Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 108
pro vyhledávání: '"Bruce P. Luyendyk"'
Autor:
Fabio Florindo, Nicholas R. Golledge, Richard H. Levy, Robert M. DeConto, James S. Crampton, Tim R Naish, Ross D. Powell, Stephen R. Meyers, Christopher D. Clowes, Edward Gasson, David M. Harwood, Denise K. Kulhanek, Bruce P. Luyendyk, Robert M. McKay, L. De Santis
Publikováno v:
Levy, R H, Meyers, S, Naish, T R, Golledge, N R, McKay, R M, Crampton, J S, DeConto, R, De Santis, L, Florindo, F, Gasson, E, Harwood, D, Luyendyk, B P, Powell, R, Clowes, C & Kulhanek, D K 2019, ' Antarctic ice-sheet sensitivity to obliquity forcing enhanced through ocean connections ', Nature Geoscience, vol. 12, no. 2, pp. 132-137 . https://doi.org/10.1038/s41561-018-0284-4, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41561-018-0284-4
Deep sea geological records indicate that Antarctic ice-sheet growth and decay is strongly influenced by the Earth’s astronomical variations (known as Milankovitch cycles), and that the frequency of the glacial–interglacial cycles changes through
Autor:
Bruce P. Luyendyk, Riccardo Geletti, L. De Santis, Nigel Wardell, Christopher C. Sorlien, Martina Busetti, Chiara Sauli
Publikováno v:
Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems. 22
Autor:
Robert M. DeConto, Douglas S. Wilson, David Pollard, Bruce P. Luyendyk, Stewart S. R. Jamieson
Publikováno v:
Geophysical Research Letters. 40:4305-4309
[1] Reconstructions of Antarctic paleotopography for the late Eocene suggest that glacial erosion and thermal subsidence have lowered West Antarctic elevations considerably since then, with Antarctic land area having decreased ~20%. A new climate-ice
Autor:
Christopher C. Sorlien, Leonardo Seeber, Kris Broderick, William R. Normark, Ray W. Sliter, Bruce P. Luyendyk, Michael Fisher
Publikováno v:
Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems. 14:1866-1890
[1] The Palos Verdes anticlinorium (PVA) is a 70 km-wide, NW-trending Pliocene-Quaternary transpressional high that separates the onshore Los Angeles basin from the offshore San Pedro basin. The PVA southwest limb underlies a 70 km-long SW facing sea
Autor:
Bruce P. Luyendyk, Michael Williams, Richard H. Levy, Frank R. Rack, Richard Limeburner, Robert Zook, Craig L Stewart
Publikováno v:
Oceanography. 25:84-89
Publikováno v:
Marine and Petroleum Geology. 23:621-630
Oil slicks on the ocean surface emitted from natural marine hydrocarbon seeps offshore from Coal Oil Point in the Santa Barbara Channel, California were tracked and sampled over a 2-h period. The objectives were to characterize the seep oil and to tr
Publikováno v:
International Oil Spill Conference Proceedings. 2005:855-860
Linking beach tar with sources in a complex natural marine seepage area presents numerous challenges. Efforts at Coal Oil Point (COP), CA included beach tar distribution surveys, oil slick tracking, sampling, and chemical analysis, underwater scuba s
Publikováno v:
Luyendyk, B; Kennett, J; & Clark, JF. (2005). Hypothesis for increased atmospheric methane input from hydrocarbon seeps on exposed continental shelves during glacial low sea level. Marine and Petroleum Geology, 22(4 SPEC. ISS.), 591-596. doi: 10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2004.08.005. UC Santa Barbara: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/6j08d3gp
Marine and Petroleum Geology, vol 22, iss 4
Marine and Petroleum Geology, vol 22, iss 4 SPEC. ISS.
Marine and Petroleum Geology, vol 22, iss 4
Marine and Petroleum Geology, vol 22, iss 4 SPEC. ISS.
Natural marine hydrocarbon seeps on continental margins today represent a small source of methane in the global atmosphere budget, which is dominated by anthropogenic sources and contributions from wetlands in the tropics and northern high latitudes.
Publikováno v:
Environmental Geology. 46:1038-1052
Marine hydrocarbon gas emissions at an intense, 20-m-deep seep in the Santa Barbara Channel, California were studied with a network of three turbine seep-tents and repeated seabed mapping. The tents observed two gas ejection events that are interpret
Autor:
Bruce P. Luyendyk, Andrea Donnellan
Publikováno v:
Global and Planetary Change. 42:305-311
GPS measurements collected between 1999 and 2002 in Marie Byrd Land, West Antarctica indicate no significant present motion between East and West Antarctica greater than 1-2 nm/yr.