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1                                       Recent geophysical analyses suggest the presence of a late Pale
2 l on ice flow have not been characterized by geophysical analysis.
3 and Ranging) spacecraft and the NASA Goddard Geophysical and Astronomical Observatory (GGAO).
4  responsible for shaping Earth's distinctive geophysical and chemical properties and generating pathw
5 thermally or compositionally driven flows in geophysical and engineering systems.
6 urbulent dynamical systems are ubiquitous in geophysical and engineering turbulence.
7     The temporal relationships between these geophysical and eruptive time series were studied.
8                           Here we report new geophysical and fluid geochemical data for high-temperat
9  over the weaker underlying mantle, although geophysical and geochemical constraints on the exact thi
10                                              Geophysical and geochemical data support the removal of
11                        We use multiparameter geophysical and geochemical data to show that the 110-sq
12  requires greater quantitative comparison of geophysical and geochemical data, linked through sets of
13                                  Integrating geophysical and geochemical data, we estimate that 1.3 G
14                                   Co-located geophysical and geochemical datasets in the borehole sho
15 ailability limitations rising from different geophysical and geochemical dynamics at pore-scale.
16                             Here, we provide geophysical and geochemical evidence that the salt chimn
17 hat significantly influenced the geological, geophysical and geochemical evolution of the planet, inc
18 ssential, though challenging, as traditional geophysical and geochemical methods for tracking volcani
19  also affects current interpretations of the geophysical and geochemical models using extrapolated or
20         These elements are key components in geophysical and geochemical models.
21                                     However, geophysical and geochemical observations suggest slab su
22                                Such combined geophysical and geochemical observations will help const
23 stitution of the Earth's mantle dictates the geophysical and geochemical properties of this region.
24 rease of the hydrothermal system controlling geophysical and geochemical signals at the caldera.
25                       Such processes produce geophysical and geochemical signals that may be detected
26    The formation of Earth's core left behind geophysical and geochemical signatures in both the core
27 iron core may be responsible for the unusual geophysical and geochemical signatures observed at the b
28 Our results demonstrate that high-resolution geophysical and geological observations can yield unprec
29                                   We present geophysical and geological observations from the west Ib
30                                      INDEPTH geophysical and geological observations imply that a par
31 S) as part of an integrated approach for the geophysical and geotechnical assessment of the shallow s
32 sive failure, which concerns a wide range of geophysical and geotechnical situations.
33 ed, despite the importance of these flows in geophysical and industrial systems.
34 formation of the Haumea family can match all geophysical and orbital characteristics of the family wi
35      However, this trend has scatter because geophysical and physicochemical parameters can vary, suc
36                                  Geological, geophysical, and geochemical data support a theory that
37 lications, including industrial, biological, geophysical, and medical settings.
38 g an integrated set of global environmental, geophysical, and social indicators.
39 eling the interaction between lake climatic, geophysical, and socioeconomic features and their stabil
40  100-km length scale is significant for many geophysical applications including mapping of crustal ma
41 r flow, posing an obstacle in industrial and geophysical applications.
42  of EOS data from nanosecond experiments for geophysical applications.
43  temporal patterns of genetic variation with geophysical aspects of the environment can best be attri
44 d decrease losses, as it happens in numerous geophysical, astrophysical flows and in tokamaks.
45  ecology, recent discussions have focused on geophysical attributes, and it is recognized that dynami
46 al land use, vegetation characteristics, and geophysical attributes.
47 e identify a nested evolutionary sequence of geophysical, biophysical, sociocultural, and sociotechni
48                                              Geophysical borehole measurements and chemical weatherin
49 ions are important sources of uncertainty in geophysical calculations of the AOD-to-PM2.5 relationshi
50                  The present increase, whose geophysical cause(s) are uncertain, thus signifies a lar
51                                        These geophysical changes go along with widespread ecosystem d
52  However, numerical studies of how projected geophysical changes in sea ice will realistically impact
53 sociated with El Nino events and longer term geophysical changes, may thus have far-reaching impacts
54                                              Geophysical characterization of calderas is fundamental
55                    Here we present the first geophysical characterization of serpentinite carbonation
56 )-saturated DIW for 49 days while monitoring geophysical, chemical, and hydrodynamic parameters.
57 buoyancy remains actively debated within the geophysical community.
58 ate services, given subnational geographical/geophysical complexity, attention is focused on lessons
59 cal evolution of ice sheets to ascertain the geophysical conditions that allow liquid water to be pro
60 s is consistent with existing geological and geophysical constraints, including Pleistocene glacio-is
61 et characteristics that describes platinum's geophysical constraints, institutional efficiency, and d
62 5) composition is compatible with a range of geophysical constraints.
