL time scales ,IRON Age ,WORLD Heritage Sites ,DIGITAL preservation ,POINT cloud ,FIGURINES ,PHOTOGRAPHIC lighting - Abstract
Copyright of Virtual Archaeology Review is the property of Virtual Archaeology Review and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
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27. A Search for Magnetized Quark Nuggets (MQNs), a Candidate for Dark Matter, Accumulating in Iron Ore.
- Author
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VanDevender, J. Pace, Sloan, T., and Glissman, Michael
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DARK matter ,IRON ores ,QUARKS ,GEOLOGICAL time scales ,MAGNETIC anomalies ,METEORITES - Abstract
A search has been carried out for Magnetized Quark Nuggets (MQNs) accumulating in iron ore over geologic time. MQNs, which are theoretically consistent with the Standard Models of Physics and of Cosmology, have been suggested as dark-matter candidates. Indirect evidence of MQNs has been previously inferred from observations of magnetars and of non-meteorite impact craters. It is shown in this paper that MQNs can accumulate in taconite (iron ore) and be transferred into ferromagnetic rod-mill liners during processing of the ore. When the liners are recycled to make fresh steel, they are heated to higher than the Curie temperature so that their ferromagnetic properties are destroyed. The MQNs would then be released and fall into the ferromagnetic furnace bottom where they would be trapped. Three such furnace bottoms have been magnetically scanned to search for the magnetic anomalies consistent with trapped MQNs. The observed magnetic anomalies are equivalent to an accumulation rate of ~1 kg of MQNs per 1.2 × 10
8 kg of taconite ore processed. The results are consistent with MQNs but there could be other, unknown explanations. We propose an experiment and calculations to definitively test the MQN hypothesis for dark matter. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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28. Early Triassic Episode of the Kresty Volcano–Plutonic Complex Formation in the Maymecha-Kotuy Alkaline Province, Polar Siberia: Geochemistry, Petrology and Uranium–Lead Geochronology.
- Author
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Sazonov, Anatoly M., Gertner, Igor F., Mustafaev, Agababa A., Krasnova, Tatyana S., Kolmakov, Yurii V., Kingsbury, Cole G., and Gogoleva, Vera A.
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GEOCHEMISTRY ,PETROLOGY ,GEOLOGICAL time scales ,RARE earth metals ,GEOLOGICAL research ,DIKES (Geology) - Abstract
The Kresty volcano–plutonic complex (KVPC) is one of the representatives of the alkaline–ultrabasic magmatism in the Maymecha-Kotuy Alkaline Province in Polar Siberia. The geological structure of the KVPC consists of intrusive formations of olivinite–pyroxenite and melilitolite–monticellitolite bodies, a series of rocks that break through dikes of trachydolerites, syenites, granosyenites, alkaline picrites and lamprophyres. This paper summarizes the results of the authors' long-term research on the geological structure and features of the material composition of the intrusive magmatic rocks, including geochemistry, mineralogy, distribution of rare earth elements (REE), as well as the results of isotope studies. The multielement composition of the KVPC intrusions demonstrates a complex geodynamic paleoenvironment of the formation as plume nature with signs of subduction and collision. For the ultrabasic series with normal alkalinity from the first phase of the KVPC, a Sm-Nd isochron age yielded an Early Triassic (T
1 ) result of 251 ± 25 Ma. Here, we present U-Pb dating of zircons and perovskite of high-calcium intrusive formations and a dyke complex of alkaline syenites. Thus, for the intrusion of kugdite (according to perovskite), the age determination was 249 ± 4 Ma, and for the crosscutting KVPC dykes of syenites (according to zircon) 249 ± 1 Ma and 252 ± 1 Ma. The age of the most recent dike is almost identical to the age of the main intrusive phases of the KVPC (T1 ), which corresponds to a larger regional event of the Siberian LIP—251 Ma. According to isotopic Sr-Nd parameters, the main source of KVPC magmas is a PREMA-type material. For dyke varieties, we assume there was an interaction of plume melts with the continental crust. The new age results obtained allow us to further constrain the episodes of alkaline–ultrabasic intrusions in Polar Siberia, taking into account the interaction of mantle plume matter and crustal material. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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29. Development of a Modern-Style Trench-Arc-Backarc System in the Proto-Tethys Ocean (Qilian Orogenic Belt, NW China).
