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Institution

King's College, Aberdeen

Education
About: King's College, Aberdeen is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Poison control & Sedimentary depositional environment. The organization has 712 authors who have published 918 publications receiving 25421 citations. The organization is also known as: King's College, Aberdeen & The University and King's College of Aberdeen.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The properties of nanoparticles and its aggregation as well as convective heat transfer of nanofluids have received great attentions over the last few decades as discussed by the authors, and the recent investigations on the fractal models and fractal-based approaches are summarized.

146 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors assess the record of Hong Kong's Land Development Corporation and consider the reasons for its recent transformation into an Urban Renewal Authority and examine how the Hong Kong Government failed to equip it with adequate powers and resources, and how the LDC's own flagship projects took much longer to deliver than originally anticipated and did not produce any major restructuring of land use patterns or transport networks.

142 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Early Devonian Rhynie hot spring system is the oldest known and is of the low sulphidation type as mentioned in this paper, it extends for at least 1.5 km along a major fault zone defining the western margin of an outlier of fluvial and lacustrine sediments, plant-bearing sinters and andesitic lavas.
Abstract: The Early Devonian Rhynie hot spring system is the oldest known and is of the low sulphidation type. It extends for at least 1.5 km along a major fault zone defining the western margin of an outlier of fluvial and lacustrine sediments, plant-bearing sinters and andesitic lavas. The age of sedimentation and hydrothermal activity has been determined by palynological (Pragian) and radio-metric (396 ± 12 Ma) techniques. The outlier is a half graben with a complex stepped western margin. The Devonian rocks show intense hydrothermal alteration along the fault zone. The main alteration minerals are quartz, K-feldspar, calcite, hematite and illitic and chloritic clays. Multiple chert veining and brecciation are widely developed, and geyserite and vent material are also present. Pyrite occurs in veins and all alteration facies. Sinters and altered rocks contain high concentrations of Au, As, Sb, Hg, W and Mo. Gold occurs in arsenian pyrite and as sub-micron particles in oxidized rocks. The fluid(s) responsible for most hydrothermal alteration were near neutral with low sulphur and oxygen activities and dominated by meteoric water. However, incursions of high temperature (300–440°C) magmatic fluids occurred with δD–65‰ and δ 18 O around +8.5‰. δ 34 S (pyrite) and initial 87 Sr/ 86 Sr ratios (vein calcite) lie mainly within the ranges +3.4‰ to +8.5‰ and 0.71138 to 0.71402 respectively. These data indicate that late Proterozoic Dalradian metasediments are a likely source for S and Sr but other sources are possible. δ 13 C values for caliche and vein calcite imply derivation of carbon from non-organic sources. The Rhynie cherts were deposited from a low salinity fluid of probable meteoric origin (δ 18 O chert + 13.1‰ to +16.5‰) which had interacted with the basement rocks and sediments (high Xe/Ar, Br/Cl and I/Cl ratios). Plant-bearing chert yielded an 40 Ar/ 39 Ar ratio (292.1± 0.6) significantly less than that of modem air and may be the first valid determination of a sample of ancient atmosphere.

142 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The trace fossils of the Tumblagooda Sandstone (?late Silurian) of Kalbarri, Western Australia are spectacular in their variety and preservation, and reveal the presence of a diverse fauna dominated by arthropods.
Abstract: The trace fossils of the Tumblagooda Sandstone (?late Silurian) of Kalbarri, Western Australia are spectacular in their variety and preservation. They provide a unique insight into the activities of the early invaders of terrestrial environments, and reveal the presence of a diverse fauna dominated by arthropods. Within the Formation trace fossil assemblages can be related to fluvial, aeolian and marine sand-dominated environments. Two distinct and diverse ichnofaunas are recognised. The Heimdallia–Diplichnites Ichnofauna occurs in sandstones deposited in broad low sinuosity braided fluvial channels, between which were mixed aeolian and waterlain sandsheets, small aeolian dunes and flooded interdune and deflation hollows. Heimdallia is the major bioturbator, favouring shallow pools. Other burrows include Tumblagoodichnus (gen. nov.), Diplocraterion, Skolithos, Beaconites and Didymaulyponomos. Arthropod trackways (Diplichnites) occur on surfaces of waterlain sands and on foreset bedding of aeolian dunes, and represent some of the earliest reported terrestrial trackways. Other trackways include Paleohelcura and Protichnites, and the digging traces Selenichnites and Rusophycus are also present. At least ten types of arthropods are required to produce the observed traces. Myriapods, eurypterids, euthycarcinoids, xiphosurids and scorpionids are considered responsible for the trackway assemblage. The Skolithos–Diplocraterion Ichnofauna occurs at the top of the exposed section in sandstones that overlie a thick fluvial sequence containing few traces. The strata are considered to represent marine influence at a fluvial/marine transition. They show variable trough cross-bedding, complex planar cross-bedding with down-climbing sets, ripple lamination, and fining-up sequences with bioturbated tops. Traces are dominated by crowded Skolithos up to 1 m long, together with two forms of Diplocraterion. Daedalus and Lunatubichnus (gen. nov.) burrows occur in a few beds and Aulichnites trails cover some foreset surfaces of cross-bedding. The trace fossils and the sedimentology of the Tumblagooda Sandstone bear a remarkable similarity to those of the lower part of the Taylor Group of Antarctica, which is probably Devonian in age. It is suggested that the two represent a similar age, stratigraphy, and range of environments on the margins of Gondwana. Large unvegetated fluvial outwash plains with variable aeolian influence were essentially coastal in character and fluvial/marine transitions occur in sand-rich environments. The animals responsible for the traces inhabited coastal areas but many could survive outwith marine influence, and arthropods responsible for some types of Diplichnites trackways walked out of water. The rich diversity of trackways attributable to arthropods illustrate that the invasion of terrestrial environments by arthropods, particularly large forms, was well-established by the beginning of the Devonian. The basis of the food chain was algal and bacterial films which bound the surface sediment in freshwater pools.

140 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Recent and ongoing work on building systems that automatically generate textual summaries of neonatal data are described, showing that the technology is viable and comparable in its effectiveness for decision support to existing presentation modalities.
Abstract: Contemporary Neonatal Intensive Care Units collect vast amounts of patient data in various formats, making efficient processing of information by medical professionals difficult. Moreover, different stakeholders in the neonatal scenario, which include parents as well as staff occupying different roles, have different information requirements. This paper describes recent and ongoing work on building systems that automatically generate textual summaries of neonatal data. Our evaluation results show that the technology is viable and comparable in its effectiveness for decision support to existing presentation modalities. We discuss the lessons learned so far, as well as the major challenges involved in extending current technology to deal with a broader range of data types, and to improve the textual output in the form of more coherent summaries.

138 citations


Authors

Showing all 721 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Gary J. Macfarlane8838924742
Celso Grebogi7648822450
Rhona Flin7428220088
C. Neil Macrae7119320704
Robert M. McMeeking7031219385
David M. Paterson6521611613
Ray W. Ogden6429424885
Lawrence J. Whalley6219514050
Ana Deletic6133412585
Falko F. Sniehotta6026016194
Lisa M. DeBruine5927011633
Robert H. Logie5719014008
Muhammad Naveed5434610376
Jörg Feldmann5120910302
J. Neilson5112924749
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20233
202220
202172
202058
201937
201826