DETRITAL ZIRCON ANALYSIS OF BASEMENT IN THE COST NO. G-1 WELL, GEORGES BANK, OFFSHORE MASSACHUSETTS: FRAGMENTS OF WEST AFRICAN CRUST?

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yvette D. Kuiper ◽  
◽  
Margaret D. Thompson ◽  
Sandra M. Barr ◽  
Christopher E. White ◽  
...  
Geology ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 45 (9) ◽  
pp. 811-814 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yvette D. Kuiper ◽  
Margaret D. Thompson ◽  
Sandra M. Barr ◽  
Chris E. White ◽  
J. Christopher Hepburn ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 110 ◽  
pp. 589-593 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jenny C. Aker ◽  
Silvia Prina ◽  
C. Jamilah Welch

Mobile money can reduce the cost of sending remittances as compared with traditional money transfer systems. Despite remittances being a crucial part of the West African economy, mobile money is failing to take off. We use supply and demand data for money transfer services to better understand low mobile money adoption in Niger. Using a modified Becker-DeGroot-Marschak mechanism to elicit willingness to pay, we find that households are willing to pay the cost of sending a transfer via mobile money, with substantial regional variation. This regional variation is correlated with agent density, which suggests that agent infrastructure might be a barrier.


2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cristina Accotto ◽  
David Martínez Poyatos ◽  
Antonio Azor ◽  
Cristina Talavera ◽  
Noreen Joyce Evans ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Detrital zircon U-Pb geochronology has been widely used to constrain the pre-Carboniferous geography of the European and, to a lesser extent, the Moroccan Variscides. The latter have been generally considered as part of a long-lasting passive margin that characterized northern Gondwana from Ordovician to Devonian time, and was subsequently involved in the late Paleozoic Variscan orogeny. We report detrital zircon ages for three Early to Late Ordovician samples from the Beni Mellala inlier in the northeastern part of the Western Moroccan Meseta in order to discuss the temporal evolution of the sources of sediments in this region. The detrital zircon spectra of these samples, characterized by two main populations with mean ages of 630–610 Ma and 2170–2060 Ma, are typical of Cambrian–Devonian rocks from the Moroccan Variscides and confirm their link to the West African craton. A minor Stenian–Tonian population (peak at ca. 970 Ma) suggests the influence of a distant and intermittent NE African source (Sahara metacraton), which was probably interrupted after Ordovician time. Our data support previous interpretations of the Moroccan Meseta (and the entire northern Moroccan Variscides) as part of the northern Gondwana passive margin. The main sources of these sediments would have been the West African craton in the western regions of the passive margin (Moroc- can Meseta and central European Paleozoic massifs), and the Arabian-Nubian Shield and/or Sahara metacraton in the eastern areas (Libya, Egypt, Jordan, central and NW Iberian zones during Paleozoic time), where the 1.0 Ga detrital zircon population is persistent throughout the Ordovician–Devonian time span.


2018 ◽  
Vol 350 (6) ◽  
pp. 267-278 ◽  
Author(s):  
Moussa Konaté ◽  
Yacouba Ahmed ◽  
Andreas Gärtner ◽  
Diafarou Alzouma Amadou ◽  
Hassan Ibrahim Maharou ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
HEATHER DALTON

In 1541, Roger Barlow, an English merchant who had traded with Spain's Atlantic settlements from Seville in the 1520s, presented Henry VIII with a cosmography containing his personal account of the Rio de la Plata, inserted into an English translation of the 1519 edition of the Suma de Geographia by Martin Fernandez de Enciso. Despite the fact that both men had been involved in the buying and selling of West African slaves, Barlow translated Enciso's short description of the slave markets in Guinea without comment. This chapter explores how the trading network of English, Spanish and Genoese merchants Barlow belonged to had traded in slaves and associated products, such as pearls and sugar, since the 1480s. In doing so, they were instrumental in linking the ‘Guinea of Cape Verde’ to the wider Atlantic world.


2018 ◽  
Vol 479 ◽  
pp. 259-271 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andreas Petersson ◽  
Anders Scherstén ◽  
Bara Kristinsdóttir ◽  
Anthony Kemp ◽  
Martin Whitehouse

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