1,182 research outputs found

    Magnetic mineral populations in lower oceanic crustal gabbros (Atlantis Bank, SW Indian Ridge): implications for marine magnetic anomalies

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    Author Posting. Ā© American Geophysical Union, 2020. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems 21(3), (2020): e2019GC008847, doi:10.1029/2019GC008847.To learn more about magnetic properties of the lower ocean crust and its contributions to marine magnetic anomalies, gabbro samples were collected from International Ocean Discovery Program Hole U1473A at Atlantis Bank on the Southwest Indian Ridge. Detailed magnetic property work links certain magnetic behaviors and domain states to specific magnetic mineral populations. Measurements on whole rocks and mineral separates included magnetic hysteresis, firstā€order reversal curves, lowā€temperature remanence measurements, thermomagnetic analysis, and magnetic force microscopy. Characteristics of the thermomagnetic data indicate that the upper ~500 m of the hole has undergone hydrothermal alteration. The thermomagnetic and natural remanent magnetization data are consistent with earlier observations from Hole 735B that show remanence arises from lowā€Ti magnetite and that natural remanent magnetizations are up to 25 A māˆ’1 in evolved Feā€Ti oxide gabbros, but are mostly <1 A māˆ’1. Magnetite is present in at least three forms. Primary magnetite is associated with coarseā€grained oxides that are more frequent in the upper part of the hole. This magnetic population is linked to dominantly ā€œpseudoā€singleā€domainā€ behavior that arises from fineā€scale lamellar intergrowths within the large oxides. Deeper in the hole the magnetic signal is more commonly dominated by an interacting singleā€domain assemblage most likely found along crystal discontinuities in olivine and/or pyroxene. A third contribution is from noninteracting singleā€domain inclusions within plagioclase. Because the concentration of the highly magnetic, oxideā€rich gabbros is greatest toward the surface, the signal from coarse oxides will likely dominate the nearā€bottom magnetic anomaly signal at Atlantis Bank.This work used samples and data provided by the International Ocean Discovery Program. Funding was provided by the U.S. Science Support Program (J.B.). I.L. has benefited from a Smithsonian Edward and Helen Hintz Secretarial Scholarship. We thank the members of the IODP Expedition 360 Science Party, and the captain and crew of the JOIDES Resolution. Part of this work was done as a Visiting Fellow at the Institute for Rock Magnetism (IRM) at the University of Minnesota. The IRM is made possible through the Instrumentation and Facilities program of the National Science Foundation, Earth Sciences Division, and by funding from the University of Minnesota. We would like to thank IRM staff M. Jackson, P. Solheid, and D. Bilardello for their generous assistance. Many thanks to A. Butula, K. Vernon, and J. Marquardt for their assistance with rock magnetic measurements at UWM and to L. McHenry for assistance with XRD. We also thank two anonymous reviewers for their thoughtful comments that improved the manuscript. Magnetic data associated with this manuscript are available in the Magnetics Information Consortium (MagIC) database at https://www.earthref.org/MagIC/doi/10.1029/2019GC008847. XRD data are available at https://zenodo.org/record/3611642.2020-08-2

    Multiple case-study analysis of quality management practices within UK Six Sigma and non-Six Sigma manufacturing small- and medium-sized enterprises

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    This paper examines multiple case-study analysis of quality management practices within UK Six Sigma and non-Six Sigma manufacturing small- and medium-sized enterprises

    An investment case analysis for the prevention and treatment of adolescent mental disorders and suicide in England

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    BackgroundAdolescent mental health (AMH) needs in England have increased dramatically and needs exceed treatment availability. This study undertook a comparative assessment of the health and economic return on investment (ROI) of interventions to prevent and treat mental disorders among adolescents (10ā€“19ā€‰years) and examined intervention affordability and readiness.MethodsInterventions were identified following a review of published and grey literature. A Markov model followed a simulated adolescent cohort to estimate implementation costs and health, education, and economic benefits. Intervention affordability was assessed, comparing annual cost per adolescent with NHS England per capita spending, and an expert panel assessed intervention readiness using a validated framework.ResultsOver 10- and 80-year horizons, interventions to treat mild anxiety and mild depression were most cost-effective, with the highest individual lifetime ROI (GBP 5822 GBP 1 and GBP 257: GBP 1). Preventing anxiety and depression was most affordable and ā€˜implementation readyā€™ and offered the highest health and economic benefits. A priority package (anxiety and depression prevention; mild anxiety and mild depression treatment) would avert 5 million disability-adjusted life-years (DALYS) and achieve an ROI of GBP 15: GBP 1 over 10ā€‰years or 11.5 million DALYs (ROI of GBP 55: GBP 1) over 80ā€‰years.ConclusionThe economic benefits from preventing and treating common adolescent mental disorders equivalent to 25% of NHS Englandā€™s annual spending in 2021 over 10ā€‰years and 91% over 80ā€‰years. Preventing and early treatment for anxiety and depression had the highest ROIs and strong implementation readiness.<br/

    Post-fledging habitat selection in a rapidly declining farmland bird, the European turtle dove Streptopelia turtur

