scholarly journals Origin of large diamonds in kimberlite

2021 ◽  
pp. 30-34
Author(s):  
V. S. Shkodzinskiy

The evidence of the existence and fractionation of the global magmatic ocean on the Earth allows us to distinguish two stages of the formation of diamonds of increased size. The largest giant diamonds arose at an early stage of crystallization and fractionation of the peridotite layer of the magmatic ocean, since its bottom layer at that time was blocked by still hot upper ones and therefore cooled and crystallized very slowly and long. The mafic composition of this layer and the low viscosity of its magmas caused mainly octahedral cutting of the formed giant diamonds. Later crystallized mainly rhombododecahedral diamonds have increased coarseness due to the formation mainly by the growth of early octahedral crystals.

Author(s):  
A. U. Zamurayeva ◽  
Е. T. Supiyeva ◽  
B Sh. Orynbayeva

Relevance. The modern method of infiltration provides an opportunity to stop the spread of pathogenic bacteria and the development of caries at the white spot stage, replacing the destroyed enamel cells with special polymers having low viscosity and high penetrating ability. The stabilization of the process is achieved in a short time with the maximum safety of their tissues. Purpose. Treatment of initial tooth decay in children by infiltration, assessment of the effectiveness and advantages of modern technology. Materials and methods. Clinical examination was carried out according to generally accepted methods. Additionally, a laser diagnostic method was used using the KaVo DIAGNOdent device (Germany). The LLP Dentistry Center «Zhaik Dent» and the LLP «Concept» used the Icon system for the treatment of initial caries and after orthodontic treatment for 25 children with 54 teeth. Results. At the end of tooth treatment with the Icon infiltration method, parents and the child were given recommendations: from the next day, brush your teeth 2 times a day, rinse your mouth regularly after eating, do not drink drinks, products with coloring substances. To monitor the result of treatment, the child was prescribed for reexamination after 7-10 days, after one month, in the following periods – once a year.After working with the material of the Icon system, the authors noted the pronounced effects of the treatment of initial caries by the method of infiltration.Conclusions. 1. The method of infiltration is a modern and promising technology for the treatment of dental caries at an early stage without losing healthy tissues. 2. The Icon infiltration method makes it possible to stop the spread of pathogenic bacteria and develop tooth decay at the white spot stage, replacing the destroyed enamel cells with special polymers having low viscosity and high penetrating ability. 3. The stabilization of the carious process is achieved in a short time with the maximum preservation of the tooth's tissues. 


Nematology ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 9-14 ◽  
Author(s):  
George Poinar Jr ◽  
Hans Kerp ◽  
Hagen Hass

AbstractNematodes are one of the most abundant groups of invertebrates on the face of the earth. Their extremely poor fossil record hinders our ability to assess just when members of this group invaded land and first became associated with plants. This study reports fossil nematodes from the stomatal chambers of the Early Devonian (396 mya) land plant, Aglaophyton major. These nematodes, which are tentatively assigned to the order Enoplia, are described as Palaeonema phyticum gen. n., sp. n. in the new family Palaeonematidae fam. n. Diagnostic characters of the family are: i) cuticular striations; ii) uniform, cylindrical pharynx with the terminal portion only slightly set off from the remainder; and iii) a two-portioned buccal cavity with the upper portion bearing protuberances. The presence of eggs, juveniles and adults in family clusters within the plant tissues provide the earliest evidence of an association between terrestrial plants and animals and may represent an early stage in the evolution of plant parasitism by nematodes.


2020 ◽  
Vol 51 (2) ◽  
pp. 03-04
Author(s):  
Raven Boxman

The woods environment is basic for providing common assets to the greenery. The woods is an indispensable safe-haven, albeit at present it is presented to illicit logging by insatiable individuals, and this has altogether influenced the woodland. Because of this criminal behavior, unfortunate wonder has surfaced. Consequently, the system of this exploration is worried about building up a far off observing gadget that could catch basic ongoing information, for example, temperature, moistness, vaporous substance, and bonfire and downpour location, which could show the recent and the safeguarded characteristic state and environment in the woods. The model was actualized at chosen areas to screen and assemble information at two stages. The results from this exploration will be utilized in the advancement of a progression of games as instructing helps that can make mindful our group of people yet to come about the consumption and its effect upon the earth.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jaime Gonzalez ◽  
Wendy Donoso ◽  
Natalia Díaz ◽  
María Eliana Albornoz ◽  
Ricardo Huilcaman ◽  
...  

