623 resultados para Lava
Resumo:
The lava park is surrounded by the volcanic mountains of Les Preses, revealed as the edges of a vast caldera and repeated at a human scale with low walls made up of small volcanic boulders. These walls are evidence of how successive communities have gradually worked amongst this lava flow to create arable land, supported by rich soils. The people saw the land prosper and learned how to maximise its productivity. Boulders that had come to the surface during agricultural cultivation were moved with human labour to create "artigas“, the characteristic pilings of volcanic stone. They have been used to raise and lower areas, to create shelter and exposure for their crops and to make caves for storage. Amongst all this, paths weave and cross. The whole place is made up of grey and black rocks with a constant cover of green crops or grass.
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The mineral newberyite Mg(PO3OH)•3H2O is a mineral that has been found in caves such as the Skipton Lava Tubes (SW of Ballarat, Victoria, Australia), Moorba cave, Jurien Bay, Western Australia, and in the Petrogale Cave (Madura , Eucla, Western Australia). Because these minerals contain water, the minerals lend themselves to thermal analysis. The mineral newberyite is found to decompose at 145°C with a water loss of 31.96%, a result which is very close to the theoretical value. The result shows that the mineral is not stable in caves where the temperature exceeds this value. The implication of this result rests with the removal of kidney stones, which have the same composition as newberyite. Point heating focussing on the kidney stone results in the destruction of the kidney stone.
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Two Archaean komatiitic flows, Fred’s Flow in Canada and the Murphy Well Flow in Australia, have similar thicknesses (120 and 160 m) but very different compositions and internal structures. Their contrasting differentiation profiles are keys to determine the cooling and crystallization mechanisms that operated during the eruption of Archaean ultramafic lavas. Fred’s Flow is the type example of a thick komatiitic basalt flow. It is strongly differentiated and consists of a succession of layers with contrasting textures and compositions. The layering is readily explained by the accumulation of olivine and pyroxene in a lower cumulate layer and by evolution of the liquid composition during downward growth of spinifex-textured rocks within the upper crust. The magmas that erupted to form Fred’s Flow had variable compositions, ranging from 12 to 20 wt% MgO, and phenocryst contents from 0 to 20 vol%. The flow was emplaced by two pulses. A first ~20-m-thick pulse was followed by another more voluminous but less magnesian pulse that inflated the flow to its present 120 m thickness. Following the second pulse, the flow crystallized in a closed system and differentiated into cumulates containing 30–38 wt% MgO and a residual gabbroic layer with only 6 wt% MgO. The Murphy Well Flow, in contrast, has a remarkably uniform composition throughout. It comprises a 20-m-thick upper layer of fine-grained dendritic olivine and 2–5 vol% amygdales, a 110–120 m intermediate layer of olivine porphyry and a 20–30 m basal layer of olivine orthocumulate. Throughout the flow, MgO contents vary little, from only 30 to 33 wt%, except for the slightly more magnesian basal layer (38–40 wt%). The uniform composition of the flow and dendritic olivine habits in the upper 20 m point to rapid cooling of a highly magnesian liquid with a composition like that of the bulk of the flow. Under equilibrium conditions, this liquid should have crystallized olivine with the composition Fo94.9, but the most magnesian composition measured by electron microprobe in samples from the flow is Fo92.9. To explain these features, we propose that the parental liquid contained around 32 wt% MgO and 3 wt% H2O. This liquid degassed during the eruption, creating a supercooled liquid that solidified quickly and crystallized olivine with non-equilibrium textures and compositions.
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[ES] La documentación contenida en este registro ha servido de base para los siguientes documentos:
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[ES] Tumba megalítica compuesta por 17 losas de gran tamaño, incluida la tapa. La estructura ocupa un espacio de 10 x 4 metros en planta, unos 4 metros de altura en la cámara. Conserva restos del túmulo que forma aproximadamente un círculo de unos 10 metros de radio.
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[ES] Yacimiento arqueológico a las afueras de la ciudad de Vitora-Gasteiz que han sido afectadas por la urbanización de Zabalgana. Se trata de restos muy arrasados de varios edificios de los que sólo se conserva su interpretación en planta aunque excepcionalmente se conserva algún alzado.
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[ES] Restos de poblado del que se han excavado tres sectores inconexos. El sector central ocupa unos 160 x 40 metros, los dos sectores laterales ocupan un área aproximada de 20x12 y 20x30 metros. Las estructuras conservadas corresponden a muros y calles excavadas hace varias décadas que posteriormente fueron parcialmente acondicionadas, en cualquier caso, el estado de los restos en algunas zonas es de un avanzado deterioro.
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(ES) En este artículo son analizadas las políticas de suelo industrial en Álava, uno de los tres territorios históricos o provincias), junto con Vizcaya y Guipúzcoa, que integra la Comunidad Autónoma del País Vasco (CAPV en adelante). En un primer apartado exponemos los planteamientos teóricos actuales que inspiran el diseño de las políticas en materia de suelo industrial y posteriormente valoramos las actuaciones y los resultados de los diferentes organismos que gestionan este tipo de suelo en Álava. Finalmente, avanzamos los resultados preliminares obtenidos mediante el SIG Alavamap.
Resumo:
[ES] Se trata de una tumba megalítica compuesta por 9 losas de gran tamaño, incluida la tapa. La estructura ocupa un espacio de 4 x 4 metros en planta, unos 3 metros de altura en la cámara. Conserva restos del túmulo que pudo llegar a tener unos 14 metros de radio.
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747 p. (Bibliogr.: 521-546]
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399 p.:il.
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[ES] La documentación contenida en este registro ha servido de base para el siguiente proyecto fin de carrera:
[A_Villabuena_Montecillo] Documentación geométrica del dolmen de El Montecillo (Villabuena de Álava)
Resumo:
[ES] Tumba megalítica compuesta por 8 losas (6 en la cámara, una de ellas caída originalmente y 2 en el corredor). El tamaño de la cámara es de unos 2 x 2,5 metros que se encuentra en un morcuero de unos 10 metros de diámetro.
Resumo:
[ES] El edificio tiene planta rectangular de unos 30 x 15 metros con un interior con una altura de 10 metros. Cuenta con una torre anexa a los pies y un pórtico de piedra de ocho arcos de posible factura medieval. La antigua cabecera ha quedado como la sacristía actual.
Resumo:
A través de este inventario se pretende facilitar la información y el acceso de los investigadores a la documentación cartográfica antigua de cualquier parte del territorio histórico alavés.