677 research outputs found
Radiometric age constraints for glacial terminations IX and VII
Buried sedimentary aggradational sections deposited between 800 ka and 600 ka in the
Tiber River coastal alluvial plain have been studied using borecores from around Rome. 40Ar/39Ar
ages on sanidine and/or leucite from intercalated tephra layers and paleomagnetic investigation of
clay sections provide geochronological constraints on the timing of aggradation of two of these
alluvial sections, and demonstrate that they were deposited in response to eustatic sea level rise
caused by glacial terminations IX and VII. 40Ar/39Ar age data indicate ages of 802 ± 8 ka and 649
± 3 ka for glacial terminations IX, and VII, respectively, providing a rare test, beyond the range
of U-series dating for corals and speleothems (~500 ka), of the astronomically calibrated
timescale developed for oxygen isotope records from deep sea cores
Tephrochronology in faulted Middle Pleistocene tephra layer in the Val d’Agri area (Southern Italy)
The High Agri River Valley is a Quaternary Basin located along the hinge of the Southern Apennines fold-andthrust
belt. The inner margin of the orogen has been affected by intense transtensional and normal faulting, which
accompanied vigorous volcanism during the Quaternary. Marker tephra layers are distributed across the whole of
Southern Italy and provide a powerful tool to constrain both the size of eruptions and the regional activity of extensional
faults controlling basin evolution. Paleoseismological trenching within the Monti della Maddalena
range, that borders the Agri River Valley to the south-west, has exposed a faulted stratigraphic sequence and recovered
a 10 cm thick tephra layer involved in deformation. This is the first tephra horizon recognized in the high
Agri Valley, which, based on the stratigraphic study of the trench, lies in a primary position. 40Ar/39Ar dating
constrain its age to 266 ka and provide an important marker for the Middle Pleistocene tephrochronology of the
region. Together with dating, geochemical analysis suggests a possible volcanic source in the Campanian region
40Ar/39Ar and 14C geochronology of the Albano maar deposits: Implications for 2 defining the age and eruptive style of the most recent explosive activity at Colli 3 Albani Volcanic District, Central Italy
New 40Ar/39Ar and 14C ages have been found for the Albano multiple maar pyroclastic units and underlying 25
paleosols to document the most recent explosive activity in the Colli Albani Volcanic District (CAVD) near 26
Rome, Italy, consisting of seven eruptions (Albano 1 27
^
=
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oldest). Both dating methodologies have been applied
on several proximal units and on four mid-distal fall/surge deposits, the latter correlated, according to two 28
current different views, to either the Albano or the Campi di Annibale hydromagmatic center. The 40Ar/39Ar 29
ages on leucite phenocrysts from the mid-distal units yielded ages of ca. 72 ka, 73 ka, 41 ka and 36 ka BP, 30
which are indistinguishable from the previously determined 40Ar/39Ar ages of the proximal Albano units 1, 2, 31
5 and 7, thus confirming their stratigraphic correspondence. 32
Twenty-one 14C ages of the paleosols beneath Albano units 3, 5, 6 and 7 were found for samples collected 33
from 13 proximal and distal sections, some of which were the same sections sampled for 40Ar/39Ar 34
measurements. The 14C ages were found to be stratigraphically inconsistent and highly scattered, and were 35
systematically younger than the 40Ar/39Ar ages, ranging 36
^
from 35 ka
^
to 3 ka. Considering the significant
consistence of the 40Ar/39Ar chronological framework, we interpret the scattered and contradictory 14C ages 37
to be the result of a variable contamination of the paleosols by younger organic carbon deriving from the 38
superficial soil horizons. 39
These results suggest that multiple isotopic systems anchored to a robust stratigraphic framework may need 40
to be employed to determine accurately the geochronology of the CAVD as well as other volcanic districts. 4
Valence State Partitioning of Cr and V Between Pyroxene - Melt: Estimates of Oxygen Fugacity for Martian Basalt QUE 94201
Several studies, using different oxybarometers, have suggested that the variation of fO2 in martian basalts spans about 3 log units from approx. IW-1 to IW+2. The relatively oxidized basalts (e.g., pyroxene-phyric Shergotty) are enriched in incompatible elements, while the relatively reduced basalts (e.g., olivine-phyric Y980459) are depleted in incompatible elements. A popular interpretation of the above observations is that the martian mantle contains two reservoirs; 1) oxidized and enriched, and 2) reduced and depleted. The basalts are thus thought to represent mixing between these two reservoirs. Recently, Shearer et al. determined the fO2 of primitive olivine-phyric basalt Y980459 to be IW+0.9 using the partitioning of V between olivine and melt. In applying this technique to other basalts, Shearer et al. concluded that the martian mantle shergottite source was depleted and varied only slightly in fO2 (IW to IW+1). Thus the more oxidized, enriched basalts had assimilated a crustal component on their path to the martian surface. In this study we attempt to address the above debate on martian mantle fO2 using the partitioning of Cr and V into pyroxene in pyroxene-phyric basalt QUE 94201
Logarithmic rate dependence in deforming granular materials
Rate-independence for stresses within a granular material is a basic tenet of
many models for slow dense granular flows. By contrast, logarithmic rate
dependence of stresses is found in solid-on-solid friction, in geological
settings, and elsewhere. In this work, we show that logarithmic rate-dependence
occurs in granular materials for plastic (irreversible) deformations that occur
during shearing but not for elastic (reversible) deformations, such as those
that occur under moderate repetitive compression. Increasing the shearing rate,
\Omega, leads to an increase in the stress and the stress fluctuations that at
least qualitatively resemble what occurs due to an increase in the density.
Increases in \Omega also lead to qualitative changes in the distributions of
stress build-up and relaxation events. If shearing is stopped at t=0, stress
relaxations occur with \sigma(t)/ \sigma(t=0) \simeq A \log(t/t_0). This
collective relaxation of the stress network over logarithmically long times
provides a mechanism for rate-dependent strengthening.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures. RevTeX
Simulations of Weighted Tree Automata
Simulations of weighted tree automata (wta) are considered. It is shown how
such simulations can be decomposed into simpler functional and dual functional
simulations also called forward and backward simulations. In addition, it is
shown in several cases (fields, commutative rings, Noetherian semirings,
semiring of natural numbers) that all equivalent wta M and N can be joined by a
finite chain of simulations. More precisely, in all mentioned cases there
exists a single wta that simulates both M and N. Those results immediately
yield decidability of equivalence provided that the semiring is finitely (and
effectively) presented.Comment: 17 pages, 2 figure
Diagnosis and Pharmacotherapy of Stable Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease : The Finnish Guidelines
Peer reviewe
Mechanisms for slow strengthening in granular materials
Several mechanisms cause a granular material to strengthen over time at low
applied stress. The strength is determined from the maximum frictional force
F_max experienced by a shearing plate in contact with wet or dry granular
material after the layer has been at rest for a waiting time \tau. The layer
strength increases roughly logarithmically with \tau -only- if a shear stress
is applied during the waiting time. The mechanisms of strengthening are
investigated by sensitive displacement measurements and by imaging of particle
motion in the shear zone. Granular matter can strengthen due to a slow shift in
the particle arrangement under shear stress. Humidity also leads to
strengthening, but is found not to be its sole cause. In addition to these time
dependent effects, the static friction coefficient can also be increased by
compaction of the granular material under some circumstances, and by cycling of
the applied shear stress.Comment: 21 pages, 11 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
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