Transfer of displacement between faults of opposed dip

Author(s):  
Conrad Childs ◽  
Robert Worthington ◽  
John Walsh ◽  
Vincent Roche

<p>The transfer of displacement between faults that dip in the same direction is well understood and relay ramps between adjacent fault segments have been frequently described. Perhaps counterintuitively, displacement can also be transferred between faults that dip in opposite directions but the structure at the boundaries between opposed dipping faults is not well understood. We constrain the mechanism by which displacement is transferred between opposed-dipping faults by examining the geometries of faulted horizons and fault throw distributions at these ‘conjugate relay zones’.</p><p>Structure contour maps of horizons offset by overlapping opposed-dipping faults from different extensional settings display a consistent pattern. Above the line of intersection between the conjugate faults the deformed horizon is flat between converging faults and displacement transfer is reflected in changes in footwall elevation. Below the line of fault intersection the mutual footwall is flat and elevation changes occur in the hanging walls of the divergent faults. These elevation changes can be explained as a simple superposition of the deformation fields of two faults that have retarded lateral propagation due to the presence of the other synchronous fault, irrespective of whether the two faults actually intersect. The observed patterns of horizon elevation strongly resemble those seen at boundaries between adjacent basin-scale half-graben of opposed polarity.</p>

2012 ◽  
Vol 610-613 ◽  
pp. 3574-3579
Author(s):  
Cui Hua Wang ◽  
Sheng Long Yang ◽  
Chao Lu ◽  
Hong Xia Yu ◽  
Lian Shen Wang ◽  
...  

By using CoMFA and CoMSIA methods, the new quantitative structures of 25 aromatic hydrocarbons and the 96 hr-EC50 data with C. vulgaris have been investigated to obtain more detailed insight into the relationships between molecular structure and bioactivity. Compared to CoMFA (the average Q2LOO option =0.610), CoMSIA (the average Q2LOO =0.736) has the better results with robustness and stability. CoMSIA analysis using steric, electrostatic, hydrophobic, and H-bond donor and acceptor descriptors show H-bond donor is the common factor for influencing the toxicity, the steric and electrostatic descriptors are next and the hydrophobic descriptor was last. From the contour maps, the number of benzene ring is more crucial for the compound toxicity and the compounds with more benzene ring make toxicity increased. Under the same number of benzene ring, the kind of substituent group and the formed ability of H-bond are the other parameters to influencing the aromatic hydrocarbons toxicity.


1993 ◽  
Vol 177 (1) ◽  
pp. 113-128 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Barlow ◽  
M. A. Sleigh ◽  
R. J. White

Patterns of water flow around steadily beating comb plates of Pleurobrachia pileus were tracked using suspended plastic beads. The positions of the beads and the comb plates in the plane of the central longitudinal axis of the comb row were digitised from high-speed cine films covering several beat cycles. All of the data from each sequence were combined using a computer program which integrated them into a standard cycle, and the resulting data were plotted by a second computer program to produce charts for different stages in the beat cycle showing the flow velocity at a grid of points. On these charts, contour maps were drawn to indicate the speed and direction of the water flow. Water is drawn towards each comb row from ahead and from the sides and accelerates strongly backwards in a fairly narrow stream which joins those from the other seven comb rows at the rear of the animal. At a beat frequency of 10 Hz the comb plates move with a tip speed of up to 70 mm s-1 in their effective stroke; they have an estimated Reynolds number of 9 in this stroke. Changes in inter- plate volume between adjacent antiplectically coordinated plates are very important in propulsion, particularly near the end of the effective stroke when pairs of adjacent plates close together and cause the high-speed water from around the ciliary tips to be shed into the overlying stream as a series of jets at speeds of 50 mm s-1 or more. The antiplectic coordination of the comb plates makes a major contribution to the efficiency of propulsion.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Athul Kaitheri ◽  
Anthony Mémin ◽  
Frédérique Rémy

