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Publications

Scientific literature and information products produced by Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center staff

Filter Total Items: 1691

Geologic mapping of the nearshore area offshore of Fire Island, New York

No abstract available.
Authors
W. C. Schwab, E. R. Thieler, J.R. Allen, D. S. Foster, B.A. Smith, J. F. Denny, W. W. Danforth

Space and time scales of shoreline change at Cape Cod National Seashore, MA, USA

Different processes cause patterns of shoreline change which are exhibited at different magnitudes and nested into different spatial and time scale hierarchies. The 77-km outer beach at Cape Cod National Seashore offers one of the few U.S. federally owned portions of beach to study shoreline change within the full range of sediment source and sink relationships, and barely affected by human inter
Authors
J.R. Allen, C.L. LaBash, J. H. List

Sea-floor methane blow-out and global firestorm at the K-T boundary

A previously unsuspected source of fuel for the global firestorm recorded by soot in the Cretaceous-Tertiary impact layer may have resided in methane gas associated with gas hydrate in the end-Cretaceous seafloor. End-Cretaceous impact-generated shock and megawaves would have had the potential to initiate worldwide oceanic methane gas blow-outs from these deposits. The methane would likely have ig
Authors
M.D. Max, William P. Dillon, C. Nishimura, B.G. Hurdle

Deep seismic reflections beneath the Trans-Antarctic Mountain Front, from reprocessed SERIS seismic data

No abstract available.
Authors
S. Bannister, A. Melhuish, S. Henrys, T. Stern, Uri S. ten Brink

Physical properties of sediments from the JAPEX/JNOC/GSC Mallik 2L-38 gas hydrate research well

A 1150 m deep gas hydrate research well was drilled in the Canadian Arctic in February and March 1998 to investigate the interaction between the presence of gas hydrate and the natural conditions presented by the host sediments. Profiles of the following measured and derived properties are presented from that investigation: water content, sediment wet bulk density, grain size, porosity, gas hydrat
Authors
W.J. Winters

Plate deformation at depth under northern California: Slab gap or stretched slab?

Plate kinematic interpretations for northern California predict a gap in the underlying subducted slab caused by the northward migration of the Pacific-North America-Juan de Fuca triple junction. However, large-scale decompression melting and asthenospheric upwelling to the base of the overlying plate within the postulated gap are not supported by geophysical and geochemical observations. We sugge
Authors
Uri S. ten Brink, N. Shimizu, P.C. Molzer

Anatomy of the Dead Sea transform: Does it reflect continuous changes in plate motion?

A new gravity map of the southern half of the Dead Sea transform offers the first regional view of the anatomy of this plate boundary. Interpreted together with auxiliary seismic and well data, the map reveals a string of subsurface basins of widely varying size, shape, and depth along the plate boundary and relatively short (25–55 km) and discontinuous fault segments. We argue that this structure
Authors
Uri S. ten Brink, M. Rybakov, A. S. Al-Zoubi, M. Hassouneh, U. Frieslander, A.T. Batayneh, V. Goldschmidt, M.N. Daoud, Y. Rotstein, J.K. Hall

Apparatus investigates geological aspects of gas hydrates

The US Geological Survey (USGS), in response to potential geohazards, energy resource potential, and climate issues associated with marine gas hydrates, has developed a laboratory research system that permits hydrate genesis and dissociation under deep-sea conditions, employing user-selected sediment types and pore fluids.The apparatus, GHASTI (gas hydrate and sediment test laboratory instrument),
Authors
J.S. Booth, W.J. Winters, William P. Dillon

Clathrate eustasy: Methane hydrate melting as a mechanism for geologically rapid sea-level fall

Although submarine methane hydrates or clathrates have been highlighted as potential amplifiers of modern global climate change and associated glacio-eustatic sea-level rise, their potential role in sea-level fall has not been appreciated. Recent estimates of the total volume occupied by gas hydrates in marine sediments vary 20-fold, from 1.2 × 1014 to 2.4 × 1015 m3. Using a specific volume change
Authors
J.F. Bratton

A marine GIS library for Massachusetts Bay: Focusing on disposal sites, contaminated sediments, and sea floor mapping

No abstract available.
Authors
Bradford Butman, John A. Lindsay, George Graettinger, Laura Hayes, Chris Polloni, Ellen Mecray, Tom Simon

Formation of natural gas hydrates in marine sediments 1. Conceptual model of gas hydrate growth conditioned by host sediment properties

The stability of submarine gas hydrates is largely dictated by pressure and temperature, gas composition, and pore water salinity. However, the physical properties and surface chemistry of deep marine sediments may also affect the thermodynamic state, growth kinetics, spatial distributions, and growth forms of clathrates. Our conceptual model presumes that gas hydrate behaves in a way analogous to
Authors
M. B. Clennell, M. Hovland, J.S. Booth, P. Henry, W.J. Winters

Crustal and lithospheric structure of the west Antarctic Rift System from geophysical investigations: A review

The active West Antarctic Rift System, which extends from the continental shelf of the Ross Sea, beneath the Ross Ice Shelf and the West Antarctic Ice Sheet, is comparable in size to the Basin and Range in North America, or the East African rift systems. Geophysical surveys (primarily marine seismic and aeromagnetic combined with radar ice sounding) have extended the information provided by sparse
Authors
John C. Behrendt