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J. J. González

Researcher at Spanish National Research Council

Publications -  5
Citations -  619

J. J. González is an academic researcher from Spanish National Research Council. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ice sheet & Ice-sheet model. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 5 publications receiving 515 citations.

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Dynamic behaviour of the East Antarctic ice sheet during Pliocene warmth

C. Cook, +44 more
- 01 Sep 2013 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present new data from Pliocene marine sediments recovered offshore of Adelie Land, East Antarctica, that reveal dynamic behaviour of the East Antarctic ice sheet in the vicinity of the low-lying Wilkes Subglacial Basin during times of past climatic warmth.
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Chronostratigraphic framework for the IODP Expedition 318 cores from the Wilkes Land Margin: Constraints for paleoceanographic reconstruction

TL;DR: The Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Expedition 318 to the Wilkes Land margin of Antarctica recovered a sedimentary succession ranging in age from lower Eocene to the Holocene and much of the Pleistocene as mentioned in this paper.
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Circum-Antarctic warming events between 4 and 3.5 Ma recorded in marine sediments from the Prydz Bay (ODP Leg 188) and the Antarctic Peninsula (ODP Leg 178) margins.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors use a multi-proxy (i.e., sediment facies and grain size, siliceous microfossils, biogenic opal, geochemical composition and clay mineralogy) approach to examine sediments recovered in drill holes from the West Antarctic Peninsula and the East Antarctic Prydz Bay margins, focusing on the climatic record between 4 and 3.5-Ma.
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Relative sea-level rise around East Antarctica during Oligocene glaciation

Paolo Stocchi, +41 more
- 01 May 2013 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify the crustal response to ice-sheet growth by forcing a glacial-hydro isostatic adjustment model with an Antarctic ice sheet model and find that the shelf areas around East Antarctica first shoaled as upper mantle material upwelled and a peripheral forebulge developed.