Results 181 to 190 of about 4,315 (229)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Impact crater lakes on Mars

Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets, 1996
The robotic search for life on Mars centers on identifying accessible environments where the biological catalyst, water, has existed. The formation of large impact craters on Mars (>65 km diameter) may have resulted in the creation of ice‐covered impact crater lakes, which would not freeze for thousands of years, even under present climatic ...
Horton E. Newsom   +4 more
openaire   +1 more source

Hazardous Crater Lakes

1996
Geochemistry of crater lakes can provide information about deep magmatic activity and shallow volcano-fluid interactions because the lakes act as condensers, traps, and calorimeters for magmatic volatiles and heat supplied through the volcanic conduits. Such information is only available through long-term monitoring.
openaire   +1 more source

The Crater Lake of Nagyhegyes

2015
In spite of an increasing security of operations, hydrocarbon exploration and extraction may involve accidents which sometimes cause localized but rapid and fundamental changes on the ground surface. In Hungary the scars generated by such accidents are still clearly detectable in many places, best visible in the outskirts of the village Nagyhegyes ...
Dénes Lóczy   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Isabela Crater-Lake: a Mexican insular saline lake

Hydrobiologia, 1998
The Isabela Crater-Lake is a bright-green, hypersaline lake (68–112.5 mS cm-1) on Isabela Island off the Pacific coast of Nayarit, Mexico. Some salient features were documented in November 1993. It appears meromictic, with three well-defined strata separated by sharp pycnoclines.
Javier Alcocer   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

Sediments of Crater Lake, Oregon

Geological Society of America Bulletin, 1967
Crater Lake, in the collapse caldera of a Pleistocene composite volcano in the Cascade Range of Oregon, has a maximum depth of 1932 feet. Immature and generally unsorted volcanic sediments have been deposited on the steep slope and nearly flat floor of the lake.
openaire   +1 more source

Tritium in Crater Lake, Oregon

Journal of Geophysical Research, 1970
The transfer of tritium from the atmosphere to the ocean and to continental water bodies by vapor exchange as well as by precipitation is generally accepted. Vapor exchange has been suggested as the dominant mechanism for transfer of tritium to small continental lakes.
openaire   +1 more source

Crater Lake Energy and Mass Balance

2015
The volume and temperature of a Crater Lake in an active volcano depends on the balance between the input of volcanic fluids and gases, with their thermal energy, and the evaporation and other processes by which the lake loses energy. The general situation is that we can measure the bulk properties of the lake, and want to determine the mass and energy
Hurst, T., Hashimoto, T., Terada, A.
openaire   +1 more source

Crater Lake

2014
Mohamed Ramy El Maarry   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Lake heatwaves under climate change

Nature, 2021
Richard Iestyn Woolway   +2 more
exaly  

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy