Results 121 to 130 of about 51,259 (279)
Terrestrial Analogs to Titan for Geophysical Research
Abstract Saturn's moon Titan exhibits remarkable parallels to the Earth in many geophysical and geological processes not found elsewhere in the solar system at the present day. These include a nitrogen atmosphere with a condensible gas—methane—replacing the Earth's water, leading to an active meteorology with rainfall and surface manifestations ...
Conor A. Nixon +21 more
wiley +1 more source
Arc Heat Flow and Magmatic Heat Budgets
Abstract We evaluate hydrothermal heat loss from 11 volcanic‐arc segments (∼6,000 km of arc length, ∼10% of the global total), motivated by the observation that much magmatic heat ultimately crosses the land surface as heated aqueous fluid. Heat loss takes place by volcanic eruption, geothermal heat conduction to the surface, fumarolic (vapor ...
S. E. Ingebritsen +7 more
wiley +1 more source
Deep biosphere hosted by Archean granitoid basement of Deccan Traps showed depth‐wise microbial partitioning. Limited dispersion and variable selection control community assembly. Fewer abundant bacterial taxa were ubiquitous, while large numbers of rare taxa remained localized.
Rajendra Prasad Sahu +5 more
wiley +1 more source
Building‐Scale Flood Hazard Modelling for Risk Assessment of Cultural Heritage
ABSTRACT Flooding is among the most frequent natural hazards threatening cultural heritage sites, yet current flood hazard studies often operate at urban or regional scales. While building‐scale damage models exist, they generally rely on flood depth inputs from large‐scale inundation models, inputs that may fail to capture the internal complexity of ...
Chiara Arrighi +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Developing a site-conditions map for seismic hazard Assessment in Portugal [PDF]
The evaluation of site effects on a broad scale is a critical issue for seismic hazard and risk assessment, land use planning and emergency planning.
Borges, J. F. +7 more
core +1 more source
Abstract A small phreatic eruption occurred on April 2018 Iwo‐yama, Kirishima volcanic complex, Japan. We estimated the change in the subsurface resistivity structure before and after the phreatic eruption by repeated magnetotelluric (MT) measurements. A substantial decrease in resistivity was determined in the zone from the surface down to a depth of ...
K. Aizawa, N. Matsushima, Y. Matsunaga
wiley +1 more source
Abstract Since the Mesozoic, much of the eastern China lithosphere was removed through thermo‐mechanical erosion and delamination, yet the effects on the overlying crust remain unclear. The Tanlu Fault Zone (TLFZ), the region's largest lithosphere‐scale weakness, offers a natural laboratory to assess crustal responses to lithospheric destruction.
Yuqi Zhu +5 more
wiley +1 more source
Magnetic Signature of Oceanic Transform Faults and Their Fracture Zones
Abstract Oceanic transform faults (TFs) offset mid‐ocean ridges, juxtaposing different‐aged crust and causing fracture zones (FZ) crossing ocean basins. Mounting evidence challenges the consensus that TFs are conservative plate boundaries, instead supporting the existence of extensional tectonics and two phases of magmatism.
Fei Zhou +4 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract Unraveling the surface deformation and fault kinematics during the seismic cycle is crucial for understanding earthquake physics. Herein, we use geodetic and seismic observations to quantify the interseismic coupling, coseismic rupture, and postseismic afterslip associated with the 2025 Mw 8.8 Kamchatka earthquake.
Yang Xiao +8 more
wiley +1 more source
North China is one of the high-risk areas for destructive and strong earthquakes in mainland China and has experienced numerous strong historical earthquakes.
Guanshen Liu +6 more
doaj +1 more source

