Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Physical Sciences and Mathematics Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Articles 181 - 210 of 305

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Stratigraphic Distribution And Suggested Evolution Of Dendroid Graptolites From The Silurian Of Eastern Australia, Barrie Rickards, Anthony Wright Jan 2010

Stratigraphic Distribution And Suggested Evolution Of Dendroid Graptolites From The Silurian Of Eastern Australia, Barrie Rickards, Anthony Wright

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

Five evolutionary lineages are proposed for Silurian species of the benthic dendroid graptolite genus Dictyonema, based largely on the exceptional eastern Australian records of the genus, comprising at least 25 species. These are: A, the delicatulum lineage with bifurcating ventral autothecal apertural spines; B, the paululum lineage with single ventral apertural spines or processes; C, the elegans lineage with isolated thecal apertures ± processes; D, the sherrardae lineage with dorsal apertural processes; and E, the venustum lineage with simple autothecal apertures. Brief comments are also made on other dendroid genera occurring in Australian strata, namely: Acanthograptus, Koremagraptus, Callograptus, Dendrograptus, Stelechocladia, …


Functional Relationships Between Vegetation, Channel Morphology, And Flow Efficiency In An Alluvial (Anabranching) River, John D. Jansen, Gerald C. Nanson Jan 2010

Functional Relationships Between Vegetation, Channel Morphology, And Flow Efficiency In An Alluvial (Anabranching) River, John D. Jansen, Gerald C. Nanson

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

Water and sediment flux interactions are examined in Magela Creek, an alluvial (anabranching) sand bed river in the northern Australian tropics. Dense riparian vegetation stabilizes the channels and floodplains thereby preventing erosional instability at flow depths up to 6.2 times bankfull and discharges up to 15 times bankfull. Narrow anabranching channels characterize > 92% of the alluvial reach and transport bed load more efficiently than short reaches of wide single-channels, yet overall 29 +/- 12% of the bed load is sequestered and the average vertical accretion rate is 0.41 +/- 0.17 mm yr (1) along the 12 km study reach. The …


Soil Geochemistry And Pathfinder Element Distribution Associated With The Hillgrove Antimony-Gold-Tungsten Deposit, New England Orogen, Nsw, R Ellsmore, Solomon Buckman, C Simpson Jan 2010

Soil Geochemistry And Pathfinder Element Distribution Associated With The Hillgrove Antimony-Gold-Tungsten Deposit, New England Orogen, Nsw, R Ellsmore, Solomon Buckman, C Simpson

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

No abstract provided.


Linking Measured Carbon Dioxide Exchange By Sugarcane Crops And Biomass Production, O T Denmead, B.C.T. Macdonald, I. White, David W. Griffith, G Bryant, Travis A. Naylor, Stephen R. Wilson, W J. Wang Jan 2010

Linking Measured Carbon Dioxide Exchange By Sugarcane Crops And Biomass Production, O T Denmead, B.C.T. Macdonald, I. White, David W. Griffith, G Bryant, Travis A. Naylor, Stephen R. Wilson, W J. Wang

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

CARBON TRADING and the growing interest in biofuel production from sugarcane necessitate the ability to measure gains and losses of soil organic C which may occur as a result. Modelling and soil sampling suggest that changes in soil C are likely to be < 1 t C/ha/y. Published accounts indicate that confirming such small changes by traditional soil sampling is error-prone and requires investigations of > 10 years. The paper explores the possibility of calculating soil gains or losses by subtracting the carbon stored in the crop biomass from the carbon gained by the crop through the uptake of carbon dioxide supplied by the atmosphere and processes in the soil. Although uptake and storage very nearly balanced each other in one–year measurements in …


Evidence Of Solar And Tropical-Ocean Forcing Of Hydroclimate Cycles In Southeastern Australia For The Past 6500 Years, Hamish A. Mcgowan, Samuel K. Marx, Joshua Soderholm, John Denholm Jan 2010

Evidence Of Solar And Tropical-Ocean Forcing Of Hydroclimate Cycles In Southeastern Australia For The Past 6500 Years, Hamish A. Mcgowan, Samuel K. Marx, Joshua Soderholm, John Denholm

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

Evidence of solar and tropical‐ocean forcing of climate cycles has been found in numerous palaeoclimate records. Numerical modelling studies show physical mechanisms by which direct and indirect solar forcing may affect climate, while there is mounting evidence of solar forcing of tropical ocean‐atmosphere teleconnections. This study has developed a 6500 year record of dust deposition, a proxy for regional hydroclimate variability for the Snowy Mountains region of Australia. Spectral analysis of the record provides evidence of statistically significant cycles in dust deposition of 35–43 years, 62–73 years, 161 years and 2200 years. These correlate with variability in solar irradiance and …