- Author
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Qiao, Jinran, Dong, Jie, Song, Shuguang, Allen, Mark B, Wang, Chao, Xia, Xiaohong, and Su, Li
- Subjects
OROGENIC belts ,GEOLOGICAL time scales ,PLATE tectonics ,BACK-arc basins ,CONTINENTAL margins ,PALEOZOIC Era ,FLYSCH ,FELSIC rocks - Abstract
The development of trench-arc-backarc (TABA) systems is uniquely associated with modern-style plate tectonics on Earth. The Qilian orogenic belt in NW China records the evolution history of the Proto-Tethys Ocean at the transition time from the Proterozoic to Phanerozoic. This paper presents systematic studies of petrography, U–Pb chronology and geochemistry on various rocks from a middle-ocean ridge (MOR)-type ophiolite belt, active continental margin and back-arc basin in the Qilian orogenic belt to address the development of a modern-style TABA system. Arc magmas include felsic intrusions with ages of 531 to 477 Ma and felsic-mafic arc volcanic rocks with ages of 506 to 439 Ma, showing distinctive features of typical magmatic rocks formed at an Andean-type continental margin. The back-arc basin is recorded by a 490- to 448-Ma suprasubduction zone (SSZ)-type ophiolite with boninite, and Silurian turbidite flysch formation. We establish a three-stage tectonic history from the initiation of subduction to the formation of a mature Japan-Sea-type back-arc basin at the active continental margin in the Early Paleozoic era. (1) Northward subduction of Proto-Tethys Ocean initiated and the Andean-type continental arc developed at ~530 to 500 Ma with continual crustal thickening; (2) a tectonic transition occurred from an Andean-type active continental margin to a West Pacific-type active continental margin at ~500 to 490 Ma with rapid thinning of crust to ~35 km; and (3) mature ocean basins and back-arc-basin (BAB) ophiolites were formed in the back-arc extensional environment at ~490 to 450 Ma. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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30. A micromechanics‐based approach to damage propagation criterion in viscoelastic fractured materials regarded as homogenized media.
- Author
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Aguiar, Cássio B. and Maghous, Samir
- Subjects
VISCOELASTIC materials ,GEOLOGICAL time scales ,MICROMECHANICS ,CRACK propagation (Fracture mechanics) ,SEDIMENTARY rocks ,INHOMOGENEOUS materials ,SEDIMENTATION & deposition - Abstract
This paper aims to formulate a damage propagation criterion in microfractured viscoelastic materials, relying upon a micromechanics reasoning together with thermodynamics concepts. The fracture density is regarded as damage parameter at macroscopic scale. The equivalent behavior of the heterogeneous material (solid matrix + fractures) is first formulated within the framework of viscoelastic homogenization theory. In this context, relevant relationships relating local fields to macroscopic fields are derived, thus allowing a clear micromechanical interpretation of quantities involved in the upscaling process, such as the residual or viscous strains. Based on thermodynamic concepts, the energy dissipation and the free energy of the homogenized viscoelastic material are deduced at the macroscopic scale. The formulation of an energetic‐based criterion for damage propagation in viscoelastic fractured materials is then achieved by viewing the macroscopic energy release rate as the thermodynamic force responsible for propagation. Due to the delayed deformation component, the formulation is time‐dependent. Since it is formulated directly at the homogenized material level, the main advantage of the approach developed in this work is the rigorous determination of the energy release rate expression, without neglecting any residual term. In the last part of the paper, several numerical applications are performed to illustrate the main features of the modeling and to provide comparison with available simplified formulations. Finally, the proposed damage propagation criterion is applied to give qualitative insights on fracturing process of sedimentary layered rocks at geological times scale viewed as a long‐term mechanical damage problem, emphasizing the viscosity effects in preventing fracture propagation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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31. The Kulikovs: A Family of Geologists. Vyacheslav Stepanovich Kulikov, Viktoria Vladimirovna Kulikova, and Yana Vyacheslavovna Bychkova (Kulikova).
- Subjects
GEOLOGISTS ,GEOLOGY ,PETROLOGY ,ULTRABASIC rocks ,GEOLOGICAL time scales ,VOLCANIC ash, tuff, etc. - Abstract
This large and relatively poorly studied part of the Karelian craton was cloaked in many geological mysteries, into which Vyacheslav Stepanovich and Viktoria Vladimirovna delved when working at the Institute of Geology of the Karelian Research Center, Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union (and then Russia). In the year of 2020, Yana Vyacheslavovna Bychkova (nee Kulikova), Viktoria Vladimirovna Kulikova, and Vyacheslav Stepanovich Kulikov, a family of geologists, passed away. Vyacheslav Stepanovich Kulikov, Viktoria Vladimirovna Kulikova, and Yana Vyacheslavovna Bychkova (Kulikova). [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2022
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32. First Results of Complex Dating and Growth Rate Estimation of Speleothem from Vorontsovskaya Cave (Krasnodar Region, Russia).
- Author
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Gavriyshkin, D. A., Maksimov, F. E., Pasenko, A. M., and Veselovskiy, R. V.
