4 resultados para university-industry research collaboration
em Publishing Network for Geoscientific
Resumo:
Results of primary production measurements obtained by different methods are presented. These methods are radiocarbon and oxygen modifications of the flask method, as well as fluorometric procedure with a PrimProd submersible probing fluorometer (produced at the Biological Department, Moscow State University). The research was carried out during a complex expedition aboard R/V Akademik Boris Petrov to the Norwegian Sea in July, 1977. Distributions of primary production values measured by different methods were correlated with other oceanographic data. Then a comparison of obtained values by the above-mentioned methods was performed.
Resumo:
Twenty-eight core catcher samples were provided to the author by the shipboard party for evaluation of fossil diatoms. Samples are from Ocean Drilling Program Leg 207 Holes 1257A, 1257B, 1257C, and 1258A. The samples range from 50 to 112 meters below the seafloor (mbsf) at Site 1257 and from ~22 to 60 mbsf at Site 1258. At Site 1257, samples range in age from middle Eocene (foraminifer Zone P14-13) to late Paleocene (mid-foraminifer Zone P4). At Site 1258, the samples range from middle Eocene (foraminifer Zone P11) to early Eocene (foraminifer Zone P5) according to the preliminary biostratigraphic reports (Erbacher, Mosher, Malone, et al., 2004, doi:10.2973/odp.proc.ir.207.2004). All samples were processed at Florida State University Antarctic Research Facility. Treatment included acidization and sieving through stacked 38- and 63-µm sieves. Strew slides were made from each fraction and the catcher pan. A Zeiss Photoscope II microscope was used for examination of the prepared slides. Samples from Holes 1257A, 1257B, and 1257C showed that most of the samples are barren of siliceous microfossils. Only a few radiolarians and fragments of radiolarians were observed.
Resumo:
Cruise MN-74-01 of the R/V Moana Wave was the first part of the field work of the NSF-IDOE Inter-University Ferromanganese Research Program in 1974. This program was designed to investigate the origin, growth, and distribution of copper/nickel-rich manganese nodules in the Pacific Ocean. The field effort was designed to satisfy sample requirements of the 15 principal investigators, while increasing general knowledge of the copper/nickel-rich nodule deposits of the equatorial Pacific. This report is the first of a series of cruise reports designed to assist sample requests for documented nodules, sediment, and water samples so the laboratory results can be realistically compared and related to the environment of nodule growth.
Resumo:
Cruise Mn-74-02 of the R/V MOANA WAVE was the second part of the field work of the NSF/IDOE Inter-University Ferromanganese Research Program in 1974, and we gratefully acknowledge the support of the office for the International Decade of Ocean Exploration and the Office of Oceanographic Facilities and Support. This program was designed to investigate the origin, growth, and distribution of copper/nickel-rich manganese nodules in the Pacific Ocean. The field effort was designed to satisfy sample requirements of the fifteen principal investigators, while increasing general knowledge of the copper/nickel-rich nodule deposits of the equatorial Pacific. This report is the second of a series of cruise reports designed to assist sample requests for documented nodules, sediment, and water samples so that laboratory results can be realistically compared and related to the environment of nodule growth. Nodule samples and bathymetric and navigational data are archived at the Hawaii Institute of Geophysics, University of Hawaii. Bulk chemical analyses of nodules and reduction of survey data were carried out at Hawaii. Sediment cores were stored at the University of Hawaii and at Scripps Institution of Oceanography. The SIO analytical facility provided stratigraphic data on sediment chemistry.