7,845 research outputs found
Indicators of hot fluid migration in sedimentary basins: evidence from the UK Atlantic Margin
Microthermometric, petrographic and isotopic methods have been used to detect evidence for hot fluid flow in Mesozoic and Tertiary sediments from the NW UK continental margin, West of Shetland. New data presented here show that temperatures are hotter by c. 40°C in Tertiary samples than in the underlying Jurassic and Cretaceous sediments in wells 204/28-1, 206/5-2, 208/27-1, especially in cements from samples as young as mid–upper Eocene in age. Paleocene samples can be discriminated from older (Jurassic and Cretaceous) and younger (Eocene) sandstones on the basis of silica cement morphology and cathodoluminescence zonation. Jurassic, Cretaceous and Eocene quartz cements show oscillatory zoning as a consequence of relatively slow burial cementation. In direct contrast, rapid precipitation of silica cements from the cooling of hot fluids has produced unzoned cements in all but one Paleocene sample. No evidence for unzoned quartz cements was noted in any pre-Paleocene or Eocene samples. The restriction of hot fluid inclusions and unzoned cements to the Paleocene and post-Paleocene is consistent with lateral focusing of hot fluids. Isotopic data from kaolinites indicate that these fluids are best represented by mixtures of Mesozoic or Tertiary meteoric waters and marine porewaters that have undergone isotopic alteration through interaction with volcanic material. Our results indicate that hot fluid flow occurred over a relatively long time-scale (i.e. several million years), which may have important consequences for the degradation of reservoired hydrocarbons in West of Shetland Paleocene plays
Das Irdisch-Absolute: The development of a theory in the work of Hermann Broch
This thesis is a chronological study of Broch's
work from the early 1930's until his death in 1951. The
former date is selected as the point of departure
because, with the publication of "Der Zerfall der Werte"
in Die Schlafwandler in 1932, Broch, for the first time,
gave definitive expression to his theory of values, which
he had been gradually formulating in years of research
prior to that date. There are two main parts to this
study. Broch's theoretical writings are first examined
with a view to showing how and why the theory of "das
Irdisch-Absolute" developed and to explaining exactly
what it is. In the second part his novels are examined
with the aim of establishing the extent to which the
developing theory of "das Irdisch-Absolute" is reflected
in them.
It can be shown that the basic development in
question is a progression in Broch's thinking from reliance
on the purely formal, abstract, transcendental Absolute of
the Logos to the conviction that man, as the empirical,
earthly Absolute, must be the final criterion by and
against which all values must be judged. The main purpose
of the thesis, as explained in the introduction, is to
show how Broch, an intellectual and theoretician, was
forced by historical circumstances continually to modify
and revise his thinking on the basic question of ethics.
This revision, of which Broch was never fully aware
himself, is seen in the way he progressively abandoned a
highly abstract, theoretical and speculative conception
of ethics, which seemed to have little immediate
relevance to the problems of his own generation, in
favour of a more practical morality of direct humanitarian commitment
Tonsillectomy among children with low baseline acute throat infection consultation rates in UK general practices: a cohort study.
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the effectiveness of tonsillectomy in reducing acute throat infection (ATI) consultation rates over 6 years' follow-up among children with low baseline ATI consultation rates.
DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study.
SETTING: UK general practices from the Clinical Practice Research Datalink.
PARTICIPANTS: Children aged 4-15 years with ≤3 ATI consultations during the 3 years prior to 2001 (baseline). 450 children who underwent tonsillectomy (tonsillectomy group) and 13 442 other children with an ATI consultation (comparison group) in 2001.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Mean differences in ATI consultation rates over the first 3 years' and subsequent 3 years' follow-up compared with 3 years prior to 2001 (baseline); odds of ≥3 ATI consultations at the same time points.
RESULTS: Among children in the tonsillectomy group, the 3-year mean ATI consultation rate decreased from 1.31 to 0.66 over the first 3 years' follow-up and further declined to 0.60 over the subsequent 3 years' follow-up period. Compared with children who had no operation, those who underwent tonsillectomy experienced a reduction in 3-year mean ATI consultations per child of 2.5 (95% CI 2.3 to 2.6, p<0.001) over the first 3 years' follow-up, but only 1.2 (95% CI 1.0 to 1.4, p<0.001) over the subsequent 3 years' follow-up compared with baseline, respectively. This equates to a mean reduction of 3.7 ATI consultations over a 6-year period and approximates to a mean annual reduction of 0.6 ATI consultations per child, per year, over 6 years' follow-up. Children who underwent tonsillectomy were also much less likely to experience ≥3 ATI consultations during the first 3 years' follow-up (adjusted OR=0.12, 95% CI 0.08 to 0.17) and the subsequent 3 years' follow-up (adjusted OR=0.24, 95% CI 0.14 to 0.41).
CONCLUSIONS: Among children with low baseline ATI rates, there was a statistically significant reduction in ATI consultation rates over 6 years' follow-up. However, the relatively modest clinical benefit needs to be weighed against the potential risks and complications associated with surgery
Inorganic Surface Passivation of PbS Nanocrystals resulting in Strong Photoluminescent Emission
Strong photoluminescent emission has been obtained from 3 nm PbS nanocrystals
in aqueous colloidal solution, following treatment with CdS precursors. The
observed emission can extend across the entire visible spectrum and usually
includes a peak near 1.95 eV. We show that much of the visible emission results
from absorption by higher-lying excited states above 3.0 eV with subsequent
relaxation to and emission from states lying above the observed band-edge of
the PbS nanocrystals. The fluorescent lifetimes for this emission are in the
nanosecond regime, characteristic of exciton recombination.Comment: Preprint, 23 pages, 6 figure
Exclusive diffractive processes at HERA within the dipole picture
We present a simultaneous analysis, within an impact parameter dependent
saturated dipole model, of exclusive diffractive vector meson (J/psi, phi and
rho) production, deeply virtual Compton scattering and the total gamma* p cross
section data measured at HERA. Various cross sections measured as a function of
the kinematic variables Q^2, W and t are well described, with little
sensitivity to the details of the vector meson wave functions. We determine the
properties of the gluon density in the proton in both longitudinal and
transverse dimensions, including the impact parameter dependent saturation
scale. The overall success of the description indicates universality of the
emerging gluon distribution and proton shape.Comment: 48 pages, 28 figures, the final version to appear in Physical Review
Levels of genetic polymorphism: marker loci versus quantitative traits
Species are the units used to measure ecological diversity and alleles are the units of genetic diversity. Genetic variation within and among species has been documented most extensively using allozyme electrophoresis. This reveals wide differences in genetic variability within, and genetic distances among, species, demonstrating that species are not equivalent units of diversity. The extent to which the pattern observed for allozymes can be used to infer patterns of genetic variation in quantitative traits depends on the forces generating and maintaining variability. Allozyme variation is probably not strictly neutral but, nevertheless, heterozygosity is expected to be influenced by population size and genetic distance will be affected by time since divergence. The same is true for quantitative traits influenced by many genes and under weak stabilizing selection. However, the limited data available suggest that allozyme variability is a poor predictor of genetic variation in quantitative traits within populations. It is a better predictor of general phenotypic divergence and of postzygotic isolation between populations or species, but is only weakly correlated with prezygotic isolation. Studies of grasshopper and planthopper mating signal variation and assortative mating illustrate how these characters evolve independently of general genetic and morphological variation. The role of such traits in prezygotic isolation, and hence speciation, means that they will contribute significantly to the diversity of levels of genetic variation within and among species
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