research and government. For example, the following tree was used by theFederal governmentas part of an early warning program to assess the risk of more eruptions on Mount Pinatubo, an active volcano in the Philippines.
Diagrams are visual representations of what things are and how they work, and they have an extraordinary value in the classroom. Many children learn by being able to touch and see something, which means that diagrams help them internalize the information they're learning and apply it to what t...
Water quality is an important ecological steering variable, and graphical water quality diagrams may aid in rapid interpretation of the hydrochemical status of a site. Traditionally used water quality diagrams for showing multiple variables (e.g. Stiff, Maucha) were developed primarily for ...
A non-DC component has also been found in some deep volcanic long-period events (volcanic DLPs) that occur around the Moho; most of these were beneath active volcanoes, but some did not correspond to any known volcano with Quaternary activity (Nishidomi and Takeo 1996; Okada and Hasegawa ...
The Early-Cambrian Boho volcano of the El Graara massif, Morocco: Petrology, geodynamic setting and coeval sedimentation A major volcanic episode is recorded across the Neoproterozoic-Cambrian transition in the Moroccan Anti-Atlas. Several volcanic cones are still preserved i... José Javier lvaro,H...
This invited article is part of a special tribute issue of theJournal of Phase Equilibria and Diffusiondedicated to the memory of Thaddeus B. “Ted” Massalski. The issue was organized by David E. Laughlin, Carnegie Mellon University; John H. Perepezko, University of Wisconsin–Madison; Wei Xio...
Ferrario, A. (1973). I giacimenti cupriferi nelle pillow lavas della Liguria orientale. Rendiconti Società Italiana di Mineralogia e Petrolologia, 29, 485–495. Google Scholar Ferrario, A., & Garuti, G. (1980). Copper deposits in the basal breccia and volcano-sedimentary sequences of the...
English: “At Yellowstone and some other volcanoes, some scientists theorize that the earth’s crust fractures and cracks in a concentric or ring-fracture pattern. At some point these cracks reach the magma “reservoir,” release the pressure, and the volcano explodes. The huge amount of materia...