1-11 OF 11 RESULTS FOR

Cesena Basin

Results shown limited to content with bounding coordinates.
Follow your search
Access your saved searches in your account

Would you like to receive an alert when new items match your search?
Close Modal
Sort by
Journal Article
Published: 01 January 2005
Italian Journal of Geosciences (2005) 124 (2): 475–491.
..., Boccaletti & Coli (1983) identified three different portions: 1) The Internal Chain is located to south of the Apennine ridge. It includes the peri-Tyrrhenian area and is dominated by Miocene Pliocene-Quaternary sedimentary basins. These are located along the chain and separated one from one another...
Journal Article
Published: 01 June 2016
Italian Journal of Geosciences (2016) 135 (2): 261–267.
... section from the Romagna Apennines in the Cesena sulphur mining district (by permission of Biblioteca Universitaria Bolognese, FM, ms. 88, E, 3, c. 3, photo by Vai). See text for explanation; B ) the same illustration with explanatory line-drawing and typescript. I: 11a saw-tooth bed “called… …of sulfur...
FIGURES | View All (6)
Journal Article
Published: 01 June 2023
Italian Journal of Geosciences (2023) 142 (2): 262–288.
... of different faunas found by Cuvier in the Paris basin and sharply confined by catastrophic extinctions and ensuing biologic renewals (quite the same as the recent Gould’s ‘punctuated equilibria’). What made the difference was the discovery of the biostratigraphic tool enabling time correlation of rocks...
FIGURES | View All (20)
Journal Article
Published: 01 October 1955
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (1955) 45 (4): 347–355.
..., Peru 75, 345 Belgrade, Yugoslavia 336 Cesena, Italy 254 Bering Sea 69,166, 249, 338 Chagos Islands 161 Berkeley, California Chagos l~idge 246 70, 159, 254, 335, 340, 342 (2)~ 343 Chagos-St. Paul Ridge, Indian Ocean Bhutan 254 69, 161, 163,253 Big Pine, California 157 Chiapa.s, Mexico 159, 332, 334...
Journal Article
Published: 01 August 1989
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (1989) 79 (4): 973–988.
... of the southern Tyrrhenian Basin (see Fig. 3), where a Benioff zone is apparent with about a hundred recorded shocks of magnitude up to 7.0 and depth up to 600 km. These deep events are not considered in the analysis. IDENTIFYING EARTHQUAKE CLUSTERS We first of all verify the inapplicability of a simple Poisson...
Journal Article
Published: 01 June 2013
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (2013) 103 (3): 1709–1722.
... important cities in Emilia–Romagna (from west to east, Piacenza, Parma, Reggio Emilia, Modena, Bologna, Forlì, Cesena, Rimini, Ferrara, and Ravenna) for data after 1650  A.D. (R. Camassi, personal comm., 2011). On the other hand, there is a high chance that historical records in minor sites...
FIGURES | View All (11)
Journal Article
Published: 23 March 2017
Journal of Paleontology (2017) 91 (3): 444–466.
... exbrocchii Sacco, 1898 , which was named by Sacco ( 1898 ) based on an illustration of Modiola brocchii Mayer in Hörnes, 1870 from the Vienna Basin (Hörnes, 1870 , p. 345, pl. 45, fig. 13a, b). However, this species differs from B . (s.l.) moroniae by being more...
FIGURES | View All (15)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 August 1964
AAPG Bulletin (1964) 48 (8): 1299–1344.
... in the drafting stage in the bordering countries. In Austria a deep gas discovery was made in the Vienna basin and another Cretaceous oil discovery in the Molasse basin. In France there were no significant discoveries, but attention was directed toward offshore exploration in the Bay of Biscay...
FIGURES | View All (20)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 August 1965
AAPG Bulletin (1965) 49 (8): 1176–1231.
... drilling was directed primarily toward the finding of gas in Lower Triassic to Upper Carboniferous reservoirs in the Northwest German basin. Two significant new-field discoveries were made in the Lower Triassic near Bremen and there were important new-field and new-pool finds in the Triassic and Upper...
FIGURES | View All (24)
Journal Article
Journal: Geophysics
Published: 26 September 2016
Geophysics (2016) 81 (6): T323–T338.
... curve suggests the absence of strong reflectors, which is an ideal environment for the presence of Rayleigh waves in soft soils (e.g., deep sedimentary basins). Conversely, it can be associated with poor dispersion curves in a stiff (poorly dispersive) media, like rock. On the basis of our...
FIGURES | View All (17)
Journal Article
Published: 01 October 2016
Earth Sciences History (2016) 35 (2): 283–302.
... electricity thunderstorms inflammations Calabria Since Early Antiquity, philosophers in the earthquake-prone countries of the Mediterranean basin had endeavored to come up with physical theories for the cause of this terrifying scourge. Aristotle (384–322 BC) formulated the so-called pneumatic...
FIGURES