Cardiovascular diseases (CVD) represent about 30% of all global deaths. It is currently accepted that, in the atherogenic process, platelets play an important role, contributing to endothelial activation and modulation of the inflammatory phenomenon, promoting the beginning and formation of lesions and their subsequent thrombotic complications. The objective of the present work was to study using immunohistochemistry, the presence of platelets, monocytes/macrophages, and cell adhesion molecules (CD61, CD163, and CD54), in two stages of the atheromatous process. CF-1 mice fed a fat diet were used to obtain early stages of atheromatous process, denominated early stage of atherosclerosis, and ApoE−/−mice fed a fat diet were used to observe advanced stages of atherosclerosis. The CF-1 mice model presented immunostaining on endothelial surface for all three markers studied; the advanced atherosclerosis model in ApoE−/−mice also presented granular immunostaining on lesion thickness, for the same markers. These results suggest that platelets participate in atheromatous process from early stages to advance d stages. High fat diet induces adhesion of platelets to endothelial cellsin vivo. These findings support studying the participation of platelets in the formation of atheromatous plate.


1933 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 237-246
Author(s):  
M. J. MACKERRAS ◽  
M. R. FRENEY

1. Larvae of L. cuprina and Ch. rufifacies are capable of liquefying and digesting protein media without the intervention of bacteria. Both species and L. sericata secrete tryptic and peptic enzymes and at least L. cuprina does so from the moment of hatching. Tryptase is more abundant than peptase. Predatory activity, though a normal habit of Ch. rufifacies, is not necessary for any of these species and did not occur in the masses of Lucilia larvae used for extraction of the enzymes, although they were kept for periods up to 24 hours without food. 2. Partial development of larvae occurred in sheep dung, faeces-stained wool and in the products of keratin hydrolysis. Complete development took place in wool containing a "gummy crust" of dried exudate and in some samples of faeces-stained wool. Some of the samples of faeces-stained wool and those containing a "crust" have been demonstrated serologically by Dr I. M. Mackerras to have an increased content of soluble sheep protein as compared with normal wool. A marked increase of soluble protein has been demonstrated in struck wool both chemically and serologically. 3. Moisture, warmth, shelter and aeration are essential physical conditions for larval development. In addition, an alkaline reaction is relatively favourable and an acid reaction relatively unfavourable. 4. There are normally two stages in the development of a primary strike, the first stage being from hatching up to the time the larvae attack the skin, the outer layer or epidermis of which is approximately 36µ thick (Whitnall, 1931). During this stage they must feed, if at all, on materials already present. The second stage is from the commencement of an actual skin lesion up to full development of the maggots. During this stage there is a more or less copious serous exudation, which has been shown to be an adequate food for the full development of the maggots. Faeces-staining, presence of exudate due to a prior lesion, and products of wool hydrolysis have been shown to be adequate to carry the larvae through the first stage. Wool hydrolysis on the living sheep is probably not an important factor, judging by an examination of wool samples, but we have isolated organisms which, when growing on a nutrient medium, are capable of disintegrating wool fibre. 5. The rôle of bacterial activity in strike is complex and appears to be substantially as follows: (a) to produce substances which attract the flies and stimulate them to oviposit; (b) to provide food for the initial growth of the maggots, either by rendering assimilable the inert proteins, or by causing a skin reaction with a serous exudation. 6. The immediate work for the future is a more exact determination of: (a) the nature of the food of the larvae in the early stage of growth on the living sheep; (b) the factors which influence its production; and (c) the mechanism by which the larvae invade the skin.


1888 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
pp. 282-322 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Henry Middleton

In many respects Delphi and its varied cults possess an interest which is not to be rivalled by that of any other Hellenic site. The lofty precipices, the dark deeply-cleft ravines, the mysterious caves, and the bubbling springs of pure water, combine to give the place a romantic charm and a fearfulness of aspect which no description can adequately depict.Again Delphi stands alone in the catholic multiplicity of the different cults which were there combined.In primitive times it was the awfulness of Nature which impressed itself on the imaginations of the inhabitants.In an early stage of development the mind of man tends to gloomy forms of religion: his ignorance and comparative helplessness tend to fill his brain with spiritual terrors and forebodings. Thus at Delphi the primitive worship was that of the gloomy Earth and her children, the chasm-rending Poseidon, and the Chthonian Dionysus, who, like Osiris, was the victim of the evil powers of Nature. It was not till later times that the bright Phoebus Apollo came to Delphi to slay the earth-born Python, just as the rising sun dissipates the shadows in the depths of the Delphian ravines, or as in the Indian legend the god Indra kills with his bright arrows the great serpent Ahi—symbol of the black thunder-cloud.