63 ring many optical devices in the seismic and geophysical context.
64 l tropical N cycle by examining climatic and geophysical controls of surface soil N content and stabl
65 ctively the daily, seasonal, lunar and tidal geophysical cycles regulate much of the temporal biology
66 sing isolation of human societies from these geophysical cycles, as a result of improved living condi
67                        Here, using sea-floor geophysical data and marine sediment cores, we resolve t
68                                         From geophysical data and modeling analyses, we evaluate gas
69                                       Marine geophysical data collected in 2006 reveal a large, arcua
70                                          The geophysical data define a 2,500-km-long rift system in E
71 , we interpret petrographic, geochemical and geophysical data from drill holes in a modern SMS deposi
72 deling, as well as obtaining samples and new geophysical data from other planets (Venus, Mars, or Mer
73    Here we show, using marine geological and geophysical data from the continental shelf seaward of t
74 ep to derive eruption source parameters from geophysical data in real-time.
75                                              Geophysical data indicate that deep magma influx beneath
76               These combined geochemical and geophysical data indicate that the structure and hydrati
77     Deriving eruption source parameters from geophysical data is critical for volcano hazard mitigati
78                                  Most of the geophysical data provide global information that cannot
79 erical simulations and fine-tuned with small geophysical data sets for potential applications to faul
80 oil clay content, while temporal analysis of geophysical data showed the impact of soil moisture and
81 effective coupling of UAV data products with geophysical data to extract critical information for far
82 ent times range from 10's-100's of years and geophysical data typically exist for only a portion of a
83                          Here, we assimilate geophysical data with modelling of the Eurasian Ice Shee
84 d magnetic susceptibility models of airborne geophysical data(5,6).
85 es on a watershed scale, by linking borehole geophysical data, near-surface geophysics, and remote se
86 w that this structure is compatible with all geophysical data, notably (1) deep reflected and diffrac
87 c mode, constrained by satellite and in situ geophysical data, we identify the nature of this potenti
88 actorily explain the available structural or geophysical data.
89 ed on more than one million hours of diverse geophysical data.
90 le structural changes that are detectable in geophysical data.
91 storage" model is generally applicable, then geophysical detection of melt beneath volcanoes is likel
92                                              Geophysical detection of subducted mid-ocean ridge basal
93                                          The geophysical detection of such a layer has, however, prov
94 and Amazonian forest, to assess climatic and geophysical determinants of LES traits and their interre
95 's magnetosphere is therefore likely to be a geophysical effect associated with fluctuating boundary
96                 As a result, the analysis of geophysical events and the performance of largely empiri
97 small-scale experiments and the larger-scale geophysical events, a rather good agreement is found bet
98 est in the absence of robust geochemical and geophysical evidence for a mantle source.
99                                 However, the geophysical evidence for such large early emissions is e
100                       We find geological and geophysical evidence for this process in the Tasmanides
101                          However, a range of geophysical evidence indicates that compositionally dist
102 ing these results with geochemical and other geophysical evidence reveals highly symmetric lower-crus
103                                              Geophysical evidence strongly supports the complete isol
104               Petrological, geochemical, and geophysical evidence suggests that the MTZ may host subd
105 dates are based on several morphological and geophysical evidences and analogies: (i) the dimensions
106 cological dynamics to planetary change, with geophysical evolution determining the relevant time scal
107 connects polar volatiles to the geologic and geophysical evolution of the Moon and the bombardment hi
108 ents, planetary geological, geochemical, and geophysical evolution, orbital dynamics of bodies in the
109 nclusions and show that new opportunities in geophysical exploration and characterization could arise
110 nclusions suggest a rigorous new approach in geophysical exploration for mineral deposits.
111                                              Geophysical exploration of the seabed is typically done
112 demonstrating the method's effectiveness for geophysical exploration.
113 ossible thermophysical effects; however, the geophysical expressions of these effects are unknown.
114  2013, and whether lake-specific or regional geophysical factors were related to the observed changes
115             Multiple additional climatic and geophysical factors were secondary determinants of plant
116 bitats and find patterns with bioclimate and geophysical factors, as well as land use, host phylogeny
117 s well as how seasonal differences vary with geophysical factors.
118                                         This geophysical feature, clearly more evident than the ones
119                                    Among the geophysical features shown in the map, the important Sil
120  data a dictionary of local, or small-scale, geophysical features.
121 r the extrapolation of laboratory results to geophysical field scales.
122 ause both processes generate seismic energy, geophysical field studies of volcanic processes are ofte
123       Our results reveal nested climatic and geophysical filtering of LES traits and their interrelat
124 ) and fundamentally altering the behavior of geophysical flows (landslides, debris flows, pyroclastic
125                            Waves observed in geophysical flows are also robust to perturbations, whic
126 r small-amplitude, abrupt reorganizations of geophysical flows at forcing levels lower than the criti
127                                Turbulence in geophysical flows tends to organize itself so that the m
128 itable discrete numerical approximations for geophysical flows with many conserved quantities as a nu
129 ments are presented here for these truncated geophysical flows with topography in a suitable regime.
130 d atoms to metamaterials, active matter, and geophysical flows.
131  deep sea, the sense of time is dependent on geophysical fluctuations, such as internal tides and atm
132  and tropospheric sulfate aerosols) from the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory and Hadley Centre
133                                    Using the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory comprehensive Eart
134  changing climate (A2 and B1 IPCC emissions; Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory General Circulatio
135  Here, we use an earth system model from the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory to investigate reg
136  value in data assimilation, for example, in geophysical fluid dynamics.
137 rizing slow-fast interactions are central to geophysical fluid dynamics.
138 e (as found in oceans, atmospheres and other geophysical fluids) and those of SOC.
139 in turbulence, combustion, nonlinear optics, geophysical fluids, and neuroscience.
140                               Integration of geophysical, geochemical, and geological evidence suppor
141  on high-resolution aeromagnetic imaging and geophysical-geodetic observations.
142 s than the upper convecting mantle underpins geophysical, geodynamic and geochemical models of Earth'
143  add to sounds of biological (biophonic) and geophysical (geophonic) origin, with human contributions
144 er species distributions in conjunction with geophysical habitat alterations, such as changes to land
145  resulted from the complex environmental and geophysical history of the region.
146 aleomagnetic record is an archive of Earth's geophysical history, informing reconstructions of ancien
147                                              Geophysical hotspots have been attributed to partially m
148 cs of subduction zones(4,6); however, direct geophysical imaging of the complex fracture networks pro
149 been little corroboration from crustal scale geophysical imaging.
150                              Here, we couple geophysical induced polarization (IP) measurements in H(
151 ows with rigid boundaries, occurring in many geophysical, industrial and biophysical flows.
152                                              Geophysical inferences of the viscosity structure, howev
153                             Several lines of geophysical inquiry now suggest that a change in the loc
154                                     Seafloor geophysical instrumentation is challenging to deploy and
155 es worldwide are continuously monitored with geophysical instrumentation.
156 m methods to image small-scale structures of geophysical interest buried within the Earth requires th
157 nstrates significant potential for improving geophysical interpretation in complex geological environ
158 structure of the landing site to aid in situ geophysical investigations.
159 o their passive mode-overseen by the typical geophysical investigations.
160                             The chemical and geophysical issues that have to be solved to interpret i
161                              Drill cores and geophysical logs from International Ocean Discovery Prog
162                                 The use of a geophysical mapping system during the submarine SCICEX e
163 highlighting that H(2)O can be a high-energy geophysical material.
164 nts from a radiometer and a radar, producing geophysical measurements at a finer spatial resolution t
165 e than the surrounding rocks, and electrical geophysical measurements can be used to map these zones.
166 nally, high-resolution multitemporal surface geophysical measurements of apparent soil electrical con
167  from basalt major-element barometers(7) and geophysical measurements of lithospheric thickness(8).
168 ECa) maps deriving from on-site near-surface geophysical measurements of vineyard soils obtained by a
169                                     Expanded geophysical measurements onshore and offshore in these s
170                                              Geophysical measurements, however, suggest that melts of
171                          Magnetotellurics, a geophysical method measuring subsurface electrical resis
172 eous aquifer sediment, using the noninvasive geophysical method spectral induced polarization (SIP).
173 f complex electrical conductivity imaging, a geophysical method, to monitor the high-pressure injecti
174                                              Geophysical methods are even further limited at frequent
175 nd are studied intensively, particularly, by geophysical methods sensitive to active and/or visible s
176 otelluric and geomagnetic depth sounding are geophysical methods sensitive to mantle melt.
177 he effectiveness of chemical, hydraulic, and geophysical methods to monitor microbial activity, gel f
178 rust are still not accurately resolved using geophysical methods.
179 rgin using new shallow water electromagnetic geophysical methods.
180 ct detection in the deep Earth possible with geophysical methods.
