P
Peter Stoffers
Researcher at University of Kiel
Publications - 118
Citations - 5331
Peter Stoffers is an academic researcher from University of Kiel. The author has contributed to research in topics: Seamount & Hydrothermal circulation. The author has an hindex of 43, co-authored 118 publications receiving 4975 citations. Previous affiliations of Peter Stoffers include National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research & Heidelberg University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Evolution of a Submarine Magmatic-Hydrothermal System: Brothers Volcano, Southern Kermadec Arc, New Zealand
C. E. J. de Ronde,Mark D. Hannington,Peter Stoffers,Ian C. Wright,Robert G. Ditchburn,A. G. Reyes,Edward T. Baker,Gary J. Massoth,John E. Lupton,Sharon L. Walker,R. Greene,C. W. R. Soong,Jun-ichiro Ishibashi,Geoffrey T. Lebon,Colin J. Bray,Joseph A. Resing +15 more
TL;DR: In this paper, three hydrothermal sites have been located: on the northwest caldera wall, on the southeast calderas wall, and on the dacite cone.
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Petrogenesis of the Back-arc East Scotia Ridge, South Atlantic Ocean
TL;DR: The East Scotia Ridge is an active back-arc spreading centre located to the west of the South Sandwich island arc in the South Atlantic Ocean, consisting of nine main segments, E1 (north) to E9 (south) as discussed by the authors.
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Trapping efficiencies of sediment traps from the deep Eastern North Atlantic:: the 230Th calibration
Jan Scholten,Jan Fietzke,S. Vogler,M. M. Rutgers van der Loeff,Augusto Mangini,Wolfgang Koeve,Joanna J Waniek,Peter Stoffers,Avan N Antia,Joachim Kuss +9 more
TL;DR: In this paper, bottom-tethered sediment traps deployed at the European continental margin at 49°N and off the Canary Islands (ESTOC) were investigated for the determination of 230Th trapping efficiencies.
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Stratified waters as a key to the past
Egon T. Degens,Peter Stoffers +1 more
TL;DR: A comparison of modern sediments deposited in stratified and non-stratified waters with sediments formed since the Cambrian reveals that the ancient sea has been stratified a number of times.
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Heavy metal pollution in Wellington Harbour
TL;DR: In this paper, heavy metal analysis of the < 20 μm fraction of marine sediments from Wellington Harbour and Waiwhetu Stream has shown that the water surface is easily the most polluted area in the Wellington Harbour system with Pb and Zn in the extremely polluted category and Cu, Cd and Hg in the moderately to strongly polluted category.