scholarly journals The GIK-Archive of sediment core radiographs with documentation

2017 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 969-976
Author(s):  
Hannes Grobe ◽  
Kyaw Winn ◽  
Friedrich Werner ◽  
Amelie Driemel ◽  
Stefanie Schumacher ◽  
...  

Abstract. The GIK-Archive of radiographs is a collection of X-ray negative and photographic images of sediment cores based on exposures taken since the early 1960s. During four decades of marine geological work at the University of Kiel, Germany, several thousand hours of sampling, careful preparation and X-raying were spent on producing a unique archive of sediment radiographs from several parts of the World Ocean. The archive consists of more than 18 500 exposures on chemical film that were digitized, geo-referenced, supplemented with metadata and archived in the data library PANGAEA®. With this publication, the images have become available open-access for use by the scientific community at https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.854841.

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hannes Grobe ◽  
Kyaw Winn ◽  
Friedrich Werner ◽  
Amelie Driemel ◽  
Stefanie Schumacher ◽  
...  

Abstract. The GIK-Archive of radiographs is a collection of X-ray negative images from sediment cores, prepared and exposed since the early 1960s. During four decades of marine geological work at the University of Kiel, Germany, some thousand hours of sampling, careful preparation and x-raying were spent to produce a unique archive of sediment 10 radiographs from several parts of the world ocean. The archive consists of more than 18 500 exposures on chemical film that were digitized, geo-referenced, supplemented with metadata and archived in the data library PANGAEA®. With this publication, the images become available in Open Access for use by the scientific community at https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.854841.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jasper Moernaut ◽  
Sebastian Wagner ◽  
Julia Rechenmacher ◽  
Markus Fiebig ◽  
Marcel Ortler ◽  
...  

<p>Sedimentary records in inner-Alpine lakes typically show a rich history of changes in sediment dynamics and the occurrence of various geohazards. Lake Altaussee (712 m asl; 2.4 x 1.0 km; max. 72 m deep) is a dimictic, moderately-sized glacigenic lake located in the Northern Calcareous Alps. Currently, it has no major river inflow and most water input comes from several subaqueous springs, forming large and deep craters (max. 60 m diameter and 22 m deep) on the lake bottom. Since 2019, a wide suite of investigations (hydrogeology, microplastics, hydroacoustics, geomorphology, sedimentology) started under the framework of the Walter Munk Foundation for the Oceans (WMFO) and the University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences (BOKU) Vienna. In 2020, the University of Innsbruck (UIBK) became a project partner to undertake joint research on its sedimentary infill.</p><p>We present preliminary results from lacustrine morphological mapping of high-resolution multibeam bathymetry (Kongsberg EM2040), seismic-stratigraphic analysis of subbottom profiling data (Innomar SES-2000 and Kongsberg GEOPULSE), and sedimentological/geochemical analysis on 22 short cores (60-170 cm long). Stratigraphic correlation between the 22 cores is based on visual detection of marker layers in Multi-Sensor Core Logging (MSCL), X-Ray CT and X-ray fluorescence (XRF) core scanning data.</p><p>The sediment cores mainly exhibit slowly-accumulating organic-rich sediments, typical for lake systems that lack significant fluvial sediment input. One unit of finely-laminated clastic carbonate-rich sedimentation can be traced back to an episode in which a major creek −draining an area of active salt mining− was flowing into the western part of the lake. In medieval times, this creek was artificially diverted and depositional conditions in the lake returned to organic-rich sedimentation. </p><p>The hydroacoustic data show a scattered pattern of large-scale blocks up to 50-70 m diameter in the eastern half of the lake basin. This suggests the occurrence of one or more large gravitational mass movements, which potentially originated at the steep rock slopes at the northern and eastern end of the lake. A megaturbidite (>1-2 m thick) can be traced over the entire basin floor in both subbottom profiling data and sediment cores, and directly overlies the blocks in the deep basin. Isopach mapping of this megaturbidite hints at sediment transport from both the eastern and western slopes, which we interpret to have occurred as the results of a mass-movement induced impulse wave that eroded coastal sediments at the opposite side of the lake and transported these to the deeper basin. On the shallower western plateau, the presence of an outstanding coarse-grained stratigraphic unit with an erosive base further supports this hypothesis, as it is stratigraphically coeval to the megaturbidite. Biogenic gas accumulation at the base of the megaturbidite prevents further penetration on the subbottom profiles, but some acoustic windows visualize up to 15 m of infill.</p><p>Upcoming research involves the establishment of <sup>14</sup>C-based age-depth models, the acquisition of single-channel airgun seismics to visualize the entire infill of the lake through the gas blanket, and long piston coring to investigate the sediment dynamics and geohazards recorded in the Holocene sedimentary infill.</p>