An attempt is made to fit available petrochemical data on oceanic volcanic rocks into the structural model for the ocean basins presented by the plate tectonic theory. It is suggested that there are three major volcanic regimes: (i) the low-potassic olivine tholeiite association of the axial zones of the oceanic ridges where magmatic liquids are generated at low pressures high in the mantle, (ii) the alkalic (Na > K) associations along linear fractures where liquids generated at greater depth gain easy egress to the surface, (iii) those alkalic associations, rich in incompatible elements, of island groups, remote from fracture zones, where magmas created at depth proceed slowly to the surface and in consequence suffer intense fractionation. There are certain discrepancies in this pattern, notably that there is no apparent relation between rate of sea-floor spreading and degree of over-saturation of the axial zone basalts and that certain areas, such as Iceland, are characterized by excess volcanism. Explanation of these anomalies is sought by examining an oceanic area in an early stage of development—the Red Sea. It is tentatively suggested that the initial split of a contiguous continent might be brought about by the linking of profound fractures, caused by domal uplift related to rising isolated lithothermal systems, and that the present anomalies in oceanic volcanism may reflect the variation in rate of thermal convection within the original isolated lithothermal plumes.


Author(s):  
Daniel W. Graham

It is generally held that Presocratic cosmologies are sui generis and unique to their authors. If, however, a division is made between sixth-century and fifthcentury BC cosmologies, some salient differences emerge. For instance, heavenly bodies in sixth-century cosmologies tend to be light, ephemeral, fed by vapors, and located above the earth; those in fifth-century cosmologies tend to be heavy, permanent, heated by friction, and to travel below the earth. The earlier cosmologies seem to embody a meteorological model of astronomy, the latter a lithic model. The change in models can be accounted for on the basis of Parmenides’ discovery that the moon is illuminated by the sun and hence is a spherical, permanent, opaque or earthy body. This insight generated empirical evidence to confirm itself and rendered obsolete earlier cosmologies.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Valentina R. Barletta ◽  
Andrea Bordoni ◽  
Shfaqat Abbas Khan

<p>The mass lost from Greenland ice sheet is one of the most important contribution to the global sea level rise, and it is under constant monitoring. However, still little is known about the heat flux at the glacier bedrock, and how it affects dynamics of the major outlet glaciers in Greenland. Recent studies suggest that the hotspot currently under Iceland have been under eastern Greenland at ~40 Ma BP and that the upwelling of hot material from the Iceland plume towards Greenland is ongoing. A warm upper mantle has a low viscosity, which in turn causes the solid Earth to rebound much faster to deglaciation. We have good reasons to believe that mantle beneath SE-Greenland has very low viscosity (Khan, et al. 2016), as also suggested by the discrepancy between the GPS velocities and the predicted purely elastic deformations caused by present-day ice loss. Here we present a preliminary computation of the Earth deformation driven by a low viscosity mantle excited by the deglatiation since the little ice age (LIA) to the present day. We produce the time series of such deformation and compare it with GPS time series, the oldest dating back to 1992.</p>


2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
F. Angulo-Brown ◽  
Marco A. Rosales ◽  
M. A. Barranco-Jiménez

Classical models of the Sun suggest that the energy output in the early stage of its evolution was 30 percent less than today. In this context, radiative balance alone between The Sun and the Earth was not sufficient to explain the early presence of liquid water on Earth’s surface. This difficulty is called the faint young Sun paradox. Many proposals have been published to solve this paradox. In the present work, we propose an oversimplified finite-time thermodynamic approach that describes the air convective cells in the Earth atmosphere. This model introduces two atmospheric modes of thermodynamic performance: a first mode consisting in the maximization of the power output of the convective cells (maximum power regime) and a second mode that consists in maximizing a functional representing a good trade-off between power output and entropy production (the ecological regime). Within the assumptions of this oversimplified model, we present different scenarios of albedo and greenhouse effects that seem realistic to preserve liquid water on the Earth in the early stage of formation.


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