- Subjects
SPELEOTHEMS ,CAVES ,GEOMAGNETISM ,TIME series analysis ,GEOMAGNETIC variations ,GEOLOGICAL time scales - Abstract
Speleothems are unique archives of information on climate, geomagnetism, and environmental conditions of the past, and have been successfully used for paleoclimatic and paleomagnetic studies in the last two decades. The uniqueness of these geological objects lies in the peculiarities of their formation and preservation of a wide range of geochemical, geological and geophysical proxies, and, most importantly, in the ability to obtain time series of the corresponding characteristics in an unprecedentedly accurate resolution using isotope-geochronological dating methods and incremental chronology. This paper presents the first results of dating the Vor speleothem from the Vorontsovskaya Cave (Krasnodar region), which preserved a record of the geomagnetic excursion, obtained by
230 Th/U α-spectrometry,14 C dating, and incremental chronology. Such studies have been carried out in Russia for the first time. Despite the limitations of using the methods of isotope geochronology, it was possible to obtain an upper limit on the age of the excursion, which probably occurred no earlier than 5500–6000 years ago. By the method of incremental chronology, the duration of the main phase of the excursion Vor – 871 ± 16 years – was determined with great accuracy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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33. Petrogenesis and Tectonic Setting of Early Cretaceous A-Type Granite from the Southern Great Xing'an Range, Northeastern China: Geochronological, Geochemical, and Hf Isotopic Evidence.
- Author
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Ran, Xiangjin, Wang, Xi, and Sun, Zhenming
- Subjects
MESOZOIC Era ,GRANITE ,IGNEOUS rocks ,PETROGENESIS ,GEOLOGICAL time scales ,MAGMATISM - Abstract
The southern Great Xing'an Range is located in the eastern Central Asian Orogenic Belt, where voluminous igneous rocks developed during the Late Mesozoic period. The east slope of the southern Great Xing'an Range has been the topic of numerous debates on the level of influence of the Mongol-Okhotsk and the Paleo-Pacific regimes in the Late Mesozoic period. Therefore, this area is a suitable region in which to study the temporal changes in magma sources and tectono-magmatic evolution. In this paper, whole-rock geochemical data, zircon U-Pb geochronology, and zircon Hf isotope studies were carried out on the granitoids in the east slope area of the southern Great Xing'an Range. LA-ICP-MS zircon U-Pb dating revealed the ages of four granitoid samples: 135.0 ± 0.6 Ma, 130.7 ± 1.4 Ma, 130.4 ± 1.0 Ma, and 127.6 ± 0.8 Ma, respectively. The Hf isotope values
176 Hf/177 Hf = 0.282751–0.283015, εHf (t) = +2.0~+11.5, and T2DM = 583~1442 Ma suggest that the magma was generated by partial melting of Meso- and Neoproterozoic accreted and thickened low crust. The whole-rock geochemical data implied that these granitoids are A-type granite and their formation is closely linked to the subduction of the Paleo-Pacific Ocean plate. These geochemical, isotopic, and geochronological data suggest that the Early Cretaceous magmatism in the east slope area of the southern Great Xing'an Range formed in an extensional back-arc tectonic setting associated with the slab roll-back of the Paleo-Pacific plate subduction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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34. A New Machine-Learning Extracting Approach to Construct a Knowledge Base: A Case Study on Global Stromatolites over Geological Time.
- Author
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Zhang, Xiaobo, Li, Hao, Liu, Qiang, Li, Zhenhua, Reymond, Claire E., Zhang, Min, Huang, Yuangeng, Chen, Hongfei, and Chen, Zhong-Qiang
- Subjects
- *
GEOLOGICAL time scales , *STROMATOLITES , *MACHINE learning , *NATURAL language processing , *KNOWLEDGE base , *GEOLOGIC hot spots - Abstract
Within any scientific disciplines, a large amount of data are buried within various literature depositories and archives, making it difficult to manually extract useful information from the datum swamps. The machine-learning extraction of data therefore is necessary for the big-data-based studies. Here, we develop a new text-mining technique to reconstruct the global database of the Precambrian to Recent stromatolites, providing better understanding of secular changes of stromatolites though geological time. The step-by-step data extraction process is described as below. First, the PDF documents of stromatolite-containing literatures were collected, and converted into text formation. Second, a glossary and tag-labeling system using NLP (Natural Language Processing) software was employed to search for all possible candidate pairs from each sentence within the papers collected here. Third, each candidate pair and features were represented as a factor graph model using a series of heuristic procedures to score the weights of each pair feature. Occurrence data of stromatolites versus stratigraphical units (abbreviated as Strata), facies types, locations, and age worldwide were extracted from literatures, respectively, and their extraction accuracies are 92%/464, 87%/778, 92%/846, and 93%/405 from 3 750 scientific abstracts, respectively, and are 90%/1 734, 86%/2 869, 90%/2 055 and 91%/857 from 11 932 papers, respectively. A total of 10 072 unique datum items were identified. The newly obtained stromatolite dataset demonstrates that their stratigraphical occurrences reached a pronounced peak during the Proterozoic (2 500–541 Ma), followed by a distinct fall during the Early Phanerozoic, and overall fluctuations through the Phanerozoic (541–0 Ma). Globally, seven stromatolite hotspots were identified from the new dataset, including western United States, eastern United States, western Europe, India, South Africa, northern China, and southern China. The proportional occurrences of inland aquatic stromatolites remain rather low (∼ 20%) in comparison to marine stromatolites from the Precambrian to Jurassic, and then display a significant increase (30%–70%) from the Cretaceous to the present. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Photogrammetric Monitoring of Rock Glacier Motion Using High-Resolution Cross-Platform Datasets: Formation Age Estimation and Modern Thinning Rates.
