Results 171 to 180 of about 115,566 (343)
Cone-in-cone: how it occurs in the Devonian; Series in Pennsylvania (U.S.A.); with Further Details of its Structure, Varieties, etc. [PDF]
W. S. Gresley
openalex +1 more source
Late Devonian-Carboniferous tectonic evolution within the Firth of Forth, Midland Valley : as revealed from 2D seisimic reflection data [PDF]
Results of integrated seismic mapping, within the Firth of Forth in the offshore Midland Valley of Scotland, are presented and illustrate aspects of the subsurface structure and tectonic evolution of the Upper Devonian to Carboniferous succession ...
Browne, M.A.E.+3 more
core
Abstract It is well known that geothermal heat flow influences the dynamics of ice sheets. Especially small‐scale variations may lead to strong effects, but are not resolvable in most available models. Here, we establish a relationship between large‐scale radiogenic heat production (RHP) and geological units for Greenland to assess the local ...
Judith Freienstein+3 more
wiley +1 more source
Devonian Rocks of Southeastern Michigan and Northwestern Ohio [PDF]
G. M. Elhers+2 more
openalex
Second Occurrence of Colonial Corals of Devonian Type in Tyôsen (Korea)
Hisakatsu YABE, Akio Suzuki
openalex +2 more sources
The cranial buckler of a Dipnoan fish, probably Ganorhynchus, from the Devonian Beds of the Murrumbidgee River, New South Wales [PDF]
R. Etheridge
openalex +1 more source
Was the Formation of the North Anatolian Fault Influenced by the Aegean Extension?
ABSTRACT The North Anatolian Fault (NAF), one of the most prominent plate boundary continental fault systems on Earth, facilitates the westward movement of the Anatolian microplate into the Aegean region. The temporal and spatial evolution of the NAF is important for understanding the mechanism of escape tectonics during plate interaction in active ...
I. Tonguç Uysal+9 more
wiley +1 more source
The evolution of muscle spindles
Abstract Muscle spindles are stretch‐sensitive mechanoreceptors found in the skeletal muscles of most four‐limbed vertebrates. They are unique amongst sensory receptors in the ability to regulate their sensitivity by contraction of the intrafusal muscle fibres on which the sensory endings lie.
Robert W. Banks, Uwe Proske
wiley +1 more source