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Full-Text Articles in Oceanography and Atmospheric Sciences and Meteorology

Calibration Of A General Optical Equation For Remote Sensing Of Suspended Sediments In A Moderately Turbid Estuary, Richard P. Stumpf, Jonathan Pennock Oct 1989

Calibration Of A General Optical Equation For Remote Sensing Of Suspended Sediments In A Moderately Turbid Estuary, Richard P. Stumpf, Jonathan Pennock

School of Marine Science and Ocean Engineering

Abstract

A general algorithm for determining suspended sediment concentrations in the surface waters of estuaries has been developed for use with satellite data. The algorithm uses a three-parameter general optical equation to relate suspended sediment concentrations to water reflectances that have been corrected for sun angle effects, atmospheric path radiance, and tidal excursion. Using data collected by the advanced very high resolution radiometer on five different dates, reflectances were determined using two different methods, one providing maximum correction for haze and the other providing minimum sensitivity to pigments. For both methods, in situ and remotely sensed samples from Delaware Bay …


The Chernobyl Reference Horizon (?) In The Greenland Ice Sheet, Jack E. Dibb Sep 1989

The Chernobyl Reference Horizon (?) In The Greenland Ice Sheet, Jack E. Dibb

Earth Sciences

Published reports of the presence of radioactive debris from the Chernobyl reactor accident in snow on the Greenland ice sheet raised the strong prospect that such debris might constitute a valuable time stratigraphic marker all over the ice sheet. Large volume snow samples to test this possibility were collected from 7 snowpits as part of a wide ranging regional snow chemistry survey conducted during 1987 and 1988. Snow “labeled” with Chernobyl derived radioactivity was detected in all of the pits. However, the total amount of radioactive debris found at the different locations varied over a 20 fold range. The variability …


Strokes For Representing Univariate Vector Field Maps, David Fowler, Colin Ware Jun 1989

Strokes For Representing Univariate Vector Field Maps, David Fowler, Colin Ware

Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping

Particle systems make an excellent tool for creating tracks (which we call strokes) in vector fields. The question addressed in this paper is how such tracks should be made to vary in size and colour in order to reveal properties such as local direction and strength of the field. We find that for strokes that vary from large to small, direction is indicated by the large end. We also find that for strokes that vary in colour, the colour of the background is the most important determinant of perceived direction.


Escim: A System For The Investigation Of Meaningful Motion, Siew Hong Yang, Colin Ware Jun 1989

Escim: A System For The Investigation Of Meaningful Motion, Siew Hong Yang, Colin Ware

Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping

A language is described whose purpose is the investigation of meaningful motion using Stimulus Response animation techniques. The language is capable of adjusting the shape, size and velocity of an actor in real-time computer animation. Some results are presented showing how it is possible to generate such behaviours as chasing, avoidance and hitting using this animation technique. A set of primitives are presented which we find invaluable in the control of size, stretch and velocity parameters when attempting to produce fluid and meaningful interactions.


Chirp Subbottom Profiler For Quantitative Sediment Analysis, Steven G. Schock, Lester R. Leblanc, Larry A. Mayer Apr 1989

Chirp Subbottom Profiler For Quantitative Sediment Analysis, Steven G. Schock, Lester R. Leblanc, Larry A. Mayer

Affiliate Scholarship

A wide‐band, frequency‐modulated, subbottom profiling system (the chirp sonar) can remotely determine the acoustic attenuation of ocean sediments and produce artifact‐free sediment profiles in real time. The chirp sonar is controlled by a minicomputer which performs analog‐to‐digital and digital‐to‐analog conversion, correlation processing, and attenuation estimation in real time. The minicomputer generates an FM pulse that is phase‐ and amplitude‐compensated to correct for the sonar system response. Such precise waveform control helps suppress correlation noise and source ringing. The chirp sonar, which has an effective bandwidth of 5 kHz, can generate chirp (Klauder) wavelets with a tuning thickness (Rayleigh’s criterion for …


Sea Beam Survey Of An Active Strike-Slip Fault: The San Clemente Fault In The California Continental Borderland, Mark R. Legg, Bruce P. Luyendyk, Jacqueline Mammerickx, Christian De Moustier, Robert C. Tyce Feb 1989

