111 resultados para Atoll


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Cesium-137 concentrations of surface waters were measured during Cruise 20 of R/V Dmitry Mendeleev across the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. The measurements were combined with simultaneous salinity measurements. The radioactivity field of surface waters is governed by presence of closed circulation systems and their component currents. Crossing the oceans from west to east decrease in cesium-137 concentrations was noted. In surface waters in the northeastern periphery of the southern anticyclonic gyre in the Pacific Ocean Cs-137 concentrations increased (up to 21.5 Bq/m**3) due to a series of nuclear tests on the Muroroa Atoll.

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The paper deals with regularities of distribution of iron, manganese, copper, nickel, and vanadium in interstitial waters from different lithofacies types of bottom sediments on the profile from the coast of Mexico to the Wake Atoll in the Pacific Ocean. With increasing distance from the shore and with transition from reduced coastal sediments to oxidized deep-sea red clays concentration of iron and manganese in the interstitial waters greatly decreases. Elevated concentration of dissolved iron (0.34 mg/l) was observed only in highly reduced terrigenous sediments from the shelf and continental slope of Mexico. The highest concentrations of manganese (13.2 mg/l) were measured in hemipelagic carbonate-siliceous-clayey sediments. Compared to Pacific seawater interstitial waters are enriched in Fe, Mn, Cu, Ni, V. Interstitial waters contain only from 0.000004 to 1.2% of total contents of these elements in bottom sediments.

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Atoll islands are subject to a variety of processes that influence their geomorphological development. Analysis of historical shoreline changes using remotely sensed images has become an efficient approach to both quantify past changes and estimate future island response. However, the detection of long-term changes in beach width is challenging mainly for two reasons: first, data availability is limited for many remote Pacific islands. Second, beach environments are highly dynamic and strongly influenced by seasonal or episodic shoreline oscillations. Consequently, remote-sensing studies on beach morphodynamics of atoll islands deal with dynamic features covered by a low sampling frequency. Here we present a study of beach dynamics for nine islands on Takú Atoll, Papua New Guinea, over a seven-decade period. A considerable chronological gap between aerial photographs and satellite images was addressed by applying a new method that reweighted positions of the beach limit by identifying "outlier" shoreline positions. On top of natural beach variability observed along the reweighted beach sections, we found that one third of the analyzed islands show a statistically significant decrease in reweighted beach width since 1943. The total loss of beach area for all islands corresponds to 44% of the initial beach area. Variable shoreline trajectories suggest that changes in beach width on Takú Atoll are dependent on local control (that is, human activity and longshore sediment transport). Our results show that remote imagery with a low sampling frequency may be sufficient to characterize prominent morphological changes in planform beach configuration of reef islands.