11 research outputs found

    Aperçu paléogéographique de la transition cambro-ordovicienne dans la Montagne Noire méridionale (France) : résultats préliminaires

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    La transition cambro-ordovicienne de la Montagne Noire mĂ©ridionale reflĂšte une tendance regressive en milieux silicoclastiques, comprenant les complexes de barres hydrauliques de la formation de la Dentelle, dĂ©limitĂ©s par deux systĂšmes sĂ©dimentaires mixtes (carbonato-silicoclastiques) transgressifs dominĂ©s par l’action des tempĂȘtes. Ces systĂšmes correspondent respectivement aux formations sous-jacentes de la Gardie et de Val d’Homs, et Ă  la formation sus-jacente de Mounio, qui ont enregistrĂ© une activitĂ© tectonique synsĂ©dimentaire importante. Les communautĂ©s fauniques les plus riches et diversifiĂ©es (comprenant des trilobites, Ă©chinodermes, conodontes, brachiopodes Ă  coquilles carbonatĂ©es et phosphatiques, spicules d’éponges, etc.) occupent des emplacements trĂšs rĂ©duits. Ces communautĂ©s, associĂ©es Ă  une forte productivitĂ© carbonatĂ©e, sont situĂ©es sur des rampes intra-plates-formes et des horsts. MalgrĂ© l’absence de traces d’activitĂ© volcanique au cours de la transition cambro-ordovicienne en Montagne Noire mĂ©ridionale le rĂ©gime distensif responsable du dĂ©veloppement des palĂ©otopographies en horsts peut ĂȘtre reliĂ© avec un rĂ©gime gĂ©odynamique en extension. Ce dernier est reconnu dans d’autres secteurs du Massif central ayant enregistrĂ© des processus d’ocĂ©anisation et une importante activitĂ© volcanique Ă  la base de l’Ordovicien

    The Ordovician of France and neighbouring areas of Belgium and Germany

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    The Ordovician successions of France and neighbouring areas of Belgium and Germany are reviewed and correlated based on international chronostratigraphic and regional biostratigraphic charts. The same three megasequences related to the rift, drift and docking of Avalonia with Baltica can be tracked in Belgium and neighbouring areas (Brabant Massif and Ardenne inliers), western (Rhenish Massif) and northeastern Germany (RĂŒgen). The remaining investigated areas were part of Gondwana in the Ordovician. The Armorican Massif shares with the Iberian Peninsula a Furongian–Early Ordovician gap (Toledanian or Norman gap), and a continuous Mid–Late Ordovician shelf sedimentation. The Occitan Domain (Montagne Noire and Mouthoumet massifs), eastern Pyrenees and northwestern Corsica share with southwestern Sardinia continuous shelf sedimentation in the Early Ordovician, and a Mid Ordovician ‘Sardic gap’. In the Ordovician, the Maures Massif probably belonged to the same Sardo-Occitan domain. The Vosges and Schwarzwald massifs display compa-rable, poorly preserved Ordovician successions, suggesting affinities with the TeplĂĄ-Barrandian and/or Molda-nubian zones of Central Europe.This paper is a contribution to the International Geoscience Programme (IGCP) projects 653 "The onset of the Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event" and 735 “Rocks and the Rise of Ordovician Life: Filling knowledge gaps in the Early Palaeozoic Biodiversification". The authors are particularly grateful to Annalisa Ferretti, David A.T. Harper and Petr Kraft for their careful and constructive reviews, comments and suggestions, which greatly improved the quality and relevance of the paper

    Molecular-rotation-induced splitting of the binary ridge in the velocity map of sub-eV H<sup>+</sup> ions ejected from H<sub>2</sub> molecules by ion impact

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    International audienceIn studies of ion-induced molecular fragmentation, the challenging measurement of the velocity distribution of fragments emitted below 1-eV kinetic energy is rarely achieved, although most fragments have an energy below this value. Here, we study H+^+ fragment emission in collisions of 10-keV O+^+ ions with H2_2 molecules using a field-free time-of-flight technique developed specifically to detect sub-eV fragments. We find that, in the velocity map, the binary ridge due to direct H+^+ knockout is split into two parts arising from the rotational motion of the H2_2 molecule, and that this split scales with rotational velocity. The velocity distribution of the nuclei in the original molecule is determined and the thermally populated J = 1 rotational level is found to be the dominant contributor, although asymmetry in the split indicates projectile-induced rotational transitions between M sublevels. These rotation effects influence fragment emission probabilities, thus carrying important consequences for the radiation-induced hydrogen loss and H2_2 dissociation in the atmospheres or exospheres of planets and moons

    Molecular-rotation-induced splitting of the binary ridge in the velocity map of sub-eV H<sup>+</sup> ions ejected from H<sub>2</sub> molecules by ion impact

    No full text
    International audienceIn studies of ion-induced molecular fragmentation, the challenging measurement of the velocity distribution of fragments emitted below 1-eV kinetic energy is rarely achieved, although most fragments have an energy below this value. Here, we study H+^+ fragment emission in collisions of 10-keV O+^+ ions with H2_2 molecules using a field-free time-of-flight technique developed specifically to detect sub-eV fragments. We find that, in the velocity map, the binary ridge due to direct H+^+ knockout is split into two parts arising from the rotational motion of the H2_2 molecule, and that this split scales with rotational velocity. The velocity distribution of the nuclei in the original molecule is determined and the thermally populated J = 1 rotational level is found to be the dominant contributor, although asymmetry in the split indicates projectile-induced rotational transitions between M sublevels. These rotation effects influence fragment emission probabilities, thus carrying important consequences for the radiation-induced hydrogen loss and H2_2 dissociation in the atmospheres or exospheres of planets and moons

    Chapter 13 Cambrian echinoderm diversity and palaeobiogeography

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    <p>The distribution of all known Cambrian echinoderm taxa, encompassing both articulated specimens and taxonomically diagnostic isolated ossicles, is documented for the first time. The database described by 2011 comprises 188 species recorded from 65 formations from around the world. Formations that have yielded articulated echinoderms are unequally distributed in space and time. Only Laurentia and West Gondwana provide reasonably complete records at the resolution of Stage. The review of the biogeographical distributions of the eight major echinoderm clades shows that faunas from Laurentia and Northeast Gondwana (China and Korea) are distinct from those of West Gondwana and Southeast Gondwana (Australia); other regions are too poorly sampled to make firm palaeobiogeographical statements. Analysis of alpha diversity (species per formation) shows that diversity rose initially to Cambrian Stage 5, declined into Guzhangian and Paibian before returning to Stage 5 levels by the end of the Cambrian. This pattern is replicated in Laurentia and West Gondwana. We show that taxonomically diagnostic ossicles found in isolation typically occur significantly earlier than the first articulated specimens of the same taxa and provide important information on the first occurrence and palaeobiogeographical distribution of key taxa, and of the phylum as a whole. </p
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