Sea Beam Survey Of An Active Strike-Slip Fault: The San Clemente Fault In The California Continental Borderland, Mark R. Legg, Bruce P. Luyendyk, Jacqueline Mammerickx, Christian De Moustier, Robert C. Tyce

Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping

The San Clemente fault, located in the California Continental Borderland, is an active, northwest trending, right-lateral, wrench fault. Sea Beam data are used to map the major tectonic landforms associated with active submarine faulting in detail unavailable using conventional echo-sounding or seismic reflection data. In the area between North San Clemente Basin and Fortymile Bank, the major late Cenozoic faults are delineated by alignments of numerous tectonic landforms, including scarps, linear trenches, benches, and sags. Character and spatial patterns of these landforms are consistent with dextral wrench faulting, although vertical offsets may be substantial locally. The main trace of the …


Pisces Iv Submersible Observations In The Epicentral Region Of The 1929 Grand Banks Earthquake, John E. Hughes Clarke, Larry A. Mayer, David J.W. Piper, Alexander N. Shor Jan 1989

Pisces Iv Submersible Observations In The Epicentral Region Of The 1929 Grand Banks Earthquake, John E. Hughes Clarke, Larry A. Mayer, David J.W. Piper, Alexander N. Shor

Affiliate Scholarship

The PISCES IVsubmersible was used to investigate the upper continental slope around 44 ON, 56" W, near the epicentre of the 1929 Grand Banks earthquake. Four dives in water depths of 800-2000 m were undertaken to observe speci3c features identijied with the SeaMARC I sidescan system in 1983. Two dives were made in the head of Eastern Valley where pebbly mudstones ofprobable Pleistocene age were recognized outcropping on the seafloor. Constructional features of cobbles and boulders, derived by exhumation and reworking of the pebbly mudstone, were also observed. These include gravel/sand bedforms (transverse waves) on the valley floor. Slope failure …


Lithostratigraphy, Biostratigraphy, And Stable-Isotope Stratigraphy Of Cores From Odp Leg 105 Site Surveys, Labrador Sea And Baffin Bay, D. B. Scott, P. J. Mudie, A. De Vernal, C. Hillaire-Marcel, V. Baki, K. D. Mackinnon, F. S. Medioli, Larry A. Mayer Jan 1989

Lithostratigraphy, Biostratigraphy, And Stable-Isotope Stratigraphy Of Cores From Odp Leg 105 Site Surveys, Labrador Sea And Baffin Bay, D. B. Scott, P. J. Mudie, A. De Vernal, C. Hillaire-Marcel, V. Baki, K. D. Mackinnon, F. S. Medioli, Larry A. Mayer

Affiliate Scholarship

Trigger weight (TWC) and piston (PC) cores obtained from surveys of the three sites drilled during Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Leg 105 were studied in detail for benthic foraminiferal assemblages, total carbonate (all sites), planktonic foraminiferal abundances (Sites 645 and 647), and stable isotopes (Sites 646 and 647). These high-resolution data provide the link between modern environmental conditions represented by the sediment in the TWC and the uppermost cores of the ODP holes. This link provides essential control data for interpretating late Pleistocene paleoceanographic records from these core holes. At Site 645 in Baffin Bay, local correlation is difficult because …


The Influence Of Biogenic Silica On Seismic Lithostratigraphy At Odp Sites 642 And 643, Eastern Norwegian Sea, Peter Hempel, Larry A. Mayer, Elliot Taylor, Gerhard Bohrmann, Alan Pittenger Jan 1989

The Influence Of Biogenic Silica On Seismic Lithostratigraphy At Odp Sites 642 And 643, Eastern Norwegian Sea, Peter Hempel, Larry A. Mayer, Elliot Taylor, Gerhard Bohrmann, Alan Pittenger

Affiliate Scholarship

Drilling at ODP Sites 642 and 643 revealed a 250 m-thick section of diatomaceous Pliocene to Miocene sediments on the outer Vdring Plateau, eastern Norwegian Sea. These biogenic silica-rich sediments have a significantly lower saturated bulk density than the surrounding sediments, causing a decrease in acoustic impedance, which is seismically expressed as a negative polarity reflection. Variations in sonic velocity, the other key parameter in seismic analysis, is only of secondary importance in creating impedance contrasts in our study. Synthetic seismograms were produced from shipboard physical property measurements corrected for in situ conditions. These synthetic seismograms are in good agreement …