Results 191 to 200 of about 36,199 (290)

Dynamic Coupling Between Faulting, Rifting and Magmatism During 2021‐2025 Unrest on Reykjanes Peninsula, Iceland

open access: yesGeophysical Research Letters, Volume 53, Issue 10, 28 May 2026.
Abstract Interactions among faulting, earthquakes, and eruptions are fundamental to plate tectonics and hazard forecasting yet rarely observed along mid‐ocean ridges. On Iceland's Reykjanes Peninsula, seismotectonic–volcanic unrest resumed after nearly 800‐year hiatus, providing an opportunity to observe these interactions during 2021–2025 activity. By
Tomáš J. Fischer   +7 more
wiley   +1 more source

Does Geocentric Sea‐Level Rise in the Maritime Continent Reveal a Tectonic Fingerprint?

open access: yesGeophysical Research Letters, Volume 53, Issue 10, 28 May 2026.
Abstract The islands of the Maritime Continent are highly vulnerable to sea‐level rise driven by barystatic, sterodynamic, and vertical land motion (VLM) processes. While tectonics is known to affect relative sea‐level through VLM, its influence on long‐term geocentric sea level (GSL) through crustal deformation and gravity field perturbations remains ...
Nidheesh Gangadharan   +5 more
wiley   +1 more source

The Radio Occultation experiment on-board the Indian OCEANSAT-2 mission: data processing validation and preliminary results [PDF]

open access: yes, 2009
Bordi, I.   +15 more
core  

A First Attempt at Reconstructing FengYun‐4B Stratified Precipitable Water Using GNSS

open access: yesGeophysical Research Letters, Volume 53, Issue 10, 28 May 2026.
Abstract Layer Precipitable Water (LPW) characterizes the vertical structure of atmospheric moisture and is essential for accurate weather forecasts. China's FY‐4B satellite delivers near‐real‐time LPW products, but is constrained by large uncertainties.
Yuhao Wu   +4 more
wiley   +1 more source

Unconstrained GNSS Water Vapor Tomography With Real Data and LEO Augmentation

open access: yesGeophysical Research Letters, Volume 53, Issue 10, 28 May 2026.
Abstract The availability of four complete GNSS constellations (GPS, GLONASS, BeiDou and Galileo) offers, for the first time, the possibility of performing water vapor tomographic inversions that do not rely on external data. A tomographic model that includes no external constraints and requires no first guess and no virtual observations is described ...
P. M. A. Miranda   +3 more
wiley   +1 more source

Crustal Responses to the Destruction of Continental Lithosphere: Insights From Radial Anisotropy of the Tanlu Fault Zone, Eastern China

open access: yesGeophysical Research Letters, Volume 53, Issue 9, 16 May 2026.
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

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy