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Preprints

There are 6976 Preprints listed.

The organic component of the earliest sulfur cycling

Mojtaba Fakhraee, Sergei Katsev

Published: 2019-01-16
Subjects: Biogeochemistry, Earth Sciences, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

The chemistry of the Early Earth is widely inferred from the elemental and isotopic compositions of sulfidic sedimentary rocks, which are presumed to have formed globally through the reduction of seawater sulfate or locally from hydrothermally supplied sulfide. Here we argue that, in the sulfate-poor ferruginous oceans of the Archean eon, organic sulfur must have played an important and [...]

‘Trapping and binding’: A review of the factors controlling the development of fossil agglutinated microbialites and their distribution in space and time

Pablo Suarez-Gonzalez, M. Isabel Benito, I. Emma Quijada, et al.

Published: 2019-01-08
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geology, Paleobiology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Trapping and binding of allochthonous grains by benthic microbial communities has been considered a fundamental process of microbialite accretion since its discovery in popular shallow-marine modern examples (Bahamas and Shark Bay). However, agglutinated textures are rare in fossil microbialites and, thus, the role of trapping and binding has been debated in the last four decades. Recently, [...]

Utilising the flexible generation potential of tidal range power plants to optimise economic value

Freddie Harcourt, Athanasios Angeloudis, Matthew Piggott

Published: 2019-01-08
Subjects: Civil and Environmental Engineering, Computational Engineering, Engineering, Hydraulic Engineering, Oceanography, Oceanography and Atmospheric Sciences and Meteorology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Tidal range renewable power plants have the capacity to deliver predictable energy to the electricity grid, subject to the known variability of the tides. Tidal power plants inherently feature advantages that characterise hydro-power more generally, including a lifetime exceeding alternative renewable energy technologies and relatively low Operation & Maintenance costs. Nevertheless, the [...]

Ionospheric Correction of InSAR Time Series Analysis of C-band Sentinel-1 TOPS Data

Cunren Liang, Piyush Agram, Mark Simons, et al.

Published: 2019-01-18
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geophysics and Seismology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

The Copernicus Sentinel-1A/B satellites operating at C-band in TOPS mode bring unprecedented opportunities for measuring large-scale tectonic motions using interferometric synthetic aperture radar. However, while the ionospheric effects are only about one sixteenth of those at L-band, the measurement accuracy might still be degraded by long-wavelength signals due to the ionosphere. We implement [...]

Time-dependent compaction as a mechanism for regular stick-slips

Martijn van den Ende, André Niemeijer

Published: 2018-03-27
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geophysics and Seismology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Owing to their destructive potential, earthquakes receive considerable attention from laboratory studies. In friction experiments, stick-slips are studied as the laboratory equivalent of natural earthquakes, and numerous attempts have been made to simulate stick-slips numerically using the Discrete Element Method (DEM). However, while laboratory stick-slips commonly exhibit regular stress drops [...]

Structural evolution and medium-temperature thermochronology of central Madagascar: implications for Gondwana amalgamation

Sheree Ellen Armistead, Alan S. Collins, Ahmad Redaa, et al.

Published: 2019-01-07
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geochemistry, Geology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics, Tectonics and Structure

Madagascar occupied an important place in the amalgamation of Gondwana and preserves a record of several Neoproterozoic events that are linked to orogenesis of the East African Orogen. In this study, we integrate remote sensing, field data and thermochronology to unravel complex deformation in the Ikalamavony and Itremo domains of central Madagascar. The deformation sequence comprises a gneissic [...]

Correspondence: The Taupo eruption occurred in 232 ± 10 CE, and not later

Alan Hogg, Colin J.N. Wilson, David J. Lowe, et al.

Published: 2019-01-08
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Physical Sciences and Mathematics, Volcanology

The Taupo eruption deposit is an isochronous marker bed that spans much of New Zealand’s North Island and pre-dates human arrival. Holdaway et al. (2018, Nature Comms 9, 4110) propose that the current Taupo eruption date is inaccurate and that the eruption occurred “…decades to two centuries…” after the published wiggle-match estimate of 232 ± 10 CE (2 s.d.) derived from a tanekaha (Phyllocladus [...]

