2 resultados para Faux Terrain

em Aquatic Commons


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These are the first documented observations of shortraker rockfish, Sebastes borealis, in their natural habitat. The in situ observations were made from a manned submersible in 1991 in the eastern Gulf of Alaska. Eleven dives were completed from 207 to 357 m (679-1,171 feet); shortraker rockfish were observed during four dives. Their apparent indifference to the submersible allowed observations of their spatial distribution and habitat. The shortraker rockfish observed (20 total) were not schooled and were at least 50 m (164 feet) apart. Nineteen were on the bottom, and one was 0.5 m (20 inches) above the bottom. They were using 3-12° sloping terrain composed of either silt or pebbles interspersed with boulders (diameter 0.5-4.0 m (1.6-13 feet)); six were next to boulders.

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EXTRACT (SEE PDF FOR FULL ABSTRACT): Examining secular changes in relative sea level along the U.S. west coast, we have identified strong tectonic signals. Tectonism exists not only on a coherent plate-wide scale (assuming a rigid plate approximation), but also on a sub-plate scale. In fact, differential tectonism between exotic or suspect geological terrain explains much of the spatial patterns of west coast tide-gauge data. Peltier's isostatic model appears not to explain the spatial pattern, implying glacio-isostatic adjustment is not the dominant contribution to the low-frequency signals. Eustatic effects cannot be identified unambiguously. These studies suggest several major questions/observations with regard to relative sea-level studies ...