Complete structural model for lanthanum tungstate: a chemically stable high temperature proton conductor by means of intrinsic defects

2012 ◽  
Vol 22 (5) ◽  
pp. 1762-1764 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna Magrasó ◽  
Jonathan M. Polfus ◽  
Carlos Frontera ◽  
Jesús Canales-Vázquez ◽  
Liv-Elisif Kalland ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
S. W. Richards ◽  
W. J. Collins

ABSTRACTCombined field and geophysical data show that plutons from the Bega Batholith are elongate, meridional, wedge-shaped bodies which intruded during a period of regional east–west extension in the Palaeozoic eastern Lachlan orogen, eastern Australia. Plutons within the core of the batholith have intruded coeval, syn-rift sediments and co-magmatic volcanics. The batholith is bound by high-temperature, dip-slip faults, and contains several major NE-trending transtensional faults which were active during batholith construction. In the central part of the batholith, the Kameruka pluton is an asymmetric, eastward-thickening, wedge-shaped body with the base exposed as the western contact, which is characterised by abundant, shallow-dipping schlieren migmatites which contain recumbent folds and extensional shear bands. A shallow (<30°), east-dipping, primary magmatic layering in the Kameruka pluton steepens progressively westward, where it becomes conformable to the east-dipping basal migmatites. The systematic steepening of the layering is comparable to sedimentary units formed during floor depression in syn-rift settings. The present authors suggest that the wedge-shaped plutons of the Bega Batholith are the deeper, plutonic expression of a hot, active rift. The batholith was fed and sustained by injection of magma through sub-vertical dykes. Displacement along syn-magmatic, NE-trending faults suggests up to 25 km of arc-perpendicular extension during batholith construction. The inferred tectonic setting for batholith emplacement is a continental back-arc, where modern half-extension rates of 20–40 mm yr−1 are not unusual, and are sufficient to emplace the entire batholith in ∼1 Ma. This structural model provides a mechanism for the emplacement of some wedge-shaped plutons and is one solution to the ‘room problem’ of batholith emplace


2011 ◽  
Vol 158 (11) ◽  
pp. B1368 ◽  
Author(s):  
Igor Luisetto ◽  
Elisabetta Di Bartolomeo ◽  
Alessandra D'Epifanio ◽  
Silvia Licoccia

1997 ◽  
Vol 234-236 ◽  
pp. 937-939 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Lind ◽  
I. Sosnowska ◽  
R. Hempelmann ◽  
W. Schäfer ◽  
K. Knight

2018 ◽  
Vol 213 ◽  
pp. 35-43 ◽  
Author(s):  
Suwen Wang ◽  
Peng Sun ◽  
Xuejing Hao ◽  
Zhongfang Li ◽  
Guohong Liu ◽  
...  

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