<p>Precisely quantifying the Antarctic Ice Sheet (AIS) mass balance remains a challenge as several processes compete at differing degrees in the basin-scale with regional variations. Understanding of changes in AIS has been largely based on observations from various altimetry missions and Gravity Recovery And Climate Experiment (GRACE) missions due to its scale and coverage. Analysis of linear trends in surface height variations of AIS since the early 1990s showed multiple variabilities in the rate of changes over the period of time. These observations are a reflection of various underlying ice sheet processes. Therefore understanding the processes that interact on the ice sheet is important to precisely determine the response of the ice sheet to a rapidly changing climate.</p><p>Changing climate constitutes variations in major short term processes including snow accumulation and surface melting. Variations in accumulation rate and temperature at the ice sheet surface cause changes in the firn compaction (FC) rate. Variations in the FC rate change the AIS thickness, that should be detected from altimetry, but do not change its mass, as observed by the GRACE mission. We focus our study on the seasonal and interannual changes in the elevation and mass of the AIS. We use surface elevation changes from Envisat data and gravity changes derived from the latest GRACE solutions between 10/2002 and 10/2010. As mass changes observed using the GRACE mission is strongly impacted by long term isostasy, as it involves mantle mass redistribution, we remove from all dataset an 8-year trend. We use weather variable historical data solutions including surface mass balance, temperature and wind velocities from the regional climate model RACMO2.3p2 as input to an FC model to estimate AIS elevation changes. We obtain a very good correlation between height change estimates from GRACE, Envisat and RACMO2.3p2 at several places such as along the coast of Dronning Maud Land, Wilkes land and Amundsen sea sector. Considerable differences in Oates and Mac Robertson regions, with a strong seasonal signal in Envisat estimates, reflect spatial variability in physical parameters of the surface of the AIS due to climate parameter changes such as winds.</p>


1968 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 147-158 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dorothy A. Huntington ◽  
Katherine S. Harris ◽  
George N. Sholes

The purpose of this study was to obtain comparative information on the articulation of some common consonants by a very small sample of normal and deaf talkers. Information on the organization of articulation was collected by electromyography. Electrodes were placed on some diagnostic locations on the facial and tongue musculature, and the patterns of contractions were measured for 11 common consonants spoken in a disyllabic frame. The results show that patterns of facial muscle contractions in the deaf speakers are in general correct, by comparison with normals, although they are generally exaggerated. On the other hand, tongue muscle patterns of the deaf speakers are stereotyped but frequently wrong, though there is no consistent pattern to the direction of the errors.


2013 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 187-210 ◽  
Author(s):  
Donald Bungum

Eleonore Stump has argued that the fulfilment of union between God and human beings requires a mode of relatedness that can be compared to joint attention, a phenomenon studied in contemporary experimental psychology. Stump’s account of union, however, is challenged by the fact that mother Teresa, despite her apparent manifestation of the love of God to others, herself experienced an interior ‘dark night of the soul’ during which God seemed to be absent and to have rejected her completely. The dark night of the soul poses a problem for Stump’s account, since, if anyone had a union of divine love with God, it would seem that mother Teresa did. Nevertheless, I argue that the isolation and abandonment of mother Teresa’s dark night are contrary to the conditions assumed to be required for joint attention with God. As an alternative to Stump’s account, I suggest that the dark night of the soul might be better understood by reference to a combination of joint attention and blindsight, according to which interpersonal closeness might be realized through a consistent pattern of external actions without, however, a direct awareness of one person by the other.


1970 ◽  
Vol 27 (4) ◽  
pp. 715-730 ◽  
Author(s):  
James D. McCleave ◽  
Ross M. Horrall