- Author
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Meng, Tyler M., Aguilar, Roberto, Christoffersen, Michael S., Petersen, Eric I., Larsen, Christopher F., Levy, Joseph S., and Holt, John W.
- Subjects
ROCK glaciers ,LAST Glacial Maximum ,GEOLOGICAL time scales ,TOPOGRAPHIC maps ,DIGITAL elevation models ,REMOTE sensing ,BAROCLINICITY - Abstract
The availability of remote sensing imagery at high spatiotemporal resolutions presents the opportunity to monitor the surface motion of rock glaciers, a key constraint for characterizing the dynamics of their evolution. In this paper, we investigate four North American rock glaciers by automatically measuring their horizontal surface displacement using photogrammetric data acquired with crewed and uncrewed aircraft along with orbital spacecraft over monitoring periods of up to eight years. We estimate vertical surface changes on these rock glaciers with photogrammetrically generated digital elevation models (DEM) and digitized topographic maps. Uncertainty analysis shows that the imagery with the highest resolution and most precise positioning have the best performance when used with the automated change detection algorithm. This investigation produces gridded velocity fields over the entire surface area of each study site, from which we estimate the age of rock glacier formation using along-flow velocity integration. Though the age estimates vary, the ice within the modern extent of these landforms began flowing between 3000 and 7000 years before present, postdating the last glacial maximum. Surface elevation change maps indicate present-day thinning at the lower latitude/higher elevation sites in Wyoming, while the higher latitude/lower elevation sites in Alaska exhibit relatively stable surface elevations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Geomorphology, Geoarchaeology, and Geochronology of the Upper Pleistocene Archaeological Site of El Olivo Cave (Llanera, Asturias, Northern Spain).
- Author
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Jordá Pardo, Jesús F., Álvarez-Alonso, David, de Andrés-Herrero, María, Ballesteros, Daniel, Carral, Pilar, Hevia-Carrillo, Aitor, Sanjurjo, Jorge, Giralt, Santiago, and Jiménez-Sánchez, Montserrat
- Subjects
GEOLOGICAL time scales ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations ,PLEISTOCENE Epoch ,LAST Glacial Maximum ,CAVES ,SPELEOTHEMS ,GEOMORPHOLOGY - Abstract
El Olivo Cave (Pruvia de Arriba, Llanera, Asturias, Spain) is a small karst cave located in the Aboño River basin and formed in the Cretaceous limestone of the Mesozoic cover of the Cantabrian Mountains (north of the Iberian Peninsula). It contains an important upper Pleistocene sedimentary, archaeological, and paleontological record, with abundant technological evidence and faunal remains. The archaeological record shows a first occupation that could correspond to the Middle Paleolithic and a second occupation in the Middle Magdalenian. The stratigraphic sequence inside and outside the cave was studied with geoarchaeological methodology. In this paper, the lithostratigraphic sequence is analyzed, and the data from the granulometric, mineralogical, edaphological, and radiometric analyses are presented. The results of these analyses enable an accurate interpretation of both the lithostratigraphy of the deposit and the processes responsible for its formation and subsequent evolution. The available numerical dates allow us to locate the first sedimentation episode in the cave in OIS 7a, in the Middle Pleistocene, the base of the outer fluvial sedimentation in the cold OIS 3a stage of the Upper Pleistocene and the Magdalenian occupation in the Last Glacial Maximum (OIS 2) at the end of the Late Pleistocene. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Geochronology and geological significance of the strata of the Neoproterozoic Nanhua System, SW North China Craton.