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    Post-fledging survival plays a vital role in the dynamics of bird populations and yet is the least studied avian life-stage. Habitat requirements post-fledging may have important implications for behaviour and survival, especially for declining populations in landscapes that have undergone wide-scale anthropogenic modification, resulting in an altered distribution and composition of habitats. The European Turtle Dove is a widespread but rapidly declining species both within the UK and across Europe. Reduced seed food availability is thought to influence breeding success of this species, but it is not known whether post-fledging survival may also be influenced by seed availability. Here, we use leg-ring radio-tag attachments to monitor post-fledging survival and movements in 15 Turtle Dove nestlings from eight nests monitored during 2014 as part of a wider autecological study. Fledglings remained in close proximity to their nest for three weeks post-tagging, spending more than half their time in the immediate vicinity (within āˆ¼ 20 m) of the nest. 95% of foraging trips during this period were within 329 m of the nest and fledglings selected seed-rich habitat (semi-natural grassland, low-intensity grazing, fallow and quarries). Fledglings that were heavier and in better body condition at seven days old were more likely to survive for 30 days post-fledging, and the proportion of available seed-rich habitat was a strong predictor of nestling weight and condition at seven days old. Whilst our sample size is modest, this study highlights the crucial role of food availability in juvenile survival, both while adults are feeding nestlings, and to recently fledged young, and the potential for agri-environment schemes providing foraging and nesting habitats in close proximity to provide important benefits

    Recognizing detachment-mode seafloor spreading in the deep geological past

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    Large-offset oceanic detachment faults are a characteristic of slow-and ultraslow-spreading ridges, leading to the formation of oceanic core complexes (OCCs) that expose upper mantle and lower crustal rocks on the seafloor. The lithospheric extension accommodated by these structures is now recognized as a fundamentally distinct &apos;&apos;detachment-mode&apos;&apos; of seafloor spreading compared to classical magmatic accretion. Here we demonstrate a paleomagnetic methodology that allows unequivocal recognition of detachment-mode seafloor spreading in ancient ophiolites and apply this to a potential Jurassic detachment fault system in the Mirdita ophiolite (Albania). We show that footwall and hanging wall blocks either side of an inferred detachment have significantly different magnetizations that can only be explained by relative rotation during seafloor spreading. The style of rotation is shown to be identical to rolling hinge footwall rotation documented recently in OCCs in the Atlantic, confirming that detachment-mode spreading operated at least as far back as the Jurassic. I t is now known that large-offset detachment faulting plays a fundamental role in accommodating plate separation at slow-and ultraslow-spreading mid-ocean ridges We illustrate this approach using an example from the northern Mirdita ophiolite of Albania. This is a slice of Jurassic (c. 165 Ma 15 ) oceanic lithosphere, representing a remnant of the eastern branch of the slow-spreading Tethys Ocean that was obducted during Europe-Adria convergence 17 . The contact between mantle and upper crustal rocks in the region of the Puka Massif is locally marked by mylonitic shear zones in amphibole-bearing peridotite

    Indirect effects of pesticides on breeding yellowhammer (Emberiza citrinella

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    Abstract Intensification of agriculture is believed to have caused declines in farmland bird populations. One of the key elements of recent agricultural intensification is the increased use of pesticides. However, studies elucidating relationships between individual management practices and responses in bird populations remain rare. Here, evidence is presented of indirect effects of pesticides on behaviour and nestling condition of yellowhammers (Emberiza citrinella L.). Insecticide use was associated with reduced abundance of invertebrate food at the field scale resulting, early in the season (when nestlings were fed exclusively on invertebrates), in a negative correlation with yellowhammer foraging intensity. There was also a negative relationship between insecticide use and nestling body condition. While cumulative effects of repeated spraying can have impacts, the occurrence of any insecticide spraying in the breeding season may be more detrimental than multiple sprays at other times. Minimising applications of persistent broad-spectrum insecticides during March-June, the provision of alternative unsprayed foraging habitat and advice on mitigating indirect effects of pesticides to advisers and users are likely to benefit nesting yellowhammers.

    High rates of infection by blood parasites during the nestling phase in UK Columbids with notes on ecological associations

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    Studies of blood parasite infection in nestling birds rarely find a high prevalence of infection. This is likely due to a combination of short nestling periods (limiting the age at which nestlings can be sampled) and long parasite prepatent periods before gametocytes can be detected in peripheral blood. Here we examine rates of blood parasite infection in nestlings from three Columbid species in the UK. We use this system to address two key hypotheses in the epidemiology of avian haemoparasites: first, that nestlings in open nests have a higher prevalence of infection; and second, that nestlings sampled at 14 days old have a higher apparent infection rate than those sampled at 7 days old. Open-nesting individuals had a 54% infection rate compared with 25% for box-nesters, probably due to an increased exposure of open-nesting species to dipteran vectors. Nestlings sampled at 14 days had a 68% infection rate compared with 32% in nestlings sampled at 7 days, suggesting that rates of infection in the nest are high. Further work should examine nestlings post-fledging to identify rates of successful parasite infection (as opposed to abortive development within a dead-end host) as well as impacts on host post-fledging survival and behaviour
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