Preprints

Filtering by Subject: Earth Sciences

Growth, overprinting, and stabilization of Proterozoic Provinces in the southern Lake Superior region

Daniel Holm, L. Gordon Medaris, Kalin T. McDannell, et al.

Published: 2019-11-07
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geochemistry, Geology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics, Tectonics and Structure

New geochronologic data in the southern Lake Superior region provide key information on the timing and nature of tectonic activity that pre-and post-date initial Paleoproterozoic growth of Laurentia during the geon 18 Penokean orogeny. The obducted Pembine ophiolite formed along the edge of a Paleoproterozoic ocean basin at least 30 m.y. prior to Penokean island arc/microcontinent accretion [...]

Nowcasting submarine slope instability at local, margin, and global scales using machine learning

Jeffrey Obelcz, Warren T. Wood, Benjamin J. Phrampus, et al.

Published: 2019-11-07
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Submarine slope instability (SSI) is a broad term for events ranging from 100 km3 instantaneous open slope failures on continental margins to 0.001 km3 creeping mudflows on heavily sedimented river deltas. SSI events such as the 2018 Sunda Strait and 1929 Grand Banks submarine landslides extract high societal tolls, yet SSI predictive capability is limited. SSI observational studies are resource [...]

Chemical versus mechanical denudation in meta-clastic and carbonate bedrock catchments on Crete, Greece, and mechanisms for steep and high carbonate topography

Richard F Ott, Sean F Gallen, Jeremy Caves-Rugenstein, et al.

Published: 2019-11-05
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geomorphology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

On Crete — as is common elsewhere in the Mediterranean — carbonate massifs form high mountain ranges whereas topography is lower in areas with meta-clastic rocks. This observation suggests that differences in denudational processes between carbonate-rich rocks and quartzofeldspathic units impart a fundamental control on landscape evolution. Here we present new cosmogenic basin-average denudation [...]

On the statistical significance of foreshock sequences in Southern California

Martijn van den Ende, Jean Paul Ampuero

Published: 2019-11-05
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geophysics and Seismology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Earthquake foreshocks may provide information that is critical to short-term earthquake forecasting. However, foreshocks are far from ubiquitously observed, which makes the interpretation of ongoing seismic sequences problematic. Based on a statistical analysis, Trugman & Ross (2019) suggested that as much as 72% of all mainshocks in Southern California is preceded by foreshock sequences. In [...]

Equifinality, Sloppiness, and emergent model structures of mechanistic soil biogeochemical models

Gianna Marschmann, Holger Pagel, Philipp Kuegler, et al.

Published: 2019-11-05
Subjects: Biogeochemistry, Earth Sciences, Environmental Sciences, Physical Sciences and Mathematics, Soil Science

Biogeochemical models increasingly consider the microbial control of car- bon cycling in soil. The major current challenge is to validate mechanistic descriptions of microbial processes and predicted system responses against experimental observations. We analyzed soil biochemical models of different complexity regarding parameter identifiability using information geometry, i.e. a model is [...]

Neogene-Recent Reactivation of Jurassic-age Faults in Southern Vietnam, with Implications for the Extrusion of Indochina

Caroline M Burberry, Lynne Elkins, Nguyen Hoang, et al.

Published: 2019-11-02
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Onshore Vietnam contains a complex series of faults coupled with a diffuse igneous province that has been active since the mid-Miocene. However, there are several conflicting fault maps in the literature and no consensus concerning the relative age of mapped faults and Neogene basalt flows, which becomes problematic when trying to use structural data to distinguish between competing tectonic [...]

Detection and temperature estimation of gas flares with nocturnal Landsat OLI

Ruiwen Lee, Christopher Small

Published: 2019-11-02
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Environmental Sciences, Oil, Gas, and Energy, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Natural gas flaring is a worldwide polluting activity carried out during oil production. Satellite imagery has emerged as a low-cost, objective tool to measure and monitor gas flaring. Since 2012, hectometre-resolution infrared imagery from the Suomi NPP VIIRS sensor has been used to operationally monitor global gas flaring (Elvidge et al. 2016). Since 2013, nocturnal acquisitions of Landsat 8 [...]

The variation and visualisation of elastic anisotropy in rock-forming minerals

David Healy, Nicholas Timms, Mark Pearce

Published: 2019-10-31
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geochemistry, Geology, Geophysics and Seismology, Mineral Physics, Physical Sciences and Mathematics, Tectonics and Structure

All minerals behave elastically, a rheological property that controls their ability to support stress, strain and pressure, the nature of acoustic wave propagation and influences subsequent plastic (i.e. permanent, non-reversible) deformation. All minerals are intrinsically anisotropic in their elastic properties – that is, they have directional variations that are related to the configuration [...]

A unique bacteriohopanetetrol stereoisomer of marine anammox

Rachel Schwartz-Narbonne, Philippe Schaeffer, Ellen C. Hopmans, et al.

Published: 2019-10-31
Subjects: Biogeochemistry, Earth Sciences, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox) is a significant process for bioavailable nitrogen removal from marine systems. A bacteriohopanetetrol (BHT) isomer, with unknown stereochemistry, eluting later than BHT using high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), was detected in ‘Ca. Scalindua profunda’ and proposed as a biomarker for anammox in marine paleo-environments. Four non-marine, [...]

The Earthquake Arrest Zone

Chun-Yu Ke, Gregory McLaskey, David S. Kammer

Published: 2019-10-31
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geophysics and Seismology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Earthquake ruptures are generally considered to be cracks that propagate as fracture or frictional slip on preexisting faults. Crack models have been used to describe the spatial distribution of fault offset and the associated static stress changes along a fault, and have implications for friction evolution and the underlying physics of rupture processes. However, field measurements that could [...]

Deep Unsupervised 4D Seismic 3D Time-Shift Estimation with Convolutional Neural Networks

Jesper Sören Dramsch, Anders Nymark Christensen, Colin MacBeth, et al.

Published: 2019-10-31
Subjects: Applied Statistics, Earth Sciences, Geophysics and Seismology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics, Statistics and Probability

We present a novel 3D warping technique for the estimation of 4D seismic time-shift. This unsupervised method provides a diffeomorphic 3D time shift field that includes uncertainties, therefore it does not need prior time-shift data to be trained. This results in a widely applicable method in time-lapse seismic data analysis. We explore the generalization of the method to unseen data both in the [...]

Observing Rivers with Varying Spatial Scales

Ernesto Rodriguez, Michael Durand, Renato Prata de Moraes Frasson

Published: 2019-10-31
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Hydrology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

The NASA/CNES Surface Water and Ocean Topography (SWOT) mission will estimate global river discharge using remote sensing. Synoptic remote sensing data extends in situ point measurements, but, at any given point, is generally less accurate. We address two questions: 1)What are the scales at which river dynamics can be observed, given spatial sampling and measurement noise characteristics? 2) Is [...]

Did deglaciation of the Greenland ice sheet cause a large earthquake and tsunami around 10,600 years ago?

Rebekka Steffen, Holger Steffen, Robert Weiss, et al.

Published: 2019-10-31
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geophysics and Seismology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Due to their large mass, ice sheets induce significant stresses in the Earth’s crust. Stress release during deglaciation can trigger large-magnitude earthquakes, as indicated by surface faults in northern Europe. Although glacially-induced stresses have been analyzed in northern Europe, they have not yet been analyzed for Greenland. We know that the Greenland Ice Sheet experienced a large melting [...]

Crustal structure of Sri Lanka derived from joint inversion of surface wave dispersion and receiver functions using a Bayesian approach

Jennifer Dreiling, Frederik Tilmann, Xiaohui Yuan, et al.

Published: 2019-10-30
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geophysics and Seismology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

We study the crustal structure of Sri Lanka by analyzing data from a temporary seismic network deployed in 2016--2017 to shed light on the amalgamation process from a geophysical perspective. Rayleigh wave phase dispersion curves from ambient noise cross-correlation and receiver functions were jointly inverted using a transdimensional Bayesian approach. The Moho depths in Sri Lanka range between [...]

Does fluvial channel belt clustering predict net sand to gross rock volume? Architectural metrics and point pattern analysis of a digital outcrop model

Alexander Koch, Cari Johnson, Lisa Stright

Published: 2019-10-30
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics, Sedimentology, Stratigraphy

Spatial point-pattern analyses (PPAs) are used to quantify clustering, randomness, and uniformity of the distribution of channel belts in fluvial strata. Point patterns may reflect end-member fluvial architecture, e.g., uniform compensational stacking and avulsion-generated clustering, which may change laterally, especially at greater scales. To investigate spatial and temporal changes in fluvial [...]

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