In-situ U-Pb dating of Ries Crater lacustrine carbonates (Miocene, South-West Germany): Implications for continental carbonate chronostratigraphy

2021 ◽  
Vol 568 ◽  
pp. 117011
Author(s):  
Damaris Montano ◽  
Marta Gasparrini ◽  
Axel Gerdes ◽  
Giovanna Della Porta ◽  
Richard Albert
2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicolas Sobanski ◽  
Jim Thieser ◽  
Jan Schuladen ◽  
Carina Sauvage ◽  
Wei Song ◽  
...  

Abstract. We report in-situ measurement of total peroxy-nitrates (ƩPNs) and total alkyl nitrates (ƩANs) in a forested/urban location at the top of the Kleiner Feldberg mountain in South-West Germany. The data, obtained using Thermal Dissociation Cavity Ring Down Spectroscopy (TD-CRDS) in August-September 2011 (PARADE campaign) and July–August 2015 (NOTOMO campaign), represent the first detailed study of ƩPNs and ƩANs over continental Europe. We find that a significant fraction of NOx (up to 75 %) is sequestered as organics nitrates at this site. Futher, we also show that the night-time production of alkyl nitrates by reaction of NO3 with biogenic hydrocarbons is comparable to that from day-time, OH-initiated oxidation pathways. The ƩANs-to-ozone ratio obtained during PARADE was used to derive an approximate, average yield of organic nitrates at noon time from the OH initiated oxidation of VOCs of 7 % at this site in 2011, which is comparable with that obtained from an analysis of VOCs at the site. A much lower yield,


The paper describes temporary sections through the Lower Oxford Clay, Kellaways Rock and Kellaways Clay down to the Cornbrash in a part of England in which these beds were previously little known. All the beds were fossiliferous, and more than 200 ammonites ascribed to twentyfive species were collected in situ , bed by bed throughout the succession. The ammonites of the genus Kosmoceras in the Lower Oxford Clay were sufficiently numerous to allow them to be studied statistically by the methods employed by Brinkmann in 1929 on similar ammonites of the same age from the Lower Oxford Clay at Peterborough. His results for the lower part of the sequence comprising the jason Zone were fully reproduced. In addition, ammonites of other genera were found, including several specimens of Reineckeia, among the first to be recorded from beds of this age in this country. The Kellaways Rock, consisting mainly of sands, was extremely fossiliferous and yielded, besides many lamellibranchs and gastropods, numerous, although poorly preserved, ammonites. These were the same as those of the Kellaways Rock of Wiltshire, with the addition of a specimen of Macrocephalites sensu stricto . The Kellaways Clay was poorly fossiliferous, but it produced six specimens of Macrocephalites (subgenera Kamptokephalites and Dolikephats ), an assemblage similar to that of the Upper Cornbrash of Yorkshire and quite different from that of the Kellaways Clay of Wiltshire. The position of this clay above typical Upper Cornbrash as developed in south-west England, and belonging to the siddingtonensis and in part lagenalis brachiopod Subzones, confirms previous suspicions that the Cornbrash of Yorkshire is later than that of the south-west. In the light of these results, the older evidence relating to the beds of this age in this country and abroad, including some of the old collections, is re-examined. Additional information from new or undescribed exposures at Calvert, Frome, Sutton Bingham near Yeovil, Weymouth, and Herznach in Switzerland, is included. In consequence, a much closer correlation of the beds of the Middle and Lower Callovian than was previously possible is now made between outcrops in Scotland, Yorkshire, north-west Germany, central and south-west England and the Argovian Jura. A revised zonal table of the Callovian has been constructed, designed to be generally applicable to the area outlined above and including as subzones finer divisions which are in practice recognizable more locally. The relation between these west European zones and some of those used in the Mediterranean province is briefly indicated.


2017 ◽  
Vol 17 (6) ◽  
pp. 4115-4130 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicolas Sobanski ◽  
Jim Thieser ◽  
Jan Schuladen ◽  
Carina Sauvage ◽  
Wei Song ◽  
...  

Abstract. We report in situ measurements of total peroxy nitrates (ΣPNs) and total alkyl nitrates (ΣANs) in a forested–urban location at the top of the Kleiner Feldberg mountain in south-west Germany. The data, obtained using thermal dissociation cavity ring-down spectroscopy (TD-CRDS) in August–September 2011 (PARADE campaign) and July 2015 (NOTOMO campaign), represent the first detailed study of ΣPNs and ΣANs over continental Europe. We find that a significant fraction of NOx (up to 75 %) is sequestered as organics nitrates at this site. Furthermore, we also show that the night-time production of alkyl nitrates by reaction of NO3 with biogenic hydrocarbons is comparable to that from daytime OH-initiated oxidation pathways. The ΣANs ∕ ozone ratio obtained during PARADE was used to derive an approximate average yield of organic nitrates at noon from the OH initiated oxidation of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) of  ∼  7 % at this site in 2011, which is comparable with that obtained from an analysis of VOCs measured during the campaign. A much lower AN yield,  <  2 %, was observed in 2015, which may result from sampling air with different average air mass ages and thus different degrees of breakdown of assumptions used to derive the branching ratio, but it may also reflect a seasonal change in the VOC mixture at the site.