- Author
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Chen, Guanxu, Jinhai, Luo, Gennian, Sun, Zhan, Meng, Yinglei, Chang, and Zhuo, Chen
- Subjects
GEOLOGICAL time scales ,CLASTIC rocks ,SNOWBALL Earth (Geology) ,METAMORPHIC rocks ,CARBONATE rocks ,PROVENANCE (Geology) - Abstract
A set of low-grade clastic metamorphic and carbonate rocks, and greenschists outcropping in the southwestern (SW) margin of the North China Craton (NCC), was originally classified as the Paleoproterozoic Xiong'er Group according to stratigraphic correlation. To verify the age, this paper carried out detrital zircon U–Pb LA-ICP-MS dating of low-grade clastic metamorphic rocks exposed in the Changqing area at the SW margin of the Ordos Block in the SW part of the NCC. Results from detrital zircon dating indicate that the metamorphic and carbonate rocks can be classified into the Neoproterozoic Nanhua System, which is the only Nanhua System stratum in this block so far, and it probably could provide new clues to Rodinia break-up and Snowball Earth of the NCC. The nine peak ages of the low-grade clastic metamorphic rocks reflected its relatively complex provenance, and almost all major geological events experienced by the NCC basement since the Neoarchean, but some age peaks were difficult to correspond to that of the NCC, indicating that the southwestern part of the Ordos Block was also affected by the Qinling and Qiliang orogenic belts during Nanhua System of Neoproterozoic. Combined with provenance analysis, it was revealed that the current southwest boundary of the Ordos Block was the previous southwest boundary of the Ordos Block during the Qingbaikou-Nanhua Period of the Neoproterozoic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Issue Information.
- Subjects
GEOLOGICAL basins ,GEOLOGICAL time scales ,CARBONATE reservoirs ,WATERSHEDS ,ANTICLINES - Abstract
Shoaib I et al i . utilize advanced processing of recently-acquired wide-azimuth 3D seismic data, together with seismic attribute analysis and fracture modelling, to image fracture networks in the Paleogene carbonates at Ratana. These source rocks charge Paleogene and Miocene fluvio-deltaic sandstone reservoirs at about 40 oilfields including Urdaneta West, the focus of the paper on pp. 283-302 by B Escobar I et al., i b which has estimated reserves of about 1500 MM brl oil. The paper on pp. 253-282 by B Shoaib I et al i . b is a predictive study of the distribution of fractures in the low porosity Paleogene carbonates which serve as reservoir rocks at the Ratana field in the Upper Indus Basin, northern Pakistan. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Beyond the premise of conquest: Indigenous and Black earth-worlds in the Anthropocene debates.
- Author
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Gill, Bikrum
- Subjects
CHRONOBIOLOGY ,GEOLOGICAL time scales ,BLACK people ,INDIGENOUS peoples ,SPACETIME - Abstract
This paper interrogates how the two major competing frameworks in the debates over framing our geological epoch – the Anthropocene and the Capitalocene – are unified in the reproduction of a Eurocentric assumption that functions to confirm the historical priority of Euro-Western geological agency, the corollary of which is the rendering derivative of non-European peoples as lacking in such capacity until mobilized by Euro-Western forces. Rather than assume that humanity in general, or colonial capitalism more specifically, has generated a novel geological epoch by disrupting the 'natural' temporal divide between deep geological time, medium run biological time, and human history, this paper argues for a more co-constitutive relation between geological, biological, and social space-times. Locating ourselves within an irreducible socio-bio-geological space-time, we re-encounter the earth as multiple earth-worldings co-constituted by Indigenous and Black peoples in ways that precede, and exceed, the hitherto understood to be 'originary' geological capacity of Euro-Western colonial capitalism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Metallogenic models as the key to successful exploration — a review and trends.
- Author
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Pohl, Walter L.
- Subjects
METALLOGENY ,SOLID state chemistry ,GEOLOGICAL surveys ,SOLID state physics ,EARTH sciences ,GEOLOGICAL time scales - Abstract
Metallogeny is the science of ore and mineral deposit formation in geological space and time. Metallogeny is interdisciplinary by nature, comprising elements of natural science disciplines such as planetology to solid state physics and chemistry, and volcanology. It is the experimental forefront of research and bold thinking, based on an ever-growing foundation of solid knowledge. Therefore, metallogeny is not a closed system of knowledge but a fast-growing assemblage of structured and unstructured information in perpetual flux. This paper intends to review its current state and trends. The latter may introduce speculation and fuzziness. Metallogeny has existed for over 100 years as a branch of Earth Science. From the discovery of plate tectonics (ca. 1950) to the end of the last century, metallogeny passed through a worldwide phase of formally published 'metallogenetic' maps. In the last decades, a rapidly growing number of scientists, digitization and splendid new tools fundamentally boosted research. More innovations may be expected by the growing use of an evolving systematic 'Geodata Science' for metallogenic research by an increasingly global human talent pool. Future requirements for metallic and mineral raw materials, especially the critical natural elements and compounds that are needed for the nascent carbon-free economy, already drive activities on stock markets and in the resource industry. State geological surveys, academia and private companies embrace the challenges. The new age requires intensified metallogenic backing. In this paper, principles of metallogeny are recalled concerning concepts and terms. A metallogenic classification of ore and mineral deposits is proposed, and the intimate relations of metallogenesis with geodynamics are sketched (ancient lid tectonics and modern plate tectonics). Metallogenic models assemble a great diversity of data that allow an ever better understanding of ore formation, foremost by illuminating the geological source-to-trap migration of ore metals, the petrogenetic and geodynamic–tectonic setting, the spatial architecture of ore deposits and the nature and precise timing of involved processes. Applied metallogeny allows companies to choose strategy and tactics for exploration investment and for planning the work. Based on comprehensive metallogenic knowledge, mineral system analysis (MSA) selects those elements of complex metallogenic models, which are detectable and can guide exploration in order to support applications such as mineral prospectivity mapping, mineral potential evaluation and targeting of detailed investigations. MSA founded on metallogenic models can be applied across whole continents, or at the scale of regional greenfield search, or in brownfields at district to camp scale. By delivering the fundamental keys for MSA, supported by unceasing innovative research, the stream of new metallogenic insights is essential for improving endowment estimates and for successful exploration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Cadomian crustal evolution of Turkey, Iran, and environs.
