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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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Deep-water circulation in the northeast Atlantic during the mid- and Late Cretaceous
Migration using sea surface-related multiples: Challenges and opportunities
The response of water column and sedimentary environments to the advent of the Messinian salinity crisis: insights from an onshore deep-water section (Govone, NW Italy)
Methane Fluxes at the Water–Atmosphere Interface in the Southern Tatar Strait of the Sea of Japan: Distribution and Variation
Modeling full-wavefield time-varying sea-surface effects on seismic data: A mimetic finite-difference approach
Oceanic Micronutrients: Trace Metals that are Essential for Marine Life
Abstract Large tsunamis occur infrequently but have the capacity to cause enormous numbers of casualties, damage to the built environment and critical infrastructure, and economic losses. A sound understanding of tsunami hazard is required to underpin management of these risks, and while tsunami hazard assessments are typically conducted at regional or local scales, globally consistent assessments are required to support international disaster risk reduction efforts, and can serve as a reference for local and regional studies. This study presents a global-scale probabilistic tsunami hazard assessment (PTHA), extending previous global-scale assessments based largely on scenario analysis. Only earthquake sources are considered, as they represent about 80% of the recorded damaging tsunami events. Globally extensive estimates of tsunami run-up height are derived at various exceedance rates, and the associated uncertainties are quantified. Epistemic uncertainties in the exceedance rates of large earthquakes often lead to large uncertainties in tsunami run-up. Deviations between modelled tsunami run-up and event observations are quantified, and found to be larger than suggested in previous studies. Accounting for these deviations in PTHA is important, as it leads to a pronounced increase in predicted tsunami run-up for a given exceedance rate.
Atmochemical mercury dispersion aureoles over active geologic structures of the northern Sea of Japan
Holocene climate variability in the Labrador Sea
The upside-down biosphere: “Evidence for the partially oxygenated oceans during the Archean Eon”
This is a commentary on the preceding chapter by Ohmoto et al., in which it is suggested that oxygen concentrations have been high throughout Earth history. This is a contentious suggestion at odds with the prevailing view in the field, which contends that atmospheric oxygen concentrations rose from trace levels to a few percent of modern-day levels around 2.5 b.y. ago. This comment notes that many of the data sets cited by Ohmoto et al. as evidence for a relatively oxidized environment come from deep-ocean settings. This presents a possibility to reconcile some of these data and suggestions with the overwhelming evidence for an atmosphere free of oxygen at that time. Specifically, it is possible that deep-ocean waters were relatively oxidized with respect to certain redox pairs. These deep-ocean waters would have been more oxidized than surface waters, thus representing an “upside-down biosphere,” as originally proposed 25 years ago by Jim Walker.