Trace Gas Emissions From Savanna Fires In Northern Australia, Clare Paton-Walsh, Nicholas M. Deutscher, David Griffith, B. W. Forgan, Stephen Wilson, Nicholas Jones, D. Edwards Jan 2010

Trace Gas Emissions From Savanna Fires In Northern Australia, Clare Paton-Walsh, Nicholas M. Deutscher, David Griffith, B. W. Forgan, Stephen Wilson, Nicholas Jones, D. Edwards

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

We present analyses of near‐infrared ground‐based Fourier transform infrared solar absorption spectra recorded from a site in Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia (12.4°S, 130.9°E) from August 2005 to June 2008. Total column amounts of carbon monoxide derived from these spectra show a very clear annual cycle, with evidence of transported pollution from Indonesian fires in 2006. Aerosol optical depth measurements from the same site show a similar annual cycle but without exceptional values in 2006, suggesting significant loss of aerosol loading in the transported and aged smoke. In addition, we report the first ever measurements by remote sensing solar Fourier transform …


Suitability Of Membrane Bioreactor For Treatment Of Recalcitrant Textile Dye Wastewater Utilising White-Rot Fungi, Faisal I. Hai, Kazuo Yamamoto Jan 2010

Suitability Of Membrane Bioreactor For Treatment Of Recalcitrant Textile Dye Wastewater Utilising White-Rot Fungi, Faisal I. Hai, Kazuo Yamamoto

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

The performance of a laboratory scale membrane bioreactor (MBR) — utilizing a mixed microbial community dominated by fungi— for treatment of textile dye wastewater was investigated. A synthetic wastewater containing dye, starch (main contributor to total organic carbon, TOC) and other nutrients was used. Preliminary batch tests confirmed the superior decoloration capacity of pure fungus culture (Coriolus versicolor, NBRC 9791) as compared to that of conventional activated sludge. Simultaneous biosorption and biodegradation was evident in case of the fungus, while mainly biosorption was responsible for decoloration by activated sludge. On the other hand, activated sludge demonstrated comparatively faster TOC removal. …


Scale Dependence Of Lithological Control On Topography: Bedrock Channel Geometry And Catchment Morphometry In Western Scotland, John D. Jansen, Alexandru T. Codilean, Paul Bishop, Trevor B. Hoey Jan 2010

Scale Dependence Of Lithological Control On Topography: Bedrock Channel Geometry And Catchment Morphometry In Western Scotland, John D. Jansen, Alexandru T. Codilean, Paul Bishop, Trevor B. Hoey

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

We propose that a scale-dependent topographic signature of erodibility arises due to fiuvial and glacial erosion acting on different parts of the landscape at different times. For 14 catchments in western Scotland, we define three levels of substrate erodibility in order of decreasing resistance: quartzite rocks, nonquartzite rocks, and zones of fault-related fracture. Then, using digital topographic and planimetric data coupled with field measurements, we identify regression-based scaling relationships between substrate erodibility and morphometric parameters at two spatial scales. Catchment-scale morphometry shows a weak to variable relationship with substrate metrics overall. Erodibility can be inferred from catchment steepness indices (i.e., …