- Author
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Topuz, Gültekin, Azizi, Hossein, and Burg, Jean-Pierre
- Subjects
DIAPIRS ,GEOLOGICAL time scales ,SILICICLASTIC rocks ,EARTH sciences ,GEOLOGICAL surveys ,IGNEOUS rocks ,DIKES (Geology) - Abstract
This issue includes seven papers on Cadomian rocks from Bulgaria/Serbia through Turkey to eastern Iran (Figure 2). The most important exposures of Cadomian basements are found in the Strandja Zone, the Istanbul Zone, and the Anatolide-Tauride Block in Turkey, and NW Iranian Block and Central Iranian Microcontinent in Iran (Figure 2). Keywords: Cadomian belt; Pan-African orogeny; Turkey; Iran EN Cadomian belt Pan-African orogeny Turkey Iran 2385 2388 4 10/04/22 20221001 NES 221001 The Cadomian belt (ca. 600-500 Ma) extends from North America through Europe to Iran (Figure 1). [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Reconstruction of Land and Marine Features by Seismic and Surface Geomorphology Techniques.
- Author
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Harishidayat, Dicky, Al-Shuhail, Abdullatif, Randazzo, Giovanni, Lanza, Stefania, and Muzirafuti, Anselme
- Subjects
GEOMORPHOLOGY ,GEOMORPHOLOGICAL mapping ,GEOLOGICAL mapping ,DIGITAL elevation models ,GEOLOGICAL time scales ,SOUND waves - Abstract
Seismic reflection utilizes sound waves transmitted into the subsurface, reflected at rock boundaries, and recorded at the surface. Interpretation of their travel times and amplitudes are the key for reconstructing various geomorphological features across geological time (e.g., reefs, dunes, and channels). Furthermore, the integration of surface geomorphology technique mapping, such as digital elevation models, with seismic geomorphology can increase land and marine feature modelling and reduce data uncertainty, as well. This paper presents an overview of seismic and surface geomorphology techniques and proposes an integrated workflow for better geological mapping, 3D surface imaging, and reconstruction. We intend to identify which techniques are more often used and which approaches are more appropriate for better output results. We noticed that an integration of surface and subsurface geomorphology techniques could be beneficial for society in landscape mapping, reservoir characterization, and city/regional planning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Geochemistry and geochronology of early Triassic tephra from SW China: implications for biological evolution and tectonics.
- Author
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Xiong, Guoqing, Deng, Qi, Zheng, Xi, Dan, Yong, Li, Xiaogang, and Peng, Zhoujun
- Subjects
- *
VOLCANIC ash, tuff, etc. , *VOLCANOLOGY , *GEOLOGICAL time scales , *BIOLOGICAL evolution , *MUNG bean , *PERMIAN-Triassic boundary - Abstract
Late Permian to middle Triassic volcanic activities were very strong, however, volcanic records in the early Triassic strata are less reported than those of the Permo-Triassic boundary and the Triassic Olenekian-Anisian boundary in the Yangtze plate, especially within the Sichuan basin. We conduct zircon U-Pb dating and geochemical analysis of the tephra which was first found in the early Triassic Jialingjiang Formation from the Maliuping section, Hechuan, Chongqing. The volcanic ash in the paper yields the new 248.5 ± 0.7 Ma U-Pb age consistent with those of volcanic ashes in these contemporaneous strata in the Yangtze plate. Geochemical characters of whole-rock samples show lower contents in SiO2, K2O and higher components in Al2O3, CaO, MgO, relatively enriched LREE and depleted HREE with distinct negative Eu anomaly, and conspicuous Ba, Nb, Ta, Sr, P, Ti depletion and Th, U, K, Nd enrichment, which is similar to those of the Mung Bean rock of the Triassic Olenekian-Anisian boundary, and those of acidic volcanics from the Sanjiang orogenic belt and Shiwandashan-Qiangfang suture zone during the Early-Middle Triassic. Trace elements of whole rock and analysed zircons of the tuff imply its primary magma derived from Rhyodacite/Dacite and its tectonic setting of volcanic arc granite with continental crust affinity. The early Triassic volcanism during the syn-collision stage of the Paleo-Tethys evolution was less active than those of the Permo-Triassic boundary and the Triassic Olenekian-Anisian boundary, while the volcanic event may have a crucial effect on prolonging fully biotic recovery and entirely ecosystem turnover soon after the Permian-Triassic mass extinction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Geochemistry and geochronology of the Ordovician Qianhe metabasalt in Northwest China: implications for the northern boundary of Qinling Orogenic Belt in heavily loess-covered regions.
