944 resultados para Coarse Grain Pipelining


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This data set contains grain size analyses of bottom sediments collected by scientists from the V.P. Zenkovich Laboratory of Shelf and Sea Coasts (P.P. Shirshov Institute of Oceanology, Russian Academy of Sciences) during the Project ''Arctic Shelf of the Eurasia in the Late Quaternary'' in a number of expeditions to the Barents, Kara, East Siberian and Chukchi Seas on board the research vessels R/V Professor Shtokman, H/V Dmitry Laptev, H/V Malygin, and icebreaker Georgy Sedov since 1978. The analyses have been carried out according to the methods published by Petelin (1967) in the Analytical Laboratory of the P.P. Shirshov Institute of Oceanology. Archiving and electronic publication was performed through a data rescue by Evgeny Gurvich in 2003.

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At Ocean Drilling Program Sites 752 and 754, located on Broken Ridge in the eastern Indian Ocean, we recovered a sequence of shallow-water pelagic sediments that span the past 90 m.y. The Oligocene to Pleistocene portion of these sediments are unconsolidated carbonate oozes that display a coherent variation in bulk grain size. We believe these sediments to be winnowed, and suggest that their grain size is a measure of that winnowing energy. The largest increase in grain size, interpreted to represent an enhancement in the energy of ocean currents, occurs in the earliest late Miocene. This increase occurs about 20 m upcore from the oxygen isotope indication of ice-volume increase about 13 Ma, and is about 3 m.y. younger. If this distinct temporal separation between proxy indicators of ice volume and of current intensity observed in the Broken Ridge cores is correct, the general impression of paleoclimatologists that the planetary temperature gradient and therefore atmospheric and oceanic circulation intensity varies directly with ice volume needs to be reconsidered.

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The upper shelf of the landslide-prone Ligurian Margin (Western Mediterranean Sea) off Nice well-known for the 1979 Airport Landslide is a natural laboratory to study preconditioning factors and trigger mechanisms for submarine landslides. For this study low-stress ring shear experiments have been carried out on a variety of sediments from >50 gravity cores to characterise the velocity-dependent frictional behaviour. Mean values of the peak coefficient of friction vary from 0.46 for clay-dominated samples (53 % clay, 46 % silt, 1 %) sand up to 0.76 for coarse-grained sediments (26 % clay, 57 % silt, 17 % sand). The majority of the sediments tested show velocity strengthening regardless of the grain size distribution. For clayey sediments the peak and residual cohesive strength increases with increasing normal stress, with values from 1.3 to 10.6 kPa and up to 25 % of all strength supported by cohesive forces in the shallowmost samples. A pseudo-static slope stability analysis reveals that the different lithologies (even clay-rich material with clay content >=50 %) tested are stable up to slope angles <26° under quasi-drained conditions.