Validation Of Ozone Measurements From The Atmospheric Chemistry Experiment (Ace), Nicholas B. Jones, David W. Griffith, M Wolff, E Mahieu, G Bodeker, I Boyd, M De Maziere, P Demoulin, T Blumenstock, Y. Murayama, A. Kagawa, J Jin, Christopher Mcelroy, J Hannigan, M Coffey, M Hopfner, H W. Fischer, T Kerzenmacher, I Kramer, J Mellqvist, R Sussmann, K Strong, J R. Taylor, K Mizutani, Y Kasai, J Urban, D Murtagh, E Dupuy, V Catoire, S Chabrillat, P Baron, C Brogniez, G L. Manney, C Piccolo, C Randall, C Robert, C Senten, C Tetard, N J. Livesey, A Kleinbohl, S Godin-Beekmann, T Borsdorff, James Drummond, C De Clercq, J C. Lambert, U Cortesi, K W. Jucks, C Boone, H Oelhaf, M Schneider, T Steck, K A. Walker, P Bernath, T Von Clarmann, R Hughes, C Vigouroux, J Kuttippurath, A Bracher, J Mcconnell, C Mclinden, H Kullmann, L Froidevaux, J Dodion, F Vanhellemont, J P. Burrows, J Kar, F Goutail, D G. Dufour, J M. Zawodny, F Nichitiu, J-P Pommereau, C Nowlan, D Fussen, J Zou, A R Klekociuk, G Forbes, H Bovensmann, R M Bevilacqua, C Haley, S Ceccherini, S D Mcleod, P Gerard, R Skelton, B Firanski, A E Bourassa, D A Degenstein, J Davies, T Christensen, J Granville, A Parrish, C Roth, J W. Waters, C Von Savigny, A Standberg, M Mchugh, A M. Thompson, E J Llewellyn, P Von Der Gathen, M B. Tully, J C. Witte, C Roth, B T. Marshall, K B. Strawbridge, E Kyrola, M P. Mccormick, D P J Swart, N D Lloyd, D W. Tarasick, S V. Petelina, L W. Thomason, A Jones, I S. Mcdermid Jan 2009

Validation Of Ozone Measurements From The Atmospheric Chemistry Experiment (Ace), Nicholas B. Jones, David W. Griffith, M Wolff, E Mahieu, G Bodeker, I Boyd, M De Maziere, P Demoulin, T Blumenstock, Y. Murayama, A. Kagawa, J Jin, Christopher Mcelroy, J Hannigan, M Coffey, M Hopfner, H W. Fischer, T Kerzenmacher, I Kramer, J Mellqvist, R Sussmann, K Strong, J R. Taylor, K Mizutani, Y Kasai, J Urban, D Murtagh, E Dupuy, V Catoire, S Chabrillat, P Baron, C Brogniez, G L. Manney, C Piccolo, C Randall, C Robert, C Senten, C Tetard, N J. Livesey, A Kleinbohl, S Godin-Beekmann, T Borsdorff, James Drummond, C De Clercq, J C. Lambert, U Cortesi, K W. Jucks, C Boone, H Oelhaf, M Schneider, T Steck, K A. Walker, P Bernath, T Von Clarmann, R Hughes, C Vigouroux, J Kuttippurath, A Bracher, J Mcconnell, C Mclinden, H Kullmann, L Froidevaux, J Dodion, F Vanhellemont, J P. Burrows, J Kar, F Goutail, D G. Dufour, J M. Zawodny, F Nichitiu, J-P Pommereau, C Nowlan, D Fussen, J Zou, A R Klekociuk, G Forbes, H Bovensmann, R M Bevilacqua, C Haley, S Ceccherini, S D Mcleod, P Gerard, R Skelton, B Firanski, A E Bourassa, D A Degenstein, J Davies, T Christensen, J Granville, A Parrish, C Roth, J W. Waters, C Von Savigny, A Standberg, M Mchugh, A M. Thompson, E J Llewellyn, P Von Der Gathen, M B. Tully, J C. Witte, C Roth, B T. Marshall, K B. Strawbridge, E Kyrola, M P. Mccormick, D P J Swart, N D Lloyd, D W. Tarasick, S V. Petelina, L W. Thomason, A Jones, I S. Mcdermid

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

This paper presents extensive bias determination analyses of ozone observations from the Atmospheric Chemistry Experiment (ACE) satellite instruments: the ACE Fourier Transform Spectrometer (ACE-FTS) and the Measurement of Aerosol Extinction in the Stratosphere and Troposphere Retrieved by Occultation (ACE-MAESTRO) instrument. Here we compare the latest ozone data products from ACE-FTS and ACE-MAESTRO with coincident observations from nearly 20 satellite-borne, airborne, balloonborne and ground-based instruments, by analysing volume mixing ratio profiles and partial column densities. The ACEFTS version 2.2 Ozone Update product reports more ozone than most correlative measurements from the upper troposphere to the lower mesosphere. At altitude levels from …


Exploring Co Pollution Episodes Observed At Rishiri Island By Chemical Weather Simulations And Airs Satellite Measurements: Long-Range Transport Of Burning Plumes And Implications For Emissions Inventories, Hiroshi Tanimoto, Keiichi Sato, Tim Butler, Mark G. Lawrence, Jenny A. Fisher, M Kopacz, Robert M. Yantosca, Yugo Kanaya, Shungo Kato, Tomoaki Okuda, Shigeru Tanaka, Jiye Zeng Jan 2009

Exploring Co Pollution Episodes Observed At Rishiri Island By Chemical Weather Simulations And Airs Satellite Measurements: Long-Range Transport Of Burning Plumes And Implications For Emissions Inventories, Hiroshi Tanimoto, Keiichi Sato, Tim Butler, Mark G. Lawrence, Jenny A. Fisher, M Kopacz, Robert M. Yantosca, Yugo Kanaya, Shungo Kato, Tomoaki Okuda, Shigeru Tanaka, Jiye Zeng

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

The summer of 2003 was an active forest fire season in Siberia. Several events of elevated carbon monoxide (CO) were observed at Rishiri Island in northern Japan during an intensive field campaign in September 2003. A simulation with a global chemistry-transport model is able to reproduce the general features of the baseline levels and variability in the observed CO, and a source attribution for CO in the model suggests that the contribution from North Asia dominated, accounting for approximately 50% on average, with contributions of 7% from North America and 8% from Europe and 30% from oxidation of hydrocarbons. With …


North Polar Frontal Clouds And Dust Storms On Mars During Spring And Summer, Huiqun Wang, Jenny A. Fisher Jan 2009

North Polar Frontal Clouds And Dust Storms On Mars During Spring And Summer, Huiqun Wang, Jenny A. Fisher

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

The complete archive of Mars Global Surveyor (MGS) Mars Orbiter Camera (MOC) Mars Daily Global Maps (MDGM) are used to study north polar clouds and dust storms that exhibit frontal structures during the spring and summer (Ls 0–180°). Results show that frontal events generally follow the edge of the polar cap during spring and mid/late summer with a gap in the distribution in early summer. The exact duration and timing of the gap vary from year to year. Twww.lw20.comen to twenty percent of spring and summer time frontal events exhibit complex morphologies. Distinct temperature signatures are associated with features observed …


Factors Governing Performance Of Continuous Fungal Reactor During Non-Sterile Operation - The Case Of A Membrane Bioreactor Treating Textile Wastewater, Faisal I. Hai, Kazuo Yamamoto, Fumiyuki Nakajima, Kensuke Fukushi Jan 2009

Factors Governing Performance Of Continuous Fungal Reactor During Non-Sterile Operation - The Case Of A Membrane Bioreactor Treating Textile Wastewater, Faisal I. Hai, Kazuo Yamamoto, Fumiyuki Nakajima, Kensuke Fukushi

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

White-rot fungi, unlike bacteria in conventional activated sludge system, can degrade wide varieties of textile dyes. Their large scale implementation, however, has been impeded due to lack of appropriate reactor system that can sustain stable performance under non-sterile environment. In this study, contrary to virtually complete decoloration of an azo dye (Acid Orange II, 100 mg L−1) in pure culture batch test, a fungal membrane bioreactor (MBR) achieved 93% removal during long-term non-sterile operation at a hydraulic retention time (HRT) of 1 d. Through a set of novel observations made in MBR and parallel batch tests, the interrelated factors responsible …


The Whole Rock Sm-Nd 'Age' For The 2825 Ma Ikkattoq Gneisses (Greenland) Is 800 Ma Too Young: Insights Into Archaean Ttg Petrogenesis, Clark R L Friend, Allen Phillip Nutman, Halfdan Baadsgaard, M John M Duke Jan 2009

The Whole Rock Sm-Nd 'Age' For The 2825 Ma Ikkattoq Gneisses (Greenland) Is 800 Ma Too Young: Insights Into Archaean Ttg Petrogenesis, Clark R L Friend, Allen Phillip Nutman, Halfdan Baadsgaard, M John M Duke

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

The Ikkattoq gneisses of the Archaean gneiss complex in the Nuuk region, southern West Greenland, are the orthogneiss component within the amphibolite facies Tre Brodre terrane. They have mostly granodioritic compositions, with a small amount of quartz diorite. Sm-Nd isotopic data for a quartz diorite and five granodiorite Ikkattoq gneiss samples from within 5 km of the Ikkattoq (fjord) type locality yielded a regression with a slope equivalent to 2005 +/- 52 Ma (MSWD = 0.72). Regardless of the low MSWD, this cannot be the true age of the Ikkattoq gneisses, because all Ikkattoq gneisses yield U-Pb zircon dates of …


Data Report: Clast Counts And Petrography Of Gravels From Site C0007, Iodp Expedition 316, Nankai Trough, Christopher L. Fergusson Jan 2009

Data Report: Clast Counts And Petrography Of Gravels From Site C0007, Iodp Expedition 316, Nankai Trough, Christopher L. Fergusson

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

Gravel beds drilled during Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Expedition 316 at Site C0007 in the eastern Nankai Trough, ~100km offshore from the Kii Peninsula of Honshu, southwest Japan, have been investigated using 26 samples from two horizons (Cores 316-C0007C/C-17H and 316-C0007D-12R). The gravel from Core 316-C0007c-17H is from a 1.7m thick layer, whereas the gravel from Core 316-C0007D-12R is from a layer 4.55m thick. The upper parts of both layers are normally graded. The gravel is clast-supported, polymictic, of granule to pebble size, moderately to poorly sorted, and with subrounded to angular fragments. Clast types are similar from both cores …


Development And Application Of A System For The Analysis Of Atmospheric, Water And Sediment Nitrogen And Carbon, Ann Stavert, Stephen R. Wilson, Dianne F. Jolley Jan 2009

Development And Application Of A System For The Analysis Of Atmospheric, Water And Sediment Nitrogen And Carbon, Ann Stavert, Stephen R. Wilson, Dianne F. Jolley

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

Eutrophication and climate change, key environmental concerns, are both linked to the carbon and nitrogen cycles hence the improved understanding of these cycles is essential. Currently, there is no system that simultaneously measures the fluxes of the three key gas phase products of nitrogen and carbon cycling (CO2, CH4 and N2O) in submerged ecosystems with hourly time resolution. A “Lake-in-a-box” (mesocosm) was developed in the laboratory which allowed the monitoring of key components of the carbon and nitrogen cycles within the air, water and sediments. The approach is automated, simple and time efficient and novel in its ability to examine …


Reconstructing Annual Inflows To The Headwater Catchments Of The Murray River, Australia, Using The Pacific Decadal Oscillation, Hamish A. Mcgowan, Samuel K. Marx, John Denholm, Joshua Soderholm, Balz S. Kamber Jan 2009

Reconstructing Annual Inflows To The Headwater Catchments Of The Murray River, Australia, Using The Pacific Decadal Oscillation, Hamish A. Mcgowan, Samuel K. Marx, John Denholm, Joshua Soderholm, Balz S. Kamber

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

The Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) is a major forcing of inter-decadal to quasi-centennial variability of the hydroclimatology of the Pacific Basin. Its effects are most pronounced in the extra-tropical regions, while it modulates the El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO), the largest forcing of global inter-annual climate variability. PalaeoPDO indices are now available for at least the past 500 years. Here we show that the >500 year PDO index of Shen et al. (2006) is highly correlated with inflows to the headwaters of Australia's longest river system, the Murray-Darling. We then use the PDO to reconstruct annual inflows to the Murray …


Detrital Zircon Sedimentary Provenance Ages For The Eoarchaean Isua Supracrustal Belt Southern West Greenland: Juxtaposition Of An Imbricated Ca. 3700 Ma Juvenile Arc Against An Older Complex With 3920-3760 Ma Components, Allen P. Nutman, Clark R L Friend, Shane Paxton Jan 2009

Detrital Zircon Sedimentary Provenance Ages For The Eoarchaean Isua Supracrustal Belt Southern West Greenland: Juxtaposition Of An Imbricated Ca. 3700 Ma Juvenile Arc Against An Older Complex With 3920-3760 Ma Components, Allen P. Nutman, Clark R L Friend, Shane Paxton

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

The amphibolite facies Eoarchaean Isua supracrustal belt (northern part of the Nuuk region, southern West Greenland) is dominated by strongly deformed metabasalts, with chert, banded iron formation, felsic volcanic and volcano-sedimentary rocks and minor gabbro and sedimentary carbonates. It comprises a suture zone between a northern terrane formed at ca. 3700 Ma and a southern one formed at ca. 3800 Ma. At the junction between these two terranes is a strongly tectonised, thin unit of metachert, BIF and carbonate-bearing rocks with minor detrital components, named the dividing sedimentary unit. Away from the belt, the northern terrane is dominated by ca. …


Eoarchaean Crustal Growth In West Greenland (Itsaq Gneiss Complex) And In Northeastern China (Anshan Area): Review And Synthesis, Allen P. Nutman, Vickie C. Bennett, Clark R L Friend, Frances Jenner, Yusheng Wan, Dunyi Liu Jan 2009

Eoarchaean Crustal Growth In West Greenland (Itsaq Gneiss Complex) And In Northeastern China (Anshan Area): Review And Synthesis, Allen P. Nutman, Vickie C. Bennett, Clark R L Friend, Frances Jenner, Yusheng Wan, Dunyi Liu

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

Eoarchaean crust in West Greenland (the Itsaq Gneiss Complex, 3870-3600 Ma) is >80% by volume orthogneisses derived from plutonic tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite (TTG) suites,3850, c. 3810 and c. 3710 Mahave some compositional similarities to modern island arc basalts (IAB), suggesting their origin by hydrous fluxing of a suprasubduction-zone upper mantle wedge. Most of the Eoarchaean tonalites match in composition high-silica, low-magnesian adakites, whose petrogenesis is dominated by partial melting of garnetiferous mafic rocks at high pressure. However, associated with the tonalites are volumetrically minor more magnesian quartz diorites, whose genesis probably involved melting of depleted mantle to which some slab-derived component had …


Late Llandovery (Early Silurian) Dendroid Graptolites From The Cotton Formation Near Forbes, New South Wales, R B. Rickards, Anthony J. Wright, G Thomas Jan 2009

Late Llandovery (Early Silurian) Dendroid Graptolites From The Cotton Formation Near Forbes, New South Wales, R B. Rickards, Anthony J. Wright, G Thomas

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

A well-preserved dendroid graptolite fauna of Early Silurian (late Llandovery: probable turriculatus graptolite zone) age is described from the Cotton Formation near Forbes, New South Wales. A possible rhabdopleuran hemichordate is described from Australia for the fi rst time. The fauna consists of 13 taxa as follows: Dendrograptus sp. aff. D. avonleaensis, Dictyonema zalasiewiczi sp. nov., Dictyonema sp. aff. D. paululum australis, Dictyonema paululum australis, Dictyonema sp. aff. D. sp. cf. D. venustus of Bulman (?ssp. nov.), Dictyonema venustum, Dictyonema sp. cf. D. falciferum, Callograptus bridgecreekensis, Callograptus rigbyae, Callograptus sp. aff. C. ulahensis, Stelechocladia sp. cf. S. praeattenuata, Acanthograptus praedeckeri …


Absolute Calibration Of The Intramolecular Site Preference Of 15n Fractionation In Tropospheric N2o By Ft-Ir Spectroscopy, David W. T Griffith, Stephen D. Parkes, Vanessa Haverd, Clare Paton-Walsh, Stephen R. Wilson Jan 2009

Absolute Calibration Of The Intramolecular Site Preference Of 15n Fractionation In Tropospheric N2o By Ft-Ir Spectroscopy, David W. T Griffith, Stephen D. Parkes, Vanessa Haverd, Clare Paton-Walsh, Stephen R. Wilson

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

Nitrous oxide (N2O) plays important roles in atmospheric chemistry both as a greenhouse gas and in stratospheric ozone depletion. Isotopic measurements of N2O have provided an invaluable insight into understanding its atmospheric sources and sinks. The preference for 15N fractionation between the central and terminal positions (the “site preference”) is particularly valuable because it depends principally on the processes involved in N2O production or consumption, rather than the 15N content of the substrate from which it is formed. Despite the value of measurements of the site preference, there is no internationally recognized standard reference material of accurately known and accepted …


Darriwilian (Middle Ordovician) Conodonts From Thompson Creek, Nelson Province, New Zealand, Yong Yi Zhen, Ian G. Percival, Roger A. Cooper, John E. Simes, Anthony J. Wright Jan 2009

Darriwilian (Middle Ordovician) Conodonts From Thompson Creek, Nelson Province, New Zealand, Yong Yi Zhen, Ian G. Percival, Roger A. Cooper, John E. Simes, Anthony J. Wright

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

A well preserved Middle Ordovician conodont fauna of 24 species has been recovered from seven samples of a small limestone lens exposed in Thompson Creek, northwest of Nelson, on the South Island of New Zealand. The presence of Histiodella holodentata, Baltoniodus? sp., Paroistodus originalis, P. horridus, Periodon macrodentatus, Protopanderodus sp. cf. P. varicostatus, Costiconus ethingtoni and Venoistodus balticus in the fauna indicates a Darriwilian (late Da2 to mid Da3) age. The occurrence of Ansella jemtlandica, Baltoniodus? sp., Periodon macrodentatus, Spinodus sp., Spinodus? sp. and Histiodella holodentata suggests a relatively deeper water (outer shelf to slope) setting, comparable with contemporaneous faunas, …