Neoproterozoic glacial origin of the Great Unconformity

C. Brenhin Keller, Jon M. Husson, Ross Mitchell, et al.

Published: 2019-01-07
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geochemistry, Geology, Glaciology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

The Great Unconformity, a profound gap in Earths stratigraphic record often evident below the base of the Cambrian system, has remained among the most enigmatic field observations in Earth science for over a century. While long associated directly or indirectly with the occurrence of the earliest complex animal fossils, a conclusive explanation for the formation and global extent of the Great [...]

Development of an inversion method to extract information on fault geometry from teleseismic data

Kousuke Shimizu, Yuji Yagi, Ryo Okuwaki, et al.

Published: 2019-01-04
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geophysics and Seismology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Teleseismic waveforms contain information on fault slip evolution during an earthquake, as well as on the fault geometry. A linear finite-fault inversion method is a tool for solving the slip-rate function distribution under an assumption of fault geometry as a single or multiple-fault-plane model. An inappropriate assumption of fault geometry would tend to distort the solution due to Greens [...]

Impulsive source of the 2017, Mw =7.3, Ezgeleh, Iran, earthquake

Baptiste Gombert, Zacharie Duputel, Elham Shabani, et al.

Published: 2019-01-03
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geophysics and Seismology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

On November 12th 2017, a MW =7.3 earthquake struck near the Iranian town of Ezgeleh, close to the Iran-Iraq border. This event was located within the Zagros fold and thrust belt which delimits the continental collision between the Arabian and Eurasian Plates. Despite a high seismic risk, the seismogenic behaviour of the complex network of active faults is not well documented in this area due to [...]

Precision and Accuracy in Geochronology

Blair Schoene, Daniel Condon, Leah Morgan, et al.

Published: 2017-11-05
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geochemistry, Geology, Paleontology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics, Stratigraphy, Tectonics and Structure, Volcanology

Geochronology in Earth and Solar System science is increasingly in demand, and this demand is not only for more results, but for more precise, more accurate, and more easily interpreted temporal constraints. Because modern research often requires multiple dating methods, scrupulous inter- and intramethod calibration in absolute time is required. However, improved precision has highlighted [...]

Wet rice cultivation was the primary cause of the earthquake-triggered Palu landslides

Kyle Bradley, Rishav Mallick, Dedy Alfian, et al.

Published: 2019-01-03
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

The death toll and economic impact of an earthquake are greatly exacerbated when landslides are triggered by strong ground motion. These slides typically occur in two different contexts: localized failure of steep slopes that pose a major threat to life in areas below; and lateral spreading of nearly flat sediment plains due to shaking-induced liquefaction, which can damage large areas of [...]

Characterizing user-defined objects from outcrop and modern system interpretations for stochastic object-based reservoir modelling

Bjorn Nyberg, John Howell, Simon Buckley, et al.

Published: 2019-01-07
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Physical Sciences and Mathematics, Sedimentology

Outcrops and modern depositional environments are important analogues for subsurface hydrocarbon-, water- or CO2-sequestration reservoirs, as they supplement limited well- and seismic- data and provide information on connectivity of sandbodies observed in subsurface datasets. Object based modelling is one of a series of methods that is widely used for modelling subsurface facies architecture. A [...]

Buoyancy driven distributed chaos and ensemble weather forecasting

Alexander Bershadskii

Published: 2019-01-04
Subjects: Atmospheric Sciences, Meteorology, Oceanography and Atmospheric Sciences and Meteorology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

It is shown, using results of direct numerical simulations, that strong thermal convection in horizontal layer and on a hemisphere can be well described by the distributed chaos approach with the stretched exponential kinetic energy spectrum. Two relevant cases: the vorticity and helicity dominated distributed chaos, have been considered. The results obtained with the Weather Research and [...]

Long-term and inter-annual mass changes in the Iceland ice cap determined from GRACE gravity

Max von Hippel, Christopher Harig

Published: 2019-01-03
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Glaciology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

The Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) satellites have measured anomalies in the Earth’s time-variable gravity field since 2002, allowing for the measurement of the melting of glaciers due to climate change. Many techniques used with GRACE data have difficulty constraining mass change in small regions such as Iceland, often requiring broad averaging functions in order to capture [...]

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