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Preprints

There are 5493 Preprints listed.

Seiching period from experiment and numerical simulation

Fei Liu, David Huang

Published: 2021-10-19
Subjects: Hydrology

Seiching is a common phenomenon in nature where a large body of water exhibits periodic behavior. First, we set up water oscillations in a tank and measure its oscillation period. Then we use OpenFOAM to simulate the oscillation behavior of the water waves in a 3D mesh with the same dimensions as the tank used in the experiment. Applying the Fourier transformation on the velocities calculated [...]

Superpixel segmentations for thin sections: evaluation of methods to enable the generation of machine learning training data sets

Jiaxin Yu, Florian Wellmann, Simon Virgo, et al.

Published: 2021-10-16
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Training data is the backbone of developing either Machine Learning (ML) models or specific deep learning algorithms. The paucity of well-labeled training image data has significantly impeded the applications of ML-based approaches, especially the development of novel Deep Learning (DL) methods like Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) in mineral thin section images identification. However, image [...]

Human-in-the-Loop Segmentation of Earth Surface Imagery

Daniel David Buscombe, Evan B Goldstein, Chris Sherwood, et al.

Published: 2021-10-16
Subjects: Engineering, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Segmentation, or the classification of pixels (grid cells) in imagery, is ubiquitously applied in the natural sciences. Manual methods are often prohibitively time-consuming, especially those images consisting of small objects and/or significant spatial heterogeneity of colors or textures. Labeling complicated regions of transition that in Earth surface imagery are represented by collections of [...]

Thermochronologic constraints on the origin of the Great Unconformity

Kalin T. McDannell, C. Brenhin Keller, William R. Guenthner, et al.

Published: 2021-10-16
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

The origin of the phenomenon known as the Great Unconformity has been a fundamental yet unresolved problem in the geosciences for over a century. Recent hypotheses advocate either global continental exhumation of more than 3–4 km during Cryogenian (717–635 Ma) snowball Earth glaciations, or alternatively, diachronous episodic exhumation throughout the Neoproterozoic (1000–540 Ma) due to plate [...]

U-Pb zircon ages, mapping, and biostratigraphy of the Payette Formation and Idaho Group north of the western Snake River Plain: implications for hydrocarbon system correlation

Renee L Love, Reed Lewis, Spencer H Wood, et al.

Published: 2021-10-15
Subjects: Physical Sciences and Mathematics

The sedimentary deposits north of the western Snake River Plain host Idaho’s first and only producing oil and gas field. They consist of the mid-Miocene Payette Formation, the mid-late Miocene Chalk Hills Formation, and the Pliocene to early Pleistocene Glenns Ferry Formation. Using new geochronology, palynomorph biostratigraphy, and geologic mapping, we connect up-dip surface features to [...]

Consistent Controls on Trace Metal Micronutrient Speciation in Wetland Soils and Stream Sediments

Jinshu Yan, Neha Sharma, Elaine D. Flynn, et al.

Published: 2021-10-15
Subjects: Biogeochemistry, Geochemistry, Soil Science

Trace metal are essential for microbially-mediated biogeochemical processes occurring in anoxic wetland soils and stream bed sediments, but low availability of these elements may inhibit anaerobic element cycling and transformations. Solid-phase speciation is likely a critical control on trace metal availability but has seen limited study in anoxic systems having concentrations similar to [...]

Tidal marsh resilience to sea level rise controlled by vertical accretion and landward migration under nature-based human adaptation scenarios

Xiaoguang Ouyang, Rod Connolly, Shing Yip Lee

Published: 2021-10-15
Subjects: Biodiversity, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Environmental Studies, Geography, Life Sciences, Marine Biology, Plant Sciences

Tidal marshes are not only lost to human disturbance but also face the threat of sea level rise (SLR). However, current earth system models used to estimate future changes in wetland extent omit wetland’s real responses to SLR without field observations. We synthesised global data on sediment accretion rate (SAR) and surface elevation change (SEC) for tidal marshes and developed a mathematical [...]

Volcanic hazard exacerbated by future global warming–driven increase in heavy rainfall.

Jamie Ian Farquharson, Falk Amelung

Published: 2021-10-15
Subjects: Climate, Physical Sciences and Mathematics, Volcanology

Heavy rainfall drives a range of eruptive and noneruptive volcanic hazards; over the Holocene, the incidence of many such hazards has increased due to rapid climate change. Here we show that extreme heavy rainfall is projected to increase with continued global warming throughout the 21st century in most subaerial volcanic regions, dramatically increasing the potential for rainfall-induced [...]