Late Neoproterozoic Passive Margin Of East Gondwana: Geochemical Constraints From The Anakie Inlier, Central Queensland, Australia, Christopher L. Fergusson, R Offler, T Green Jan 2009

Late Neoproterozoic Passive Margin Of East Gondwana: Geochemical Constraints From The Anakie Inlier, Central Queensland, Australia, Christopher L. Fergusson, R Offler, T Green

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

Development of the East Gondwana passive margin and when it occurred are constrained by the composition of low grade mafic schists and U-Pb ages of detrital zircons in psammitic schists from the Bathampton Metamorphics in the Anakie Inlier of central Queensland. These rocks show considerable variation in light lithophile elements due to post-magmatic processes. They have flat heavy rare earth element patterns, low-TiO2 (<2 wt%) contents and their immobile element Ti, V, Y, La, Nb, Th and Zr values, indicate that they have an NMORB- like magmatic affinity. However, they differ from N-MORB in that they show light rare earth depleted patterns and lower incompatible trace element contents. Their relative low abundance and association with metasediments suggest they formed in a magma-poor rifted margin setting. They are associated with psammitic rocks with detrital zircon ages indicating probable deposition in the late Neoproterozoic at ca 600 Ma. A magma-poor rifted margin in northeastern Australia differs from the volcanic passive setting that occurred in southeastern Australia at this time. These findings support development of the East Gondwana margin at 600 Ma that may have been related to rifting of a microcontinent off East Gondwana well after the breakup of Rodinia at ca 750 Ma.


Middle Ordovician (Darriwilian) Brachiopods And Trilobites From Thompson Creek, Northwest Nelson, New Zealand, Ian G. Percival, Anthony J. Wright, Roger A. Cooper, John E. Simes, Yong Yi Zhen Jan 2009

Middle Ordovician (Darriwilian) Brachiopods And Trilobites From Thompson Creek, Northwest Nelson, New Zealand, Ian G. Percival, Anthony J. Wright, Roger A. Cooper, John E. Simes, Yong Yi Zhen

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

A well preserved Middle Ordovician shelly fauna, represented by twelve species of lingulate brachiopods and one trilobite genus, was recovered from an allochthonous limestone lens exposed in Thompson Creek, northwest of Nelson, on the South Island of New Zealand. The stratigraphic setting is unclear as the limestone is situated in the Takaka Terrane adjacent to the Anatoki Fault, separating this terrane from the Buller Terrane. The original depositional environment of the limestone is interpreted as relatively deep water (outer shelf to upper slope). Lingulate brachiopods described include the new species Hyperobolus? thompsonensis sp. nov., Cyrtonotreta robusta sp. nov., Scaphelasma paturauensis …


Tectonic Evolution Of The Ordovician Macquarie Arc, Central New South Wales: Arguments For Subduction Polarity And Anticlockwise Rotation, Christopher L. Fergusson Jan 2009

Tectonic Evolution Of The Ordovician Macquarie Arc, Central New South Wales: Arguments For Subduction Polarity And Anticlockwise Rotation, Christopher L. Fergusson

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

The Ordovician Macquarie Arc is most widely exposed in the Lachlan Fold Belt of central New South Wales. Complex relationships between the arc and the Ordovician turbidite mega-fan are partly explained by anticlockwise rotation of the arc during the Ordovician. Thus, initially two lobes of the mega-fan formed to the north and south of the east-west trending arc, using present-day coordinates. The arc consists of the western Goonumbla-Trangie Volcanic Belt, replacing the inappropriate term Junee-Narromine Volcanic Belt, and an eastern composite of the Molong, Rockley-Gulgong and Kiandra Volcanic Belts. These two major segments of the arc are separated by Ordovician …


In Situ U-Pb, O And Hf Isotopic Compositions Of Zircon And Olivine From Eoarchaean Rocks, West Greenland: New Insights To Making Old Crust, Joe Hiess, Vickie C. Bennett, Allen P. Nutman, Ian S. Williams Jan 2009

In Situ U-Pb, O And Hf Isotopic Compositions Of Zircon And Olivine From Eoarchaean Rocks, West Greenland: New Insights To Making Old Crust, Joe Hiess, Vickie C. Bennett, Allen P. Nutman, Ian S. Williams