2013 ◽  
Vol 71 (Suppl 3) ◽  
pp. 626.2-626
Author(s):  
F. Riewerts ◽  
J.C. Henes ◽  
C. Deuter ◽  
H.-M. Lorenz ◽  
F. Mackensen ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 532 ◽  
pp. 360-367 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ferry Schiperski ◽  
Johannes Zirlewagen ◽  
Olaf Hillebrand ◽  
Karsten Nödler ◽  
Tobias Licha ◽  
...  

1963 ◽  
Vol 58 ◽  
pp. 30-43 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. N. Coldstream

On the east slope of Lower Gypsades hill, about 100 metres west of the Temple Tomb, a chamber tomb came to light in August 1958, when a cutting for a new water pipe was driven through the area (A in Plate 9 a). In the course of this operation, part of a plain larnax (iii) was sliced off, and much earth removed from the west end of the collapsed chamber: at no point, however, had the municipal workmen penetrated to the tomb floor.The chamber was approached by a sloping dromos (Plate 9 a: length 2·80 metres; max. width 1 metre), roughly cut into the natural kouskouras rock: its walls were approximately perpendicular. Although the gradient varied a good deal, there was no suggestion of a stairway.The blocking wall was found in good condition. Of especial interest were the numerous fragments of larnakes that had been built into its fabric: some of them could be recognized as belonging to each of the three fragmentary larnakes (i, ii, v) whose scattered pieces were found below and around the two undisturbed burials in the chamber (iii, iv). We may thus distinguish two periods in the history of the tomb: larnakes i, ii, and v were evidently smashed up in order to make room for iv and iii, which must have been deposited in that order. The debris of v was found under iv, with a few adult bones in its wreckage. Part of i lay on the floor near the south-west corner, where two plain vases (2, 3) were found in situ, hence, also, came most of the fragments of the fine L.M. IIIA 2 stirrup vase (1), although its other pieces were scattered all over the floor of the tomb. This small group of offerings may belong to the disturbed adult skeleton, whose skull lay up against the lower edge of iii. Curiously, some fragments of i and ii were also found above the broken lid of iv (Plate 9 b): perhaps the lid of the later larnax was accidentally smashed at the time of the funeral, in which case the debris from earlier burials could have been piled up above it, as a rough and ready means of protection.


2009 ◽  
Vol 63 (12) ◽  
pp. 1440-1443 ◽  
Author(s):  
G Nagel ◽  
M Wabitsch ◽  
C Galm ◽  
S Berg ◽  
S Brandstetter ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Vol 8 (6) ◽  
pp. 10739-10780
Author(s):  
V. Ruiz-Villanueva ◽  
M. Borga ◽  
D. Zoccatelli ◽  
L. Marchi ◽  
E. Gaume ◽  
...  

Abstract. The 2 June 2008 flood-producing storm on the Starzel river basin in South-West Germany is examined as a prototype for organized convective systems that dominate the upper tail of the precipitation frequency distribution and are likely responsible for the flash flood peaks in this region. The availability of high-resolution rainfall estimates from radar observations and a rain gauge network, together with indirect peak discharge estimates from a detailed post-event survey, provides the opportunity to study the hydrometeorological and hydrological mechanisms associated with this extreme storm and the ensuing flood. Radar-derived rainfall, streamgauge data and indirect estimates of peak discharges are used along with a distributed hydrologic model to reconstruct hydrographs at multiple locations. The influence of storm structure, evolution and motion on the modeled flood hydrograph is examined by using the "spatial moments of catchment rainfall" (Zoccatelli et al., 2011). It is shown that downbasin storm motion had a noticeable impact on flood peak magnitude. Small runoff ratios (less than 20%) characterized the runoff response. The flood response can be reasonably well reproduced with the distributed hydrological model, using high resolution rainfall observations and model parameters calibrated at a river section which includes most of the area impacted by the storm.


2013 ◽  
Vol 33 (2) ◽  
pp. 211-226
Author(s):  
Agni Sesaria Mochtar

Borobudur temple has been famously known as one of the Indonesian heritage masterpiece. Various aspects of it had been studied thoroughly since the beginning of 20th century A.D. Those studies tended to be monumental centric, giving less attention to the cultural context of the temple and its surroundings. Settlement in the nearby places is one of the topics which not have been studied much yet; leaving a big question about how the settlement supported continuity of many activities in the temple, or even the other way around; how the temple affected the settlement. There is only a few data about old settlement found in situ in Borobudur site, only abundance of pottery sherds. The analysis applied on to the potteries find during the 2012 excavation had given some information about the old settlement in Borobodur site. The old settlement predicted as resided in the south west area, in the back side of the monument.


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