1-20 OF 125 RESULTS FOR

Tuzo Wilson volcanic field

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
Journal: Geology
Published: 01 November 1995
Geology (1995) 23 (11): 1035–1038.
... the Explorer ridge, the Dellwood Knolls, and the Tuzo Wilson volcanic field as part of the spreading system, requiring up to three triple junctions in the region. New SeaBeam bathymetry interpreted with existing regional data sets indicate that the Dellwood Knolls and Tuzo Wilson volcanic field...
Journal Article
Published: 02 January 2014
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2014) 51 (3): 197–207.
... belts were products of a common process, he was skeptical that Proterozoic orogenesis could be lithologically distinguished from Archean orogeny ( Wilson 1957 b ). After all, as a former field assistant to W.H. Collins in Georgian Bay, Ontario, Tuzo was aware that gneisses once thought to be the oldest...
FIGURES | View All (5)
Journal Article
Published: 02 January 2014
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2014) 51 (3): xvii–xxxi.
... field work, Beartooth Mountains, Montana. ( c ) Papua New Guinea, 1950; volcano on Rabaul, New Britain. ( d ) Australia, 1950; Northern Territories. ( e ) South Africa, 1950; Kenya, view over Rift Valley. ( f ) Antarctica, 1958; Little America. Table 1. Biographical summary: John Tuzo Wilson...
FIGURES | View All (4)
Series: Geological Society, London, Special Publications
Published: 11 November 2019
DOI: 10.1144/SP470-2019-58
EISBN: 9781786203878
... Abstract It is now more than 50 years since Tuzo Wilson published his paper asking ‘Did the Atlantic close and then re-open?’. This led to the ‘Wilson Cycle’ concept in which the repeated opening and closing of ocean basins along old orogenic belts is a key process in the assembly and breakup...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Published: 01 March 2014
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2014) 51 (3): v–viii.
...: The first paper is John Tuzo Wilson’s (1963) contribution published in the Canadian Journal of Physics in which he first introduced the concept of mantle plumes. In this paper, Wilson attempted to explain the origin of linear chains of Hawaiian Islands by hot spot volcanism. Assuming the presence...
Journal Article
Published: 18 September 2013
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2014) 51 (3): 208–221.
...Kevin Burke; J. Matthew Cannon Abstract Having discerned competition among vigorous plumes on the 10 8 year timescale, Tuzo Wilson suggested that plumes control plate behavior and are “the mainsprings of geological history”. Here we revisit that idea by discussing selected examples of plume–plate...
Journal Article
Published: 22 February 2016
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2016) 53 (11): 1073–1087.
... a good session and he has occupied many unscheduled vacancies by delivering his own ideas and questions and encouraging discussions. Tuzo Wilson at the University of Toronto suggested in 1963 that linear chains of seamounts and volcanoes—which display an age progression—are caused by relatively...
FIGURES | View All (7)
Journal Article
Published: 01 October 2021
Earth Sciences History (2021) 40 (2): 538–565.
... surface is broken into a few great plates, each including both continents and ocean floor, and that these plates, rather than continents alone, move relative to one another. ( Wilson 1976 , p. 4). In 1976, J. Tuzo Wilson edited an issue of Scientific American containing seventeen articles...
FIGURES | View All (12)
Journal Article
Published: 14 April 2015
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (2015) 105 (2B): 1076–1089.
... for scientific discussions. Roger MacLeod gave invaluable assistance making the maps, and Camille Brillon generously plotted focal mechanisms. References Allan J. F. Chase R. L. Cousens B. Michael P. Gorton M. P. Scott S. D. ( 1993 ). The Tuzo Wilson volcanic field, NE Pacific...
FIGURES | View All (12)
Journal Article
Published: 14 April 2015
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (2015) 105 (2B): 1058–1075.
.... Michael P. J. Gorton M. P. Scott S. D. ( 1993 ). The Tuzo Wilson Volcanic field, NE Pacific: Alkaline volcanism at a complex, diffuse, transform‐trench‐ridge triple junction , J. Geophys. Res. 98 , 22 , 367 – 22 , 387 . Argus D. F. Gordon R. G. ( 2013 ). Present tectonic...
