139 research outputs found
Macrofossils and pollen representing forests of the pre-Taupo volcanic eruption (c. 1850 yr BP) era at Pureora and Benneydale, central North Island, New Zealand.
Micro- and macrofossil data from the remains of forests overwhelmed and buried at Pureora and Benneydale during the Taupo eruption (c. 1850 conventional radiocarbon yr BP) were compared. Classification of relative abundance data separated the techniques, rather than the locations, because the two primary clusters comprised pollen and litter/wood. This indicates that the pollen:litter/wood within-site comparisons (Pureora and Benneydale are 20 km apart) are not reliable. Plant macrofossils represented mainly local vegetation, while pollen assemblages represented a combination of local and regional vegetation. However, using ranked abundance and presence/absence data, both macrofossils and pollen at Pureora and Benneydale indicated conifer/broadleaved forest, of similar forest type and species composition at each site. This suggests that the forests destroyed by the eruption were typical of mid-altitude west Taupo forests, and that either data set (pollen or macrofossils) would have been adequate for regional forest interpretation.
The representation of c. 1850 yr BP pollen from the known buried forest taxa was generally consistent with trends determined by modern comparisons between pollen and their source vegetation, but with a few exceptions.
A pollen profile from between the Mamaku Tephra (c. 7250 yr BP) and the Taupo Ignimbrite indicated that the Benneydale forest had been markedly different in species dominance compared with the forest that was destroyed during the Taupo eruption. These differences probably reflect changes in drainage, and improvements in climate and/or soil fertility over the middle Holocene
Surface effects in nucleation and growth of smectic B crystals in thin samples
We present an experimental study of the surface effects (interactions with
the container walls) during the nucleation and growth of smectic B crystals
from the nematic in free growth and directional solidification of a mesogenic
molecule () called CCH4 in thin (of thickness in the 10
m range) samples. We follow the dynamics of the system in real time with a
polarizing microscope. The inner surfaces of the glass-plate samples are coated
with polymeric films, either rubbed polyimid (PI) films or monooriented
poly(tetrafluoroethylene) (PTFE) films deposited by friction at high
temperature. The orientation of the nematic and the smectic B is planar. In
PI-coated samples, the orientation effect of SmB crystals is mediated by the
nematic, whereas, in PTFE-coated samples, it results from a homoepitaxy
phenomenon occurring for two degenerate orientations. A recrystallization
phenomenon partly destroys the initial distribution of crystal orientations. In
directional solidification of polycrystals in PTFE-coated samples, a particular
dynamics of faceted grain boundary grooves is at the origin of a dynamical
mechanism of grain selection. Surface effects also are responsible for the
nucleation of misoriented terraces on facets and the generation of lattice
defects in the solid.Comment: 15 pages, 24 figures, submitted to PR
Principal component analysis of summertime ground site measurements in the Athabasca oil sands with a focus on analytically unresolved intermediate-volatility organic compounds
In this paper, measurements of air pollutants made at a ground site near Fort
McKay in the Athabasca oil sands region as part of a multi-platform campaign
in the summer of 2013 are presented. The observations included measurements
of selected volatile organic compounds (VOCs) by a gas chromatograph–ion
trap mass spectrometer (GC-ITMS). This instrument observed a large,
analytically unresolved hydrocarbon peak (with a retention index between 1100
and 1700) associated with intermediate-volatility organic compounds (IVOCs).
However, the activities or processes that contribute to the release of these
IVOCs in the oil sands region remain unclear.
Principal component analysis (PCA) with varimax rotation was applied to
elucidate major source types impacting the sampling site in the summer of
2013. The analysis included 28 variables, including concentrations of total
odd nitrogen (NOy), carbon dioxide (CO2), methane
(CH4), ammonia (NH3), carbon monoxide (CO), sulfur
dioxide (SO2), total reduced-sulfur compounds (TRSs), speciated
monoterpenes (including α- and β-pinene and limonene),
particle volume calculated from measured size distributions of particles less
than 10 and 1 µm in diameter (PM10−1 and PM1),
particle-surface-bound polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (pPAHs), and aerosol
mass spectrometer composition measurements, including refractory black carbon
(rBC) and organic aerosol components. The PCA was complemented by bivariate
polar plots showing the joint wind speed and direction dependence of air
pollutant concentrations to illustrate the spatial distribution of sources in
the area. Using the 95 % cumulative percentage of variance criterion, 10
components were identified and categorized by source type. These included
emissions by wet tailing ponds, vegetation, open pit mining operations,
upgrader facilities, and surface dust. Three components correlated with
IVOCs, with the largest associated with surface mining and likely caused
by the unearthing and processing of raw bitumen.</p
Polyploidy and Aneuploidy in Hypolepis, and the Evolution of the Dennstaedtiales
Volume: 73Start Page: 97End Page: 10
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