181 nthesis of the mammalian fossil record and a geophysical model of topographic evolution of the Basin
182  core conditions are essential input for the geophysical modelling but are poorly constrained experim
183 hermal conductivity at odds with traditional geophysical models and direct evidence for a primordial
184          Likewise, our findings suggest that geophysical models of Uranus and Neptune require reasses
185 rom beneath Enceladus' surface at times when geophysical models predict its fissures should be under
186 l signatures to salt volume fraction through geophysical models, and (iii) increases of porosity (by
187                         A goal of subsurface geophysical monitoring is the detection and characteriza
188 e first time, ten years of multidisciplinary geophysical monitoring of simulated clandestine graves u
189 y be injected into the subsurface to enhance geophysical monitoring tools used to track fluids and ma
190 tonomy(1), provide remote time standards for geophysical monitoring(2) and distributed coherent sensi
191 n about this storage because geochemical and geophysical observations are limited to pits, boreholes,
192    Reconciling contradictory geochemical and geophysical observations at ocean ridges requires a bett
193                    These findings align with geophysical observations from caldera systems, emphasizi
194                                        Using geophysical observations from offshore Svalbard to const
195 ere, we investigate this elusive phase using geophysical observations from the 2004 moment magnitude
196                                              Geophysical observations from the 2011 moment magnitude
197 al experiments constrained by geological and geophysical observations from the Alpine Tethys and Iber
198                                     On Mars, geophysical observations have confirmed that the core is
199                   In the past decade, marine geophysical observations have led to the discovery of th
200 ical discontinuities are predicted and match geophysical observations in a consistent petrological an
201                                              Geophysical observations indicate that melting beneath r
202 igh-frequency seismic attenuation with other geophysical observations is a powerful tool for understa
203 tectonic plates, but have been challenged by geophysical observations of asymmetric upwelling that su
204 1)) are presented to support geochemical and geophysical observations of Campi Flegrei as a critical
205 loor spreading is thus inferred largely from geophysical observations of spreading events on land at
206                                  Reconciling geophysical observations of the melting regime beneath t
207                       It is unclear if these geophysical observations represent a true picture of the
208 More fundamentally, experimental studies and geophysical observations show that the core is under-sat
209  simulations of Chicxulub-scale impacts with geophysical observations suggests that the Chicxulub cra
210 ever, this assumption has been questioned by geophysical observations(2,3) and by the identification
211 aints of [Formula: see text] K inferred from geophysical observations, while a plausible scenario for
212 of the mineral matrix, which may explain the geophysical observations.
213 lly satisfy geochemical constraints, but not geophysical observations.
214 of the lower mantle could partly explain the geophysical observations.
215 s, potentially unveiling ongoing activity of geophysical or biological origin.
216 ng cracks that have been postulated to solve geophysical paradoxes about heat generated by earthquake
217 relate spatial variations in geochemical and geophysical parameters at the Earth's surface.
218           Both instruments, sensitive to the geophysical parameters in the swath, provided independen
219  for the exploration of condensed phases and geophysical phenomena(1).
220  with tectonics, influences a broad array of geophysical phenomena.
221  composition, perhaps associated with recent geophysical phenomena.
222 eal short time scale and large spatial scale geophysical phenomenon, which is necessarily human in or
223 gh rates of kinetic energy extraction may be geophysical possible.
224  the water-bearing capacity of these phases, geophysical probes such as electrical conductivity have
225 ion can take place by natural selection if a geophysical process is capable of heterotrophic formatio
226 interpret the petrological, geochemical, and geophysical processes associated with subduction zones.
227 st unexpected strong connections between the geophysical processes in Earth's deep interior, the surf
228       Radon is useful as a tracer of certain geophysical processes in marine and aquatic environments
229 s alone, it is not possible to determine the geophysical processes responsible for the observed eleva
230   The two fluxes are critically dependent on geophysical processes that determine mixed-layer depth,
231 ul indicators of a wide variety of planetary geophysical processes, and for Mars they reveal the reco
232 dment of the Stafford Act to include gradual geophysical processes, such as erosion, in the statutory
233           This article discusses a few basic geophysical processes, which collectively indicate that
234 h, economic activity, ecosystem function and geophysical processes.
235 nt in many industrial, civil engineering and geophysical processes.
236 namely the roles of fungi in geochemical and geophysical processes.
237 r analyses of a wide range of industrial and geophysical processes.
238 s, with implications for many industrial and geophysical processes.
239 eep carbon cycle and related geochemical and geophysical processes.