- Author
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Han, Xin, Huang, Xiaohan, Wang, Ran, Wang, Xingwei, Xin, Yonghui, Li, Yue, and Jiang, Zhexuan
- Subjects
- *
OROGENIC belts , *INDUCTIVELY coupled plasma mass spectrometry , *GEOCHEMISTRY , *GEOLOGICAL time scales , *GEOLOGICAL surveys , *BACK-arc basins , *BASALT , *LASER ablation - Abstract
The scientific question of precisely determining the northern boundary of the Qinling Orogenic Belt (QOB) with regard to the southern segment of the North China Craton (S-NCC) has been controversial and unresolved, as it is heavily covered by loess and lacks some geological evidence. In order to identify the concrete northern boundary of the QOB, this paper first reports the metabasalt discovered in the Qianhe River Basin in Northwestern China, on the foundation of petrography, mineralogy, geochronology and geochemistry analyses. Detailed regional geological survey presents that the Qianhe metabasalt (QMB) is in unconformable contact with the Mesoproterozoic Gaoshanhe Group. Moreover, there is the new laser ablation (LA) inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) U-Pb dating for magmatic zircons that yielded a weighted mean age of 450 ± 9 Ma, revealing that the QMB occurred in the Late Ordovician rather than that in the Mesoproterozoic period as previously considered. Both major and trace elements show that the samples are characterized by the back-arc basin (BAB) basalt affinity. In addition, combined with the regional geology analysis, it stands to reason that the QMB is very similar to those of Ordovician Caotangou Group along the northern QOB (N-QOB). Accordingly, it is illuminated that the QMB belonging to the N-QOB, is more likely originated from the back-arc basin setting, and truly defines the QOB's northern boundary in this segment, which has prominent geoscientific significance for determining the tectonic boundary in the heavily loess-covered regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Note on Lower Triassic Gondolelloid Conodont Rediversifications with Emphasis on the Spathian Recovery.
- Author
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Kilic, Ali Murat
- Subjects
- *
PERMIAN-Triassic boundary , *GEOLOGICAL time scales , *AMMONOIDEA , *CONODONTS , *ENVIRONMENTAL geology , *BIOSTRATIGRAPHY - Abstract
Conodonts, as a biotic group, next to ammonoids, pollen and spores, crustaceans and vertebrates, provide proxy clues for environment and age assessments of the rocks in which they occur. Conodonts are widely used for Triassic marine biostratigraphy. However, there are various discussions about their multielement taxonomy and evolutionary lineages (e.g., generation, speciation). Although first studies reported that most Triassic conodont species were unimembrate, studies carried out in the following years maintained that all Triassic conodonts were multimembrate. Although statistical reconstructions of a number of Triassic apparatuses were attempted, the discovery of fused clusters and natural assemblages has subsequently demonstrated that Triassic conodonts are indeed multimembrate, and all of the elements exist together in the same apparatus. The present paper aims to clarify the evolutionary relationship and array of some Lower Triassic conodonts. Columbitella dagisi n. sp. is described. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Low‐temperature thermochronology and the timing of motion on detachment faults.
- Author
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Lister, Gordon and Forster, Marnie
- Subjects
- *
GEOLOGICAL time scales , *ISLANDS , *ARCHIPELAGOES , *STEWS , *AGE - Abstract
Ios (an island in the Cycladic archipelago, Greece) was the first recognized Aegean metamorphic core complex. There is a paradoxical absence of an age jump in low‐temperature geochronology transects across the Ios Detachment Fault. This paper explains why this is so, by modelling the conductive response to detachment faulting. We demonstrate that transects across detachment faults consistently record age jumps only at shallow palaeodepths. Conductive relaxation of the perturbed geotherm keeps pace with fault movement, so the hangingwall heats just as fast as the footwall cools. Key variables are the fractional depth to the partial resetting zone, d [0.0.1], and the magnitude and rate of slip on the detachment. At shallow palaeodepths (d < 0.3, 10–50 km slip), significant age jumps occur across the actual fault contact. At deeper levels of exposure, this is no longer the case, and the effects of a 'stewing zone' readily become evident. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Darwin's Green Living Fossil: The Microalga Cyanophora paradoxa and Evolutionary Stasis.