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

The sources and petrogenetic processes that generated some of the Earth's oldest continental crust have been more tightly constrained via an integrated, in situ (U-Pb, O and Hf) isotopic approach. The minerals analysed were representative zircon from four Eoarchaean TTG tonalites and two felsic volcanic rocks, and olivine from one harzburgite/dunite of the Itsaq Gneiss Complex (IGC), southern West Greenland. The samples were carefully chosen from localities with least migmatisation, metasomatism and strain. Zircon was thoroughly characterized prior to analysis using cathodoluminescence, scanning electron, reflected and transmitted light imaging. The zircon from all but one sample showed only minor post-magmatic …


Climate Change In The Dead Heart Of Australia, Joshua Larsen, Gerald C. Nanson, Timothy J. Cohen, Brian G. Jones, John D. Jansen, Jan-Hendrik May Jan 2009

Climate Change In The Dead Heart Of Australia, Joshua Larsen, Gerald C. Nanson, Timothy J. Cohen, Brian G. Jones, John D. Jansen, Jan-Hendrik May

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

Despite the absence of large-scale glaciation, the Australian continent has experienced substantial environmental change throughout the Quaternary period. This is especially pronounced in central Australia, where one seventh of the continent is drained internally to the depocentre, and lowest point in Australia, Lake Eyre (Figure 1). Research has shown that at one time, large sandy braided and meandering rivers carried water through dunefields to a large freshwater lake system. Today, the rivers are hostage to the dunefield, and floodwaters might only reach Lake Eyre once every ten years or so. In order to understand the development of this arid desert …


The Soils Of Kiritimati (Christmas) Island, Kiribati, Central Pacific: New Information And Comparison With Previous Studies, Colin D. Woodroffe, Robert John Morrison Jan 2009

The Soils Of Kiritimati (Christmas) Island, Kiribati, Central Pacific: New Information And Comparison With Previous Studies, Colin D. Woodroffe, Robert John Morrison

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

No abstract provided.


Martellia And Associated Middle Ordovician Brachiopods From The Katkoyeh Formation, East-Central Iran, Ian G. Percival, Anthony J. Wright, Robert S. Nicoll, Mir Alireza Hamedi Jan 2009

Martellia And Associated Middle Ordovician Brachiopods From The Katkoyeh Formation, East-Central Iran, Ian G. Percival, Anthony J. Wright, Robert S. Nicoll, Mir Alireza Hamedi

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

The palaeontology and stratigraphy of the Ordovician if Iran has been the subject of considerable research over the past 15 years, revealing biogeographically significant faunas whose affinities are shared both with peri-Gondwanian terranes and continental blocks. Documentation of the composition and ages of these faunas, many of which are still poorly known, is critical to constraining palaeogeographic reconstructions of the time.


The Asaphid Trilobite Ogygites Collingwoodensis Reed, 1926 From The Late Ordovician Of New Zealand, Anthony J. Wright Jan 2009

The Asaphid Trilobite Ogygites Collingwoodensis Reed, 1926 From The Late Ordovician Of New Zealand, Anthony J. Wright

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

The New Zealand asaphid trilobite Ogygites collingwoodensis is redescribed on the basis of the type material and new collections, and its assignment to Basiliella is confirmed. The species occurs with the trinucleid trilobite Incaia bishopi and graptolites indicative of the Nemagraptus gracilis zone (early Late Ordovician, early Sandbian/Gisbornian), mostly as disarticulated material in intensely bioturbated siltstone of the Douglas Formation. Comparison with coeval faunas is limited due to the low diversity of this fauna, but B. collingwoodensis shows some limited similarity to contemporaneous eastern Australian faunas, whereas Incaia also occurs in South America and South China.


Evaporation And Carbon Dioxide Exchange By Sugar Cane Crops, G Bryant, Travis A. Naylor, Stephen R. Wilson, O T Denmead, David W. Griffith, B.C.T. Macdonald, I. White Jan 2009

Evaporation And Carbon Dioxide Exchange By Sugar Cane Crops, G Bryant, Travis A. Naylor, Stephen R. Wilson, O T Denmead, David W. Griffith, B.C.T. Macdonald, I. White

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

RECENT developments in water and carbon trading and biofuel production highlight the need to document the water and carbon balances of Australia’s cropping systems including sugarcane. This paper presents the results of studies of evaporation and CO2 exchange throughout the growing seasons of two sugarcane crops, a 1st ratoon crop at Murwillumbah where burnt-cane was practised and a 5th ratoon crop at Mackay where trash blanketing was employed. At both locations, a micrometeorological eddy covariance technique was employed to measure water vapour and CO2 exchange between crop and atmosphere and manual and automatic chambers to measure CO2 emission from the …