Institution
University of Greenwich
Education•London, United Kingdom•
About: University of Greenwich is a education organization based out in London, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Context (language use). The organization has 3749 authors who have published 9958 publications receiving 234340 citations.
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81 citations
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TL;DR: This article investigated the value of glaucony as a palaeoenvironmental indicator through an investigation of the pellets, and their distribution and reworking in the predominantly brackish to shallow marine Tertiary sediments of the Hampshire basin, together with a reevaluation of the sedimentology.
Abstract: Following the investigations of Odin and others into the distribution of green granules, glaucony has been widely assumed to be a reliable indicator of a fully marine, open shelf environment with a low sedimentation rate. We have investigated the value of glaucony as a palaeoenvironmental indicator through an investigation of the pellets, and their distribution and reworking in the predominantly brackish to shallow marine Tertiary sediments of the Hampshire basin, together with a re-evaluation of the sedimentology. Glaucony has apparently formed in situ in all lithofacies from shallow marine to estuarine. Of the three highest glaucony concentrations (all dominated by in situ glaucony) two occur within highstand system tracts, the third is at a sequence boundary. Several important surfaces do not have more than a few percent glaucony, with very variable proportions of mature and in situ pellets. The correlation between glaucony concentration and sequence stratigraphy is most obvious in the London Clay and Wittering Formations, where least reworking of pellets has occurred. In the Barton Group there are no major concentrations of glaucony at any of the important stratal surfaces, we believe this more random glaucony distribution is due to limited glaucony formation and reworking of older glaucony. In these sediments ideal conditions for glaucony formation are interpreted to have been: fully marine, 10–30 m water depth, a ‘warm’ temperature plus low sedimentation rate with periodic winnowing to concentrate the pellets. Although most of these conditions for glaucony formation occurred in the Selsey Formation and Barton Group, a factor or factors mitigated against glauconitization. We suggest that this was lowering of the water temperature. The London Clay and Wittering Formations were deposited relatively rapidly (50–60 m Ma −1 ) and include intervals of estuarine sedimentation, both factors that we believe inhibited glaucony formation. Glaucony maturity reflects the minimum length of time spent in surface sediments, close to the oxic/sub-oxic interface. Point count data and chemical data for glaucony indicate widespread reworking and an overall increase in reworking with time, possibly due to uplift on the Isle of Wight monocline. The apparently wide range of conditions in which glaucony will form, and the frequency with which it is reworked, suggest that it is a less useful indicator palaeo-environmental indicator than is commonly supposed.
81 citations
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TL;DR: This study investigated how sense of coherence theory applied when mapped onto descriptions by 20 mental health service users of how