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1.
Data Brief ; 26: 104476, 2019 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31667241

ABSTRACT

We publish a MATLAB code used to analyze concentration profile of cosmogenic 36Cl accumulated in-situ through a rupture history of the fault scarps in western Turkey (Mozafari et al., 2019). The code is a version of the forward modeling Matlab code -Fault Scarp Dating Tool- (Tikhomirov, 2014). The code models a 36Cl profile accumulated in the fault scarp surface through a guessed rupture history, and compares the modeled and measured 36Cl profiles with statistical tests. Rupture histories are randomly generated in bounded solution space using Monte-Carlo method or optimized using Random Walk algorithm to achieve the best fit of the modeled and measured 36Cl profiles. The code has a user-friendly interface, a build-in help and an example of input data.

2.
J Environ Radioact ; 129: 68-72, 2014 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24378732

ABSTRACT

Activation measurements of materials exposed to nuclear bomb explosions are widely used to reconstruct the neutron flux for retrospective dosimetry. In this study the applicability of coral CaCO3 as a biogenic neutron fluence dosimeter is tested. The long-lived radioisotopes (41)Ca, (14)C and (10)Be, which had been produced in nuclear bomb explosions, are measured in several coral sand samples from the Bikini atoll at the 600 kV and 200 kV AMS facilities of ETH Zurich. Elevated concentrations of all studied isotopes are found in a sample from the crater that was initially formed by the high-yield nuclear explosion Castle Bravo in 1954 and that had been used as site for several tests afterward. The observed (14)C concentration is considered too large to originate from neutron irradiation of CaCO3 alone. The relatively low concentration of (10)Be found in the crater sample indicates that production of (10)Be during nuclear bomb testing is generally minor. A simple neutron fluence reconstruction is performed on basis of the (41)Ca/(40)Ca ratio.


Subject(s)
Beryllium/analysis , Nuclear Weapons , Radioactive Pollutants/analysis , Radioisotopes/analysis , Animals , Anthozoa , Calcium Carbonate/chemistry , Micronesia , Radiation Monitoring
3.
Geomorphology (Amst) ; 171-172(100): 83-93, 2012 Oct 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24966447

ABSTRACT

In the Obernberg valley, the Eastern Alps, landforms recently interpreted as moraines are re-interpreted as rock avalanche deposits. The catastrophic slope failure involved an initial rock volume of about 45 million m³, with a runout of 7.2 km over a total vertical distance of 1330 m (fahrböschung 10°). 36Cl surface-exposure dating of boulders of the avalanche mass indicates an event age of 8.6 ± 0.6 ka. A 14C age of 7785 ± 190 cal yr BP of a palaeosoil within an alluvial fan downlapping the rock avalanche is consistent with the event age. The distal 2 km of the rock-avalanche deposit is characterized by a highly regular array of transverse ridges that were previously interpreted as terminal moraines of Late-Glacial. 'Jigsaw-puzzle structure' of gravel to boulder-size clasts in the ridges and a matrix of cataclastic gouge indicate a rock avalanche origin. For a wide altitude range the avalanche deposit is preserved, and the event age of mass-wasting precludes both runout over glacial ice and subsequent glacial overprint. The regularly arrayed transverse ridges thus were formed during freezing of the rock avalanche deposits.

4.
Science ; 317(5834): 111-4, 2007 Jul 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17615355

ABSTRACT

It is difficult to obtain fossil data from the 10% of Earth's terrestrial surface that is covered by thick glaciers and ice sheets, and hence, knowledge of the paleoenvironments of these regions has remained limited. We show that DNA and amino acids from buried organisms can be recovered from the basal sections of deep ice cores, enabling reconstructions of past flora and fauna. We show that high-altitude southern Greenland, currently lying below more than 2 kilometers of ice, was inhabited by a diverse array of conifer trees and insects within the past million years. The results provide direct evidence in support of a forested southern Greenland and suggest that many deep ice cores may contain genetic records of paleoenvironments in their basal sections.


Subject(s)
Amino Acids/analysis , DNA/analysis , Ecosystem , Ice Cover/chemistry , Invertebrates , Plants , Trees , Amino Acids/history , Amino Acids/isolation & purification , Animals , Bayes Theorem , Climate , DNA/history , DNA/isolation & purification , Fossils , Geography , Greenland , History, Ancient , Invertebrates/classification , Invertebrates/genetics , Plants/classification , Plants/genetics , Polymerase Chain Reaction , Time
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