- Author
-
Kutschera, Ulrich and Khanna, Rajnish
- Subjects
AQUATIC biology ,DEVELOPMENTAL biology ,SUSTAINABLE living ,GEOLOGICAL time scales ,BIOLOGISTS ,PHOTOSYSTEMS - Abstract
The article discusses the microalga Cyanophora paradoxa and its classification as a "Living Fossil." The microalga contains archaic plastids called "cyanelles" and has been studied for its structure and function. The article presents the original description of C. paradoxa and highlights recent findings regarding its genome and evolutionary history. It also discusses the structure of photosystem I in C. paradoxa and its significance in understanding the evolution of photosynthetic organisms. The article concludes that C. paradoxa exhibits both ancient and modern traits, making it a paradigmatic "Green Living Fossil." [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Geochronology and Geochemistry of Mesozoic Granites in the North Qilian Shan: Implications for Petrogenesis and Tectonic Setting.
- Author
-
Tao Yang, Sun, Zhi-yuan, Wang, Ming-liang, Zhu, Xiao-qiang, and Zhao, Jing-yu
- Subjects
- *
OROGENIC belts , *GEOLOGICAL time scales , *GEOCHEMISTRY , *GRANITE , *MESOZOIC Era - Abstract
This paper documents the zircon U–Pb ages, whole-rock geochemistry, and Sr–Nd–Pb isotopes of the Mesozoic granites in the central part of the North Qilian Orogenic Belt to provide information on the tectonic evolution and crustal accretion process of the Qilian Orogenic Belt. Zircon U–Pb dating yields an age of 215.3 ± 3.1 Ma, indicating that the Beidaban monzogranites formed from Late Triassic. They are characterized by high contents of SiO2, Al2O3, and K2O; are slightly peraluminous (A/CNK = 1.08–1.15); and have mineralogical assemblages of primary biotite and ilmenite, illustrating that they are shoshonitic and peraluminous S-type granite. The Beidaban monzogranites have initial (87Sr/86Sr)i values ranging from 0.71456 to 0.71867 and εNd(t) values ranging from –12.9 to –8.5 with two-stage Nd model ages of 1.69–2.04 Ga, suggesting that they originated from partial melting of the Paleo-Mesoproterozoic (Longshoushan Group) continental crustal metasedimentary rocks. Initial Pb isotopic compositions (206Pb/204Pb = 19.44–21.80; 207Pb/204Pb = 15.76–15.89; 208Pb/204Pb = 39.62–41.26) and geochemical features such as high Th/Ta (9.3–67.4, 37.4 on average) and Rb/Nb (12.5–17.1) are consistent with recycled crustal components. Combined with previous geochronological and geochemical data, we suggest that the Mesozoic granites probably formed in a post-collisional tectonic setting and that the North Qilian Orogen Belt experienced comprehensive intracontinental orogenesis after the closure of the Qilian ocean. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Proterozoic mafic dyke swarms of Bundelkhand Craton, North India: A connection to Columbia supercontinent.
- Author
-
Raju, S., Bodas, M. S., Anshu, R., and Neogi, Susobhan
- Subjects
- *
DIKES (Geology) , *PROTEROZOIC Era , *PETROLOGY , *GEOCHEMISTRY , *GEOLOGICAL time scales , *SUBDUCTION - Abstract
The present paper addresses petrography, geochemistry and Ar‐Ar geochronology of a significant number of mafic dykes from the Paleo‐ to Neoarchean Bundelkhand Craton in central India. The majority of the dykes are NW‐SE oriented (with a few NE‐SW and ENE‐WSW) with tholeiitic, sub‐alkaline and basalt to basaltic andesite composition. The trace element geochemistry of these dykes indicates an island arc setting during emplacement. The Ar‐Ar mineral dating (plagioclase) of three representative dykes reveals an emplacement age between 1.53 and 1.46 Ga. This finding and earlier reports (2.1–1.73 Ga) point to sustained mafic magmatism throughout the Bundelkhand Craton in a preferred structural orientation between 2.1 and 1.46 Ga. Mafic magmatism was episodic and can be linked to the perpetual subduction accretion processes between the central Indian Archean continents during the development of the Columbia supercontinent. The mafic dykes were emplaced at 45° to the maximum compression direction (E‐W), that is, along the line of no finite longitudinal strain. This time equivalent widespread NW‐SE and NE‐SW trending mafic dyke system is also relatable along the adjacent continents (Singhbhum, Bastar) and thus opened up a new paradigm for the dyke's emplacement across the Indian cratons. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Editorial: IAG Workshop papers -- Proficiency Testing, Certification, Reference Materials.
- Author
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Quétel, Christophe and Meisel, Thomas
- Subjects
REFERENCE sources ,CERTIFICATION ,GEOLOGICAL time scales ,GEOCHEMICAL cycles ,GEOCHEMISTRY - Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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