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1.
Nature ; 450(7173): 1206-9, 2007 Dec 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18097403

ABSTRACT

The Moon is thought to have formed from debris ejected by a giant impact with the early 'proto'-Earth and, as a result of the high energies involved, the Moon would have melted to form a magma ocean. The timescales for formation and solidification of the Moon can be quantified by using 182Hf-182W and 146Sm-142Nd chronometry, but these methods have yielded contradicting results. In earlier studies, 182W anomalies in lunar rocks were attributed to decay of 182Hf within the lunar mantle and were used to infer that the Moon solidified within the first approximately 60 million years of the Solar System. However, the dominant 182W component in most lunar rocks reflects cosmogenic production mainly by neutron capture of 181Ta during cosmic-ray exposure of the lunar surface, compromising a reliable interpretation in terms of 182Hf-182W chronometry. Here we present tungsten isotope data for lunar metals that do not contain any measurable Ta-derived 182W. All metals have identical 182W/184W ratios, indicating that the lunar magma ocean did not crystallize within the first approximately 60 Myr of the Solar System, which is no longer inconsistent with Sm-Nd chronometry. Our new data reveal that the lunar and terrestrial mantles have identical 182W/184W. This, in conjunction with 147Sm-143Nd ages for the oldest lunar rocks, constrains the age of the Moon and Earth to Myr after formation of the Solar System. The identical 182W/184W ratios of the lunar and terrestrial mantles require either that the Moon is derived mainly from terrestrial material or that tungsten isotopes in the Moon and Earth's mantle equilibrated in the aftermath of the giant impact, as has been proposed to account for identical oxygen isotope compositions of the Earth and Moon.

2.
Science ; 291(5512): 2269, 2001 Mar 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11264527
3.
Science ; 282(5389): 731-4, 1998 Oct 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9784128

ABSTRACT

A multitracer study of a small aquifer in northern Switzerland indicates that the atmosphere in central Europe cooled by at least 5 degreesC during the last glacial period. The relation between oxygen isotope ratios (delta18O) and recharge temperatures reconstructed for this period is similar to the present-day one if a shift in the delta18O value of the oceans during the ice age is taken into account. This similarity suggests that the present-day delta18O-temperature relation can be used to reconstruct paleoclimate conditions in northern Switzerland. A gap in calculated groundwater age between about 17,000 and 25,000 years before the present indicates that during the last glacial maximum, local groundwater recharge was prevented by overlying glaciers.

4.
Ther Umsch ; 47(4): 329-33, 1990 Apr.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2353324

ABSTRACT

The historical development is summarized: The institutions for the blind, mostly founded in the 19th century, kept the children isolated in a special surrounding. In the day schools, developed in the middle of the 20th century, the child gets specially adapted schooling daily, but lives still with his family. Todays tendencies go for integration of the child in the normal school. This is possible by supporting children and teachers by specially trained persons visiting the child regularly in school. An example of this pedagogical support is given, the techniques are described in detail.


Subject(s)
Blindness/rehabilitation , Counseling/methods , Education, Special/methods , Referral and Consultation , Child , Day Care, Medical , Humans , Reading , Sensory Aids
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