Results 131 to 140 of about 64,690 (275)
A comparison of the moss floras of Chile and New Zealand [PDF]
Chile and New Zealand share a common stock of 181 species of mosses in 94 genera and 34 families. This number counts for 23.3% of the Chilean and 34.6% of the New Zealand moss flora.
Blöcher, Rolf, Frahm, Jan-Peter
core
Abstract We present elemental geochemistry and multiple isotopic systematics (Re‐Os, Lu‐Hf, Sm‐Nd and Sr) for mantle peridotite xenoliths from Lashaine in northern Tanzania. We use the data to examine how the major Proterozoic tectono‐thermal events that affected the crust of the western Tanzanian craton are imprinted on the lithospheric mantle in the ...
Sheng‐Hua Zhou +6 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract Recent observations and drilling campaigns have challenged the typical models for rifted margins by providing evidence for the existence of intermediate cases between the magmatic and amagmatic end‐members. In this contribution, we document the evolution of the Central Campos rifted margin, located in southeast Brazil, based on a combined ...
P. Alvarez +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Cold Gondwana, warm Tethys and the Tibetan Lhasa block [PDF]
M. G. Audley‐Charles
openalex +1 more source
Seismic data reveals Cretaceous stratigraphy and hydrocarbon potential beneath volcanic rocks in Offshore Indus Basin, where magmatic intrusions enhanced source rock maturation and hydrocarbon generation by 8%–18% during favourable timing coinciding with Deccan volcanism.
Yasir Shahzad +3 more
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT The Ediacaran–Cambrian boundary, which precedes one of the most significant biotic diversification events in Earth's history, is associated with a global negative carbon isotope excursion termed the BAsal Cambrian carbon isotope Excursion (BACE).
Watsawan Chanchai +6 more
wiley +1 more source
Hopping Hotspots Shaped the Global Biogeography and Diversification of Orectolobiform Sharks
ABSTRACT Aim In marine biogeography, many clades exhibit their greatest species richness in the Central Indo‐Pacific region, which includes the Indo‐Australian Archipelago. However, there is no consensus that this region was the ancestral cradle of clade's species richness.
Alexis F. P. Marion +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Reconsidering the glaciogenic origin of Gondwana diamictites of the Dwyka Group, South Africa [PDF]
Mats O. Molén, J. Johan Smit
openalex +1 more source
Zircon U–Pb dating constrains the Pilok Sn–W granite emplacement at 212–208 Ma, during the Late Triassic post‐collisional extension after the Sibumasu‐Indochina collision. This timing coincides with widespread tin‐bearing granite magmatism throughout Southeast Asia, marking a major regional metallogenic event. ABSTRACT The Pilok Sn–W deposit in western
Mallika Intachai +8 more
wiley +1 more source