240                                              Geophysical properties of acoustic, seismic, electric, a
241 to the heat required to produce the observed geophysical properties of the crust.
242 um composition should affect geochemical and geophysical properties of the deep interior.
243  Due to their potential role in the peculiar geophysical properties of the ice giants Neptune and Ura
244 atiles to the exosphere, and geochemical and geophysical properties of the mantle.
245 ve methods of imaging and mapping of surface geophysical properties with many important applications
246 able time-series analysis of geochemical and geophysical properties, providing constraints on mantle
247 amounts of iron (Fe) with effects on various geophysical properties.
248 e that has not been documented in the modern geophysical record.
249 f salt precipitation can be achieved through geophysical remote sensing.
250  the top-shaped rubble-pile asteroid Bennu's geophysical response to spinup is highly sensitive to it
251 ught together to design a metasurface at the geophysical scale, the resonant metawedge, to control se
252 tance in both infrastructure engineering and geophysical science.
253 ngineering and have enjoyed great success in geophysical sciences, because they allow for computation
254 al and geochemical models constrained by the geophysical setting, rather than direct observations.
255 ments and multiple resilient examples of all geophysical settings in every ecoregion, it could form t
256  implications for coastal hazards in similar geophysical settings, suggesting a currently neglected s
257 habitats that instantiate aspects of Earth's geophysical signals (appropriately timed light exposure,
258                        Accelerating rates of geophysical signals (e.g., seismicity and deformation) p
259 e explored the temporal relationship between geophysical signals and eruptive parameters measured dur
260 .5% decrease in wave velocities, linking the geophysical signatures to salt volume fraction through g
261 duced salt precipitation leads to detectable geophysical signatures.
262 maging and interpretation of their preserved geophysical signatures.
263              Our new results and their broad geophysical significance could be considered when planni
264 of the D'' region raises questions about its geophysical significance.
265 t, a 550 km-long transect of magnetotelluric geophysical soundings spanning the central TAM was acqui
266                                       Beyond geophysical stressors and responses, it is critical to a
267  method to obtain high-resolution subsurface geophysical structure in Long Beach, CA, from seismic no
268 s show promise for LST in obtaining detailed geophysical structure in travel time tomography studies.
269 tion of the lower crust are based largely on geophysical studies and ancient analogues (ophiolites) t
270                                       Recent geophysical studies suggest its persistence with down-go
271 Z) and the mid-crustal lens, consistent with geophysical studies that suggest the presence of melt wi
272                                     Previous geophysical studies typically analyzed individual episod
273 s inferred from seismic tomography and other geophysical studies.
274 agement and development to geomechanical and geophysical studies.
275  applied rigorous analytical procedures to a geophysical study with enormous implications for humanit
276                            Observations from geophysical surveys and long-term oceanographic instrume
277                              High-resolution geophysical surveys and underwater SCUBA diving reconnai
278                                       Marine geophysical surveys were carried out along the floating
279  often intricate and below the resolution of geophysical surveys.
280 s will significantly improve flow models for geophysical suspensions such as hyperconcentrated flows
281  more comprehensive understanding of complex geophysical systems such as large lakes.
282 cesses in biological, social, financial, and geophysical systems, little is known about contagion beh
283 ing inertia in political, technological, and geophysical systems.
284  complex nonlinear dynamical systems such as geophysical systems.
285                                              Geophysical techniques are also not very effective in th
286  the most recent to be recorded using modern geophysical techniques.
287 ture the imagination because of their tie to geophysical time, and tools are now in hand to analyse t
288 ally coordinate physiology and align it with geophysical time, which enables diverse life-forms to an
289  how environmental signals entrain clocks to geophysical time.
290 fficult test suite of prototype problems for geophysical turbulence with waves, jets, and vortices, w
291 a new conceptual foundation for the study of geophysical turbulence, an explanation for the mixing ef
292                     Efficient computation of geophysical turbulence, such as occurs in the atmosphere
293            This hybrid approach combined the geophysical understanding and global applicability intri
294 sits, thus highlighting one of many possible geophysical uses of the marine cable network.
295 ome more than just another correlation among geophysical variables.
296 (flooding), meteorological (hurricanes), and geophysical (volcanic activity, tsunamis).
297 ar real time that synthesizes petrologic and geophysical volcano monitoring approaches.
298                               Of these, only geophysical warming commitment has been quantified.
299 s, seafloor bathymetry, sediment properties, geophysical well logs, and drilling data to assess the g
300 he moment when funding for the International Geophysical Year enabled him to design and build a CO(2)

 
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