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Robert Hall

Researcher at Wageningen University and Research Centre

Publications -  561
Citations -  32813

Robert Hall is an academic researcher from Wageningen University and Research Centre. The author has contributed to research in topics: Provenance & Basement (geology). The author has an hindex of 81, co-authored 525 publications receiving 28159 citations. Previous affiliations of Robert Hall include Rice University & University College London.

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Rapid cooling and exhumation as a consequence of extension and crustal thinning: Inferences from the Late Miocene to Pliocene Palu Metamorphic Complex, Sulawesi, Indonesia

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used geothermobarometric and geochronological data from metamorphic rocks of the Palu Metamorphic Complex (PMC) and associated granitoids to provide information on the timing and mechanisms of Neogene metamorphism and contemporaneous rapid exhumation.
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Salience of primary and secondary school students' achievement emotions and perceived antecedents: Interviews on literacy and mathematics domains

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated individual differences in students' achievement emotions and antecedents within the theoretical framework provided by Pekrun's (2006) control-value theory, and identified three groups of students, each characterized by a different pattern of emotions, not differing by class level, domain, or gender.
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Stomatal Guard Cells Are Totipotent

TL;DR: It has been successfully demonstrated, using epidermis explants of sugar beet (Beta vulgaris L.), that stomatal guard cells retain full totipotent capacity and the importance of these findings both toStomatal research and to the understanding of cytodifferentiation in plants is discussed.

Neogene History of Collision in the Halmahera Region, Indonesia

Robert Hall
TL;DR: In the northern Molucca Sea, the Halmahera Arc has been entirely overridden by the Sangihe Forearc and it seems probable that in a few million years time the entire Halmana Arc will have disappeared with almost no trace as mentioned in this paper.
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Flow and mixing in Ascension, a steep, narrow canyon

TL;DR: In this article, the average turbulent dissipation rates observed near spring tide during April are half as large as a two week average measured during August in Monterey Canyon, and the previous observed average was 4.9 times the average of an M2-only prediction.