Displacement of 42 mature cutthroat trout (Salmo clarki) from their spawning tributaries to the open water of Yellowstone Lake in the summers of 1966 and 1968 and following them ultrasonically up to 13.5 hr and 11.8 km indicated that those that homed used a compass mechanism rather than search or true navigation to find shore and then followed the shoreline to the home stream. Vision was unnecessary for homing. For many of the fish whose movements showed no consistent pattern, the transmitters failed prematurely.Of 29 nonanesthetized trout tracked from a point northwest of their home streams, six moved generally eastward to shallow water, turned south, and followed the shoreline toward the home streams, three being followed all the way home. Six moved generally south or southeast and progressed toward their home streams entirely in open water, one being followed home. Three moved inappropriately for homing but were less than 2 km from the release point when tracking was ended. Fourteen moved randomly or did not move enough or were not tracked long enough to establish a pattern.Of five anesthetized-blinded trout, two moved eastward and then south along the shoreline, one moved south in open water, and the other two did not show a consistent pattern. Of four anesthetized-control trout, two moved eastward and then south along shore, one being followed home; one moved inappropriately and the other did not establish a pattern.Of four nonanesthetized trout tracked from a point southwest of their home stream, three moved east and then north along shore toward the home stream, one being followed home; the fourth moved north in open water.Current directions may have influenced the initial orientations.Swimming speeds ranged from 0.0 to 46.2 cm sec−1 in open water and from 8.5 to 82.3 cm sec−1 along shore. Average along-shore speed (36.6 cm sec−1) was greater than average open-water speed (22.9 cm sec−1). Blinded trout swam at about the same speeds (average 22.6 cm sec−1) as control trout (average 27.0 cm sec−1) and nonanesthetized trout (average 23.3 cm sec−1).


2020 ◽  
Vol 58 ◽  
pp. 227-238
Author(s):  
Tomasz Ślęczka

The subject of the article is the issue of genre classification of the writings of Kazimierz Sar-necki, who was a permanent agent of the Deputy Chancellor of Lithuania Karol Stanisław Radziwiłł, at the court of Jan Sobieski III. Sarnecki’s main task was to obtain information about what was happening around the monarch — above all his state of health and all the other matters, even of the lowest importance. Incarrying out his assigned tasks, Sarnecki kept a diary which, at intervals of about a week, he sent to his principal along with a separate letter. In it, he reported on his own activities, answered questions, and supplemented information that he did not record in the diary. They were two separate texts written independently but he sent them in one package. He used two different names to de-scribe them (diary and letter). Researchers of old Polish literature, however, were looking for a term that would allow Sar-necki’s entire preserved output to be given one name. Two such suggestions were made. The first of these comes from Janusz Woliński, the publisher of Sarnecki’s work, who called it a memoir. This is not a correct term because the work does not meet any of the elements of the memoir definition (Sarnecki does not focus the narrative on himself, his storytelling of the events is subordinate to a consistent pattern, there is also no time distance to the described matters). The author of the second is Alojzy Sajkowski. He created the term “epistolographic relation” because in the diary he saw an element subordinate to the letter accounts; he also noticed the similar-ity between the writings of Sarnecki and Jan Piotrowski, who kept a diary during the siege of Pskov (1581–1582) and from time to time rephrased subsequent parts, giving them a form of a letter which he then sent to his patron, Andrzej Opaliński. This term is not correct enough either. Sarnecki was not creating one work which combined elements of a diary and a letter but two separate works — a diary and a letter. Similarities with Piotrowski’s diary only go so far — Sarnecki did not rephrase anything, but sent “raw” material, and did not include the diary into the letter. That is why it is a better solution to use the names introduced by the author himself, because in this way we define the nature of his writing output most accurately.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hui Chen ◽  
Jongmin Byun

