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The 2001 Omani-Swiss meteorite search campaign and recovery of Shergottite Sayh Al Uhaymir 094
Investigation of flow fields within large scale hypersonic inlet models
Analytical and experimental investigations were conducted to determine the internal flow characteristics in model passages representative of hypersonic inlets for use at Mach numbers to about 12. The passages were large enough to permit measurements to be made in both the core flow and boundary layers. The analytical techniques for designing the internal contours and predicting the internal flow-field development accounted for coupling between the boundary layers and inviscid flow fields by means of a displacement-thickness correction. Three large-scale inlet models, each having a different internal compression ratio, were designed to provide high internal performance with an approximately uniform static-pressure distribution at the throat station. The models were tested in the Ames 3.5-Foot Hypersonic Wind Tunnel at a nominal free-stream Mach number of 7.4 and a unit free-stream Reynolds number of 8.86 X one million per meter
Late Palaeozoic to Neogene Geodynamic Evolution of the north-eastern Oman Margin.
When the highlands of Arabia were still covered with an ice shield in the latest Carboniferous/Early Permian period, separation of Gondwana started. This led to the creation of the Batain basin (part of the early Indian Ocean), off the northeastern margin of Oman. The rifting reactivated an Infra-Cambrian rift shoulder along the northeastern Oman margin and detritus from this high was shed into the interior Oman basin. Whereas carbonate platform deposits became widespread along the margin of the Neo-Tethys (northern rim of Oman), drifting and oceanization of the Batain basin started only in Late Jurassic/Early Cretaceous time. Extensional tectonics was followed in the Late Cretaceous by contraction caused by the northward drift of Greater India and Afro-Arabia. This resulted in the collision of Afro-Arabia with an intra-oceanic trench and obduction of the Semail ophiolite and the Hawasina nappes south to southwestward onto the northern Oman margin ~80 m.y. ago. During the middle Cretaceous, the oceanic lithosphere (including the future eastern ophiolites of Oman) drifted northwards as part of the Indian plate. At the Cretaceous-Palaeogene transition (~65 Ma), oblique convergence between Greater India and Afro-Arabia caused fragments of the early Indian Ocean to be thrust onto the Batain basin. Subsequently, the Lower Permian to uppermost Maastrichtian sediments and volcanic rocks of the Batain basin, along with fragments of Indian Ocean floor (eastern ophiolites), were obducted northwestward onto the northeastern margin of Oman. Palaeogene neo-autochtonous sedimentary rocks subsequently covered the nappe pile. Tertiary extensional tectonics related to Red Sea rifting in the Late Eocene was followed by Miocene shortening, associated with the collision of Arabia and Eurasia and the formation of the Oman Mountains
Geochronological and thermometric evidence of unusually hot fluids in an Alpine fissure of Lauzière granite (Belledonne, Western Alps)
A multi-method investigation into Lauzière granite, located in the external Belledonne
massif of the French Alps, reveals unusually hot hydrothermal conditions in
vertical open fractures (Alpine-type clefts). The host-rock granite shows
sub-vertical mylonitic microstructures and partial retrogression at
temperatures of < 400 ∘C during Alpine tectonometamorphism.
Novel zircon fission-track (ZFT) data in the granite give ages at
16.3 ± 1.9 and 14.3 ± 1.6 Ma, confirming that Alpine
metamorphism was high enough to reset the pre-Alpine cooling ages and that
the Lauzière granite had already cooled below 240–280 ∘C and
was exhumed to < 10 km at that time. Novel microthermometric data
and chemical compositions of fluid inclusions obtained on millimetric
monazite and on quartz crystals from the same cleft indicate early
precipitation of monazite from a hot fluid at
T > 410 ∘C, followed by a main stage of quartz growth
at 300–320 ∘C and 1.5–2.2 kbar. Previous Th-Pb dating of cleft
monazite at 12.4 ± 0.1 Ma clearly indicates that this hot fluid
infiltration took place significantly later than the peak of the Alpine
metamorphism. Advective heating due to the hot fluid flow caused resetting of
fission tracks in zircon in the cleft hanging wall, with a ZFT age at
10.3 ± 1.0 Ma. The results attest to the highly dynamic fluid
pathways, allowing the circulation of deep mid-crustal fluids,
150–250 ∘C hotter than the host rock, which affect the thermal regime only at the wall rock of the
Alpine-type cleft. Such advective heating may impact the ZFT data and
represent a pitfall for exhumation rate reconstructions in areas affected by
hydrothermal fluid flow.</p
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