FIGURES | View All (18)
Journal Article
Published: 30 September 2013
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2014) 51 (3): 266–271.
... confié au rédacteur en chef, Ali Polat. E-mail for correspondence: [email protected] . 1 This article is one of a selection of papers published in this special issue in honour of John Tuzo Wilson, a man who moved mountains, and his contributions to earth sciences. Academic...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Published: 20 September 2013
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2014) 51 (3): 187–196.
...David J. Dunlop Abstract John Tuzo Wilson coined the term “plate” in plate tectonics. He is famous for inventing transform boundaries, hot spot tracks, and the Wilson cycle of ocean birth, growth, and decline. Less well remembered is his work in the 1950s on tectonic and radiometric age provinces...
Journal Article
Published: 13 December 2017
Geological Magazine (2019) 156 (2): 242–260.
.... Plate motions continuously reshape the surface of the Earth: mountains rise where plates converge and rifts open up where they move apart. Thus understanding and application of plate tectonic theory, integrated with Tuzo Wilson's ( 1966 ) principles of its effect on rifting, crustal subsidence and ocean...
FIGURES | View All (11)
Journal Article
Published: 28 September 2018
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2019) 56 (11): 1077–1094.
... ( Dewey et al. 1986 ). Discussion in text. A, Africa; An, Anatolia; E, Europe. [Colour online.] Tuzo Wilson changed my academic life by encouraging me to add a tectonic scale to my structural geology interests. I did this, enthusiastically, following a 1965 field conference in Nova Scotia...
FIGURES | View All (7)
Journal Article
Published: 01 May 2020
Russ. Geol. Geophys. (2020) 61 (5-6): 502–526.
... (5), Pitcairn, Samoa, Tahiti (9, 10, 11), Macdonald (7), and Marquess (8) plumes. The two domains are referred to ( Torsvik and Cocks, 2017 ) as the Tuzo (African) and Jason (Pacific) provinces. Their concentric structure, with fields of zero δ v S / v S ratios in the center surrounded...
FIGURES | View All (18)
Journal Article
Published: 01 November 2016
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2016) 53 (11): v–ix.
... rational approach, i.e., the courage to ask the question: what ought it to be like? Such a question had long been anathema in the 20th century geology because of the prevalent Baconianism. As Tuzo Wilson wrote in his own autobiography “more geological mapping was both the method and the aim of geology...
Journal Article
Published: 01 October 2003
The Canadian Mineralogist (2003) 41 (5): 1294.
... surprising because the author holds a degree in geology from a prestigious university. That aside, the author’s grasp of the plate-tectonic paradigm is shaky at best, and downright erroneous in places. No, it wasn’t Tuzo Wilson who came up with the hotspot idea (currently under restudy), but Prof. Jason...
Journal Article
Published: 01 October 1993
Jour. Geol. Soc. India (1993) 42 (4): 410–412.
.... Basin Studies Division -KDMIPE, ONGC Dellra Dun 248 I95 K. N. PRABHAKAR P. L. ZUTSHE TOZO WILSON In the Obituary Note on Prof. Tuzo Wilson, (Jour. Geol. Soc. India, VoI. 42, No.2, August 1993), it was mentioned that Prof. Wilson did not come to India. Dr. M. N. Qureshy and Prof. K. V. Subbarao Ihave...
Journal Article
Published: 10 October 2008
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2008) 45 (8): 897–908.
... at the Mont Lyall locality, with siltstones sandwiched between basalt flows, and the locality southwest of Mont Tuzo (discovered by SD in 2002), where fish remains occur at many levels in tuffs and tuffaceous sediments underlying a thick basaltic sequence of the Tuzo-Lyall volcanic member (SD, personal...
FIGURES | View All (6)
Journal Article
Published: 01 May 2011
Scottish Journal of Geology (2011) 47 (1): 99–100.
...) of tectonic plates. But there remained a significant number of volcanic areas, notably Hawaii, that didn't fit into the basic plate tectonic framework. In 1971, W.J. Morgan proposed that J. Tuzo Wilson's relatively fixed mantle hotspots were manifestations of ‘convection plumes’ rising from the deep mantle...