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NARROW
GeoRef Subject
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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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Asia
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Far East
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China
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Anhui China (1)
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Guizhou China (2)
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geologic age
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Paleozoic
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Permian
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Primary terms
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Asia
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Far East
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China
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Anhui China (1)
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Guizhou China (2)
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Henan China (1)
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South China Block (2)
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Xinjiang China
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Tarim Basin (1)
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Yangtze River (1)
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Yunnan China (1)
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-
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data processing (8)
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geophysical methods (12)
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Invertebrata
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Echinodermata
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Crinozoa
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Crinoidea (3)
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-
-
-
metal ores
-
copper ores (1)
-
molybdenum ores (1)
-
polymetallic ores (1)
-
-
mineral deposits, genesis (1)
-
mineral exploration (1)
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Paleozoic
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Permian
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Lower Permian
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Cisuralian
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Asselian (1)
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-
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Silurian
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Lower Silurian
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Llandovery
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Aeronian (2)
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Taiyuan Formation (1)
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petroleum (1)
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Subspace projection attention network: Deep weak signal recovery from complicated downhole distributed acoustic sensing data
Efficient signal-to-noise ratio enhancement model for severely contaminated distributed acoustic sensing seismic data based on heterogeneous knowledge distillation
Complete perception self-attention network for weak seismic signal recovery in distributed acoustic sensing vertical seismic profile data
Seismic velocity inversion transformer
Noise suppression of distributed fiber-optical acoustic sensing seismic data by attention-guided multiscale generative adversarial network
Unpaired training: Optimize the seismic data denoising model without paired training data
Ensemble empirical mode decomposition and stacking model for filtering borehole distributed acoustic sensing records
Continuous denoising level adjustment of seismic data through filter modification
Intelligent random noise modeling by the improved variational autoencoding method and its application to data augmentation
3D Numerical Simulation-Based Targeting of Skarn Type Mineralization within the Xuancheng-Magushan Orefield, Middle-Lower Yangtze Metallogenic Belt, China
Fusion or hypertrophy?: the unusual arms of the Petalocrinidae (Ordovician-Devonian: Crinoidea)
Signal-to-noise ratio enhancement for 3C downhole microseismic data based on the 3D shearlet transform and improved back-propagation neural networks
Signal-to-noise ratio enhancement for downhole microseismic data based on 3D shearlet transform
A new crinoid fauna from the Taiyuan Formation (early Permian) of Henan, North China
New taxa and phyletic evolution of the Aeronian (Llandovery, Silurian) Petalocrinidae (Echinodermata, Crinoidea) in Guizhou, South China Block
A study on the stationarity and Gaussianity of the background noise in land-seismic prospecting
Random denoising and signal nonlinearity approach by time-frequency peak filtering using weighted frequency reassignment
Surface wave attenuation of seismic records with the co-core trace transform filter
Micritic fabrics define sharp margins of Wenlock patch reefs (middle Silurian) in Gotland and England
Abstract Silurian reefs are well known to comprise frame-building corals, stromatoporoids and algae, but also a range of calcimicrobial components and micritic sediments of possible microbial origin. The margins of Wenlock patch reefs tend to have diffuse edges that grade into the surrounding bedded facies because of talus shed from the reefs. However, portions of patch reefs show sharp-bounded reef margins, with bedded limestones terminating abruptly against the reef edge. Examples of sharp boundaries where the reef comprises only carbonate mudstone–wackestone with poorly-defined gross fabric, and containing no metazoan framework, have been found in Wenlock patch reefs the UK and Gotland. Although in some cases the micrite may demonstrate a peloidal structure, in others there is no clear structure, broadly fitting the aphanitic (structureless) type of fabric found in leiolites (suspected microbial facies that show no structure). The fabrics are interpreted to have been formed by microbial mediation of micrite precipitation as part of reef construction, and are therefore automicrites. In all cases the sharp reef edges indicate coherence of the micritic fabric, interpreted as a lithified wall against which bedded limestones were deposited. This arrangement supports published interpretations of pronounced topography of Wenlock patch reefs, and shows the presence of steep, vertical and, possibly, overhanging reef margins, formed prior to bedded sediment accumulation. Thus, there is likely to have been a time interval between reef formation and deposition of bedded sediments, possibly caused by reef upward growth in transgressive settings, followed by catch-up of bedded limestone deposition.