<div> <p>Bedrock river is rock-bound, its bed and banks are composed mainly of in-place bedrock. Bedrock channel reaches, commonly short and intermittent, often occur where transport capacity exceeds bedload sediment flux. Despite the abundant research on the typical patterns of alluvial channel reaches, the distribution of bedrock channels has not been well studied. Rock type may affect the occurrence of bedrock channels because the strength, joint density, and erosion process of bedrock vary depending on the rock type. Previous studies have viewed the bedrock channel occurrence in the aspect of the excessive sediment transport capacity, but the influence of lithology has not been considered in the literature. To understand the influence of lithology on bedrock channel occurrence in a drainage basin-scale, we investigated the distribution of bedrock channels in relation to varying lithology and unit stream power along the Seogang River in South Korea. We used satellite images with high resolution for the identification of bedrock channel reaches and then verified them through field surveys. Geological maps and 1 arc-second SRTM DEMs were used to analyze lithological effects and calculate unit stream power.  As a result of the analysis, we identified 94 bedrock channels in the studied river, varying depending on lithologies. The frequency of bedrock channels in granitic gneiss areas (0.73/km) is much higher than those in the other rock type areas (granite areas, 0.57/km; limestone areas, 0.16/km). In the more frequent granitic gneiss areas, the bedrock channels are steepened (average channel slope: 0.0074 m/m) and narrow (average channel width: 65 m) and mainly reside within steepened and narrow (average valley width: 123 m) rock-bound valleys so that their occurrence is mainly associated with high unit stream power. In contrast, the bedrock channels over the other lithologies are wider (89 m) and lower-gradient (0.0056 m/m) and occur along flat and broad valleys (391 m). Consequently, the bedrock channels in the studied river were divided into two types: confined and unconfined bedrock channels. The confined bedrock channels are within the steepened and narrow valleys composed of resistant granitic gneiss and show the evidence for recent bedrock incision processes. However, the unconfined bedrock channels are mainly within the broad and flat valleys of weak saprolites and limestone with high joint density have lower unit stream power and don't show any marker for bedrock incision. In conclusion, high-relief landscape mainly composed of more resistant rocks generates steep and narrow valleys, which leads to the formation of continuous and actively incising bedrock channels. However, low-relief landscape underlain by non-resistant rocks shows wider and lower-gradient channels, with intermittent bedrock channels due to locally more resistant rock bodies.</p> </div>


1998 ◽  
Vol 46 (4) ◽  
pp. 377 ◽  
Author(s):  
Byron B. Lamont ◽  
Jens M. Olesen ◽  
Peter J. Briffa

The reproductive biology of two species pairs was compared, one member of which (Dryandra sessilis (Knight) Domin, Hakea erinacea Meissner) is susceptible to severe stress and disturbance by fire (nonsprouter) and stores few seeds in its crown, while the other (D. lindleyana Meissner, H. cristata R.Br.) is resilient (resprouter) and also stores most of its seeds for some years. It was hypothesised that the nonsprouter would have a high annual seed production associated with a suite of attributes directed towards that end (forming a reproductive syndrome), and that the resprouter would have the reverse properties. Over 30 attributes were assessed, covering putative pollinators, pollinator attractants and rewards, flower phenology, breeding system, and flower, fruit and seed production. Dryandra sessilis produced far more seeds than D. lindleyana, due to prolific flower production and a high fruit : flower ratio (associated with an effective outcrossing breeding system). Hakea erinacea produced significantly more seeds than H. cristata, which was attributable to its smaller fruits and exceptionally high fruit : flower ratio (associated with highly effective selfing). The correlation of seed production and fruit : flower ratio with susceptibility to fire was not supported by any consistent pattern among the other reproductive attributes.


1974 ◽  
Vol 83 (4) ◽  
pp. 498-514 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arndt J. Duvall ◽  
W. Dixon Ward ◽  
Kathryn E. Lauhala

One hundred and ten chinchillas were exposed to a 700–2800 Hz noise at 123 dB for 15 minutes. A consistent pattern of ultrastructural pathology within the lateral cochlear wall was found. Significant damage to the stria vascularis was first observed one hour postexposure, reached a peak at 24 hours, and had recovered almost completely by 28 days. Spiral prominence damage was permanent. The pathology included stria widening, temporary disappearance of intermediate cells, alterations of the internal membrane system and abnormal vessel transport. Horseradish peroxidase (HRP) was employed as an indicator of transport from vessels. Transport from the stria vessels was absent when stria ultrastructural abnormality was at a maximum; at other postexposure times, however, abnormally rapid exodus of HRP from the vessels of the stria was observed in animals who had received intravenous injections of HRP 30 seconds prior to sacrifice. On the other hand, no leakage was observed in the animals injected one minute before sacrifice. Theories to explain this transport dichotomy are proposed.


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