Kathmandu Basin as a local modulator of seismic waves: 2D modelling of nonlinear site response under obliquely incident waves

Elif Oral, Peyman Ayoubi, Jean Paul Ampuero, et al.

Published: 2021-10-14
Subjects: Civil Engineering, Earth Sciences, Geophysics and Seismology, Geotechnical Engineering

The 2015 Mw 7.8 Gorkha, Nepal earthquake is the largest event to have struck the capital city of Kathmandu in recent times. One of its surprising features was the frequency content of the recorded ground motion, exhibiting a notable amplification at low frequencies (< 2 Hz) and a contrasting depletion at higher frequencies. The latter has been partially attributed to the damper behaviour of the [...]

Decline of sea-ice in the Greenland Sea intensifies extreme precipitation over Svalbard

Malte Müller, Timo Kelder, Cyril Palerme

Published: 2021-10-14
Subjects: Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Extreme precipitation over the Svalbard Archipelago in the Arctic can have severe consequences for the ecosystem and society. In recent years several extreme precipitation events have been observed at Ny Ålesund, a weather station in the north-western part of the Svalbard Archipelago. The most recent observed events in the years 2012, 2016, and 2018 were the highest events in the entire [...]

Volcanologists - Who are we and where are we going?

Janine Lynsey Kavanagh, Catherine J Annen, Steffi Burchardt, et al.

Published: 2021-10-14
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geography, Human Geography, Physical Sciences and Mathematics, Social and Behavioral Sciences, Volcanology

Equity, diversity and inclusivity (EDI) are principles all scientific groups and organisations should strive to achieve as they secure working conditions, policies and practices that not only promote high-quality scientific output but also well-being in their communities. In this article, we reflect on the progress of EDI in volcanology by presenting data related to memberships of international [...]

Desiccation of the Transboundary Hamun Lakes between Iran and Afghanistan in Response to Hyro-climatic Droughts and Anthropogenic Activities

Mahdi Akbari, Ali Mirchi, Amin Roozbahani, et al.

Published: 2021-10-13
Subjects: Engineering, Life Sciences

This paper investigates the hydro-climatic reasons behind the desiccation of the Hamun Lakes in the Iran-Afghanistan border. We analyzed changes in the flow of the Hirmand River (90 percent of the total inflow to the lakes) at the international border, and precipitation over this river’s sub-basin during 1960-2016 by calculating standardized indices for precipitation (SPI) and discharge (SDI). We [...]

Systems-thinking for environmental policy coherence: Stakeholder knowledge, fuzzy logic, and causal reasoning

Cyndi V. Castro

Published: 2021-10-13
Subjects: Civil and Environmental Engineering, Environmental Studies

Environmental policies are often chosen according to physical characteristics that disregard the complex interactions between decision-makers, society, and nature. Environmental policy resistance has been identified as stemming from such complexities, yet we lack an understanding of how social and physical factors interrelate to inform policy design. The identification of synergies and trade-offs [...]

Sand-capping stabilizes muddy sediment and improves benthic light conditions in eutrophic estuaries: laboratory verification and the potential for recovery of eelgrass (Zostera marina)

Mogens Flindt, Nele Wendländer, Kadri Kuusemae, et al.

Published: 2021-10-12
Subjects: Life Sciences, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Decades of eutrophication have increased water turbidity in Danish estuaries and led to light limitation of eelgrass (Zostera marina) growth. Former eelgrass areas are now denuded and consist of organic-rich muddy sediment with frequent resuspension events that maintain a high turbidity state. In addition, low anchoring capacity of eelgrass in the soft organic-rich sediments has contributed to [...]

A rapid sedimentary response to the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum hydrological change: new data from alluvial units of the Tremp-Graus Basin (Spanish Pyrenees)

Victoriano Pujalte Navarro, Birger Schmitz, Aitor Payros

Published: 2021-10-12
Subjects: Physical Sciences and Mathematics

A massive emission of light carbon about 56 Ma ago, recorded in marine and terrestrial sediments by a negative carbon isotope excursion (CIE), caused a short-lived (~170 kyr) global warming event known as the Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM). The core of this event is represented in the south Pyrenean Tremp-Graus Basin by two successive alluvial units, the Claret Conglomerate (CC) and the [...]

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