Phytotaxa ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 452 (3) ◽  
pp. 191-199
Author(s):  
ORLANDO O. ORTIZ ◽  
THOMAS B. CROAT ◽  
HILARIO ESPINOSA ◽  
RICCARDO M. BALDINI

Currently in Panama, as in other parts of the world, there is little interest in taxonomy, both at the educational and research levels. In order to increase awareness and research interest in plant taxonomy amongst botany majors, we involved a cohort of college-level students of the University of Panama’s Biology School in the process of naming a yet-to-be described species of Anthurium (Araceae), engaging them in all aspects of taxonomy including the process of proposing a new species to the scientific community. With their help, we hereby describe a new species we named Anthurium oistophyllum, with descriptions and illustrations based upon photographs of the vegetative and reproductive structures taken from live material.


1907 ◽  
Vol 4 (6) ◽  
pp. 241-253
Author(s):  
H. G. Seeley

In presenting to our readers a brief notice of the life and work of Professor Seeley, one of the most eminent of Vertebrate Palæontologists, we feel that we are offering but a scant tribute to one who has for more than thirty years occupied a leading position in the world of science. He is not only an accomplished teacher in Geology and the allied sciences in the University of London, but has long been recognized as a distinguished worker in the fields of Zoology and Comparative Anatomy. His investigations into the Fossil Reptilia of the Secondary period, and especially his remarkable researches in the Anomodont Reptilia from the Trias of South Africa, are already classic and-unsurpassed. His purely geological work in the field has also made substantial contributions to our knowledge of the strata in the South of England.


2004 ◽  
Vol 82 (6) ◽  
pp. 1028-1042 ◽  
Author(s):  
G M Bancroft

The Canadian Light Source (CLS) in Saskatoon has been under construction for the last 4 years, and will be producing a number of very intense beams of far-IR, IR, soft and hard X-rays in 2004 for use by several hundred Canadian scientists in chemistry, surface and material science, and a host of other scientific disciplines. The CLS will dramatically enhance the Canadian spectroscopic tradition that Gerhard Herzberg help create. I begin this article (from my 2002 CIC Montreal Medal lecture) with an overview of the history of SR in Canada, beginning in 1972 with the first Canadian synchrotron workshop organized at the University of Western Ontario by Bill McGowan, and attended by Dr. Herzberg. The CLS facility is then described, along with the properties of the first and second set of beamlines to be built at the CLS. These SR beams, in the IR and X-ray regions from the third generation CSL ring, will be competitive in brightness and intensity with the best beamlines in the world for most applications. Finally, some of the present Canadian SR research at foreign SR sources is described across the entire SR spectrum. All known spectroscopic and diffraction experiments are dramatically enhanced with SR; and SR opens up new areas of spectroscopy, microscopy, and spectromicroscopy that cannot be studied with any other source of radiation.Key words: synchrotron light, X-rays, infrared, spectroscopy.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. e0247839
Author(s):  
Caio B. S. Maior ◽  
João M. M. Santana ◽  
Isis D. Lins ◽  
Márcio J. C. Moura

As SARS-CoV-2 has spread quickly throughout the world, the scientific community has spent major efforts on better understanding the characteristics of the virus and possible means to prevent, diagnose, and treat COVID-19. A valid approach presented in the literature is to develop an image-based method to support COVID-19 diagnosis using convolutional neural networks (CNN). Because the availability of radiological data is rather limited due to the novelty of COVID-19, several methodologies consider reduced datasets, which may be inadequate, biasing the model. Here, we performed an analysis combining six different databases using chest X-ray images from open datasets to distinguish images of infected patients while differentiating COVID-19 and pneumonia from ‘no-findings’ images. In addition, the performance of models created from fewer databases, which may imperceptibly overestimate their results, is discussed. Two CNN-based architectures were created to process images of different sizes (512 × 512, 768 × 768, 1024 × 1024, and 1536 × 1536). Our best model achieved a balanced accuracy (BA) of 87.7% in predicting one of the three classes (‘no-findings’, ‘COVID-19’, and ‘pneumonia’) and a specific balanced precision of 97.0% for ‘COVID-19’ class. We also provided binary classification with a precision of 91.0% for detection of sick patients (i.e., with COVID-19 or pneumonia) and 98.4% for COVID-19 detection (i.e., differentiating from ‘no-findings’ or ‘pneumonia’). Indeed, despite we achieved an unrealistic 97.2% BA performance for one specific case, the proposed methodology of using multiple databases achieved better and less inflated results than from models with specific image datasets for training. Thus, this framework is promising for a low-cost, fast, and noninvasive means to support the diagnosis of COVID-19.


Author(s):  
Alexander Y. Ivanyushkin ◽  
Andrey P. Fisenko ◽  
Ivan E. Smirnov

In the second part of the scientific review of the life, medical and scientific activities of N.I. Pirogov there are considered his achievements in his five-years research at the University of Dorpat. The result of training at the Dorpat «professor’s institute» was the defense of a doctoral dissertation. In March 1836, the doctor of medicine, N.I. Pirogov was approved as a professor at the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Dorpat, whose entire German-speaking scientific environment was a favorable factor in the full-fledged development of his scientific genius. In the person of N.I. Pirogov’s original Russian biomedical science has reached a «level of truly universal perspectives», has been recognized by the world scientific community. In 1841, N.I. Pirogov became the head of the Department of Surgery at the Imperial Medical and Surgical Academy (IMSA) in St. Petersburg, where he worked for 14 years, the most fruitful in his creative biography as a scientist and doctor. He created the Department of Hospital Surgery, the Anatomical Institute, a new scientific discipline - topographic anatomy. Philosophical reflection is organically inherent in N.I. Pirogov as a doctor, scientist, teacher, citizen.


2021 ◽  
pp. 93-102
Author(s):  
Libor Ansorge ◽  
Lada Stejskalová ◽  
Dagmar Vološinová

Sustainable development of water resources requires new tools and research in these fields of study. A systematic overview of water footprint research in countries of former Yugoslavia is presented through bibliometric analysis and publication review. The Scopus database was used as the data source. Among the countries of former Yugoslavia, only researchers from Slovenia, Serbia, Croatia, and Bosnia and Hercegovina published papers focused on water footprint research before March 2021. Research on water footprint in these countries was found to be insufficient in scope and intensity. The contribution of authors from the countries of former Yugoslavia is small compared to research in other countries all over the world but is not insignificant. Almost 2/3 of articles have already been cited by other authors. Two main centers of water footprint research are at the University of Maribor in Slovenia and at the University of Novi Sad in Serbia, respectively. The research is focused on the so-called volumetric water footprint, while the LCA water footprint stands outside the interest of the scientific community in countries of former Yugoslavia.


Author(s):  
Heather M. Hill

On 14 April 2016, the scientific community lost Dr. Stan Kuczaj, professor at the University of Southern Mississippi and Director of the Marine Mammal Behavior and Cognition Laboratory. He was a beloved teacher, researcher, friend, mentor, and colleague. By age 65, this well-liked, respected professor had achieved world-renowned status in multiple disciplines—comparative psychology, behavioral sciences, and developmental psychology. His tremendous success in these areas resulted in a legacy of more than 50 master’s- and doctoral-level students working in a variety of fields; he also had hundreds of collaborators from around the world. Stan significantly contributed to and influenced the current direction of these fields and had many plans and research projects still to accomplish.


Author(s):  
S. Edith Taylor ◽  
Patrick Echlin ◽  
May McKoon ◽  
Thomas L. Hayes

Low temperature x-ray microanalysis (LTXM) of solid biological materials has been documented for Lemna minor L. root tips. This discussion will be limited to a demonstration of LTXM for measuring relative elemental distributions of P,S,Cl and K species within whole cells of tobacco leaves.Mature Wisconsin-38 tobacco was grown in the greenhouse at the University of California, Berkeley and picked daily from the mid-stalk position (leaf #9). The tissue was excised from the right of the mid rib and rapidly frozen in liquid nitrogen slush. It was then placed into an Amray biochamber and maintained at 103K. Fracture faces of the tissue were prepared and carbon-coated in the biochamber. The prepared sample was transferred from the biochamber to the Amray 1000A SEM equipped with a cold stage to maintain low temperatures at 103K. Analyses were performed using a tungsten source with accelerating voltages of 17.5 to 20 KV and beam currents from 1-2nA.


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