2,420 research outputs found
Serpulid microbialitic bioherms from the upper Sarmatian (Middle Miocene) of the central Paratethys Sea (NW Hungary) – witnesses of a microbial sea
We present previously unknown stacked bowl-shaped bioherms reaching a size of 45 cm in diameter and 40 cm in height from weakly solidified peloidal sand from the upper Sarmatian of the Paratethys Sea. The bioherms were mostly embedded in sediment, and the “growth stages” reflect a reaction on sediment accretion and sinking into the soft sediment. The bioherms are spirorbid–microclot–acicular cement boundstones with densely packed Janua tubes surrounded by microclots and acicular cement solidifying the bioherm. The surrounding sediment is a thrombolite made of peloids and polylobate particles (mesoclots) which are solidified synsedimentarily by micrite cement and dog-tooth cement in a later stage. The shape of the bioherms reflects a series of growth stages with an initial stage (“start-up stage”) followed by a more massive “keep-up stage” which grades into a structure with a collar-like outer rim and a central protrusion and finally by a termination of growth (“give-up stage”). The setting was a shallow subtidal environment with normal marine or elevated saline, probably oligotrophic, conditions with an elevated alkalinity. The stacked bowl-shaped microbialites are a unique feature that has so far been undescribed. Modern and Neogene microbialite occurrences are not direct analogues to the described structures, but the marine examples, like in The Bahamas, Shark Bay and the Persian Gulf, offer insight into their microbial composition and environmental parameters.
The microbialites and the surrounding sediment document a predominance of microbial activity in the shallow marine environments of the Paratethys Sea during the late Middle Miocene, which was characterized by a warm, arid climate.</p
Chronology and integrated stratigraphy of the Miocene Sinj Basin (Dinaride Lake System, Croatia)
a b s t r a c t a r t i c l e i n f o In the Miocene, the intra-montane basins of the Dinaric Mountain Chain harbored a series of long-lived lakes constituting the so-called Dinaride Lake System. The thick lacustrine sedimentary records of these lakes provide an excellent opportunity to study evolution and radiation of mollusks in an isolated environment. The 500 m thick infill that accumulated in the Sinj Basin is one of the key records because of its excellent mollusk preservation. Recent studies on the depositional history, pollen assemblages and large mammals have enhanced the understanding not only of Lake Sinj, but also of the regional climatic developments and faunal migratory patterns. A reliable chronology of the development of Lake Sinj, which is crucial for global correlation of its endemic realm, was still lacking. In this paper we present a detailed time-frame for the Miocene Sinj basin based on palaeomagnetic and 40 Ar/ 39 Ar data. We conclude that deposition took place between 18.0 to 15.0 Ma, a time span that correlates with the upper Burdigalian and lower Langhian Mediterranean stages and Ottnangian, Karpatian and lowermost Badenian Paratethys stages. Furthermore, we determined the timing of several events in mollusk evolution, important for correlation across the Dinarides. An age of 15.0 Ma is attributed to the large mammals Conohyus and Gomphotherium, preserved in the upper part of the basin stratigraphy
Analysis of the low-energy electron-recoil spectrum of the CDMS experiment
We report on the analysis of the low-energy electron-recoil spectrum from the
CDMS II experiment using data with an exposure of 443.2 kg-days. The analysis
provides details on the observed counting rate and possible background sources
in the energy range of 2 - 8.5 keV. We find no significant excess in the
counting rate above background, and compare this observation to the recent DAMA
results. In the framework of a conversion of a dark matter particle into
electromagnetic energy, our 90% confidence level upper limit of 0.246
events/kg/day at 3.15 keV is lower than the total rate above background
observed by DAMA by 8.9. In absence of any specific particle physics
model to provide the scaling in cross section between NaI and Ge, we assume a
Z^2 scaling. With this assumption the observed rate in DAMA differs from the
upper limit in CDMS by 6.8. Under the conservative assumption that the
modulation amplitude is 6% of the total rate we obtain upper limits on the
modulation amplitude a factor of ~2 less than observed by DAMA, constraining
some possible interpretations of this modulation.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Characterization of SuperCDMS 1-inch Ge Detectors
The newly commissioned SuperCDMS Soudan experiment aims to search for WIMP dark matter with a sensitivity to cross sections of 5×10^(−45)cm^2 and larger (90% CL upper limit). This goal is facilitated by a new set of germanium detectors, 2.5 times more massive than the ones used in the CDMS-II experiment, and with a different athermal phonon sensor layout that eliminates radial degeneracy in position reconstruction of high radius events. We present characterization data on these detectors, as well as improved techniques for correcting position-dependent variations in pulse shape across the detector. These improvements provide surface-event discrimination sufficient for a reach of 5×10^(−45)cm^2
Results from a Low-Energy Analysis of the CDMS II Germanium Data
We report results from a reanalysis of data from the Cryogenic Dark Matter
Search (CDMS II) experiment at the Soudan Underground Laboratory. Data taken
between October 2006 and September 2008 using eight germanium detectors are
reanalyzed with a lowered, 2 keV recoil-energy threshold, to give increased
sensitivity to interactions from Weakly Interacting Massive Particles (WIMPs)
with masses below ~10 GeV/c^2. This analysis provides stronger constraints than
previous CDMS II results for WIMP masses below 9 GeV/c^2 and excludes parameter
space associated with possible low-mass WIMP signals from the DAMA/LIBRA and
CoGeNT experiments.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures. Supplemental material included as ancillary
files. v3) Added appendix with additional details regarding energy scale and
background
Search for inelastic dark matter with the CDMS II experiment
Results are presented from a reanalysis of the entire five-tower data set
acquired with the Cryogenic Dark Matter Search (CDMS II) experiment at the
Soudan Underground Laboratory, with an exposure of 969 kg-days. The analysis
window was extended to a recoil energy of 150 keV, and an improved
surface-event background-rejection cut was defined to increase the sensitivity
of the experiment to the inelastic dark matter (iDM) model. Three dark matter
candidates were found between 25 keV and 150 keV. The probability to observe
three or more background events in this energy range is 11%. Because of the
occurrence of these events the constraints on the iDM parameter space are
slightly less stringent than those from our previous analysis, which used an
energy window of 10-100 keV.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, minor changes to match published version,
conclusion unchange
Low-threshold analysis of CDMS shallow-site data
Data taken during the final shallow-site run of the first tower of the
Cryogenic Dark Matter Search (CDMS II) detectors have been reanalyzed with
improved sensitivity to small energy depositions. Four ~224 g germanium and two
~105 g silicon detectors were operated at the Stanford Underground Facility
(SUF) between December 2001 and June 2002, yielding 118 live days of raw
exposure. Three of the germanium and both silicon detectors were analyzed with
a new low-threshold technique, making it possible to lower the germanium and
silicon analysis thresholds down to the actual trigger thresholds of ~1 keV and
~2 keV, respectively. Limits on the spin-independent cross section for weakly
interacting massive particles (WIMPs) to elastically scatter from nuclei based
on these data exclude interesting parameter space for WIMPs with masses below 9
GeV/c^2. Under standard halo assumptions, these data partially exclude
parameter space favored by interpretations of the DAMA/LIBRA and CoGeNT
experiments' data as WIMP signals, and exclude new parameter space for WIMP
masses between 3 GeV/c^2 and 4 GeV/c^2.Comment: 18 pages, 12 figures, 5 table
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