J
John Jamieson
Researcher at Memorial University of Newfoundland
Publications - 56
Citations - 1489
John Jamieson is an academic researcher from Memorial University of Newfoundland. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hydrothermal circulation & Hydrothermal vent. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 45 publications receiving 1021 citations. Previous affiliations of John Jamieson include University of Maryland, College Park & University of Ottawa.
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The abundance of seafloor massive sulfide deposits
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used new deposit occurrence data from 10,000 km of ridge, arc, and backarc spreading centers to estimate the amount of massive sulfide in the easily accessible neovolcanic zones of the global oceans.
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News from the seabed – Geological characteristics and resource potential of deep-sea mineral resources
TL;DR: In this paper, the size of the most favorable areas of formation for manganese nodules and Co-rich ferromanganese crusts is estimated. But the size depends on the geological environment and the geological boundary conditions.
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Tectonic structure, evolution, and the nature of oceanic core complexes and their detachment fault zones (13°20′N and 13°30′N, Mid Atlantic Ridge)
Javier Escartín,Catherine Mével,Sven Petersen,D. Bonnemains,Mathilde Cannat,Muriel Andreani,Nico Augustin,Antoine Bezos,Valérie Chavagnac,Yujin Choi,Marguerite Godard,Kristian Agasøster Haaga,Cédric Hamelin,Benoit Ildefonse,John Jamieson,Barbara E. John,T. Leleu,Christopher J. MacLeod,Miquel Massot-Campos,Paraskevi Nomikou,J.-A. Olive,Marine Paquet,C. Rommevaux,Marcel Rothenbeck,Anja Steinführer,Masako Tominaga,Lars Triebe,Ricard Campos,Nuno Gracias,Rafael Garcia +29 more
TL;DR: In this article, microbathymetry data, in situ observations, and sampling along the 13°20′N and 13° 20′N oceanic core complexes (OCCs) reveal mechanisms of detachment fault denudation at the seafloor, links between tectonic extension and mass wasting, and expose the nature of corrugations, ubiquitous at OCCs.
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Neoarchaean seawater sulphate concentrations from sulphur isotopes in massive sulphide ore
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used sulphur isotope systematics of the 2.7 Gyr old volcanogenic massive sulphide ore deposits from Kidd Creek, Ontario, to provide constraints on seawater sulphate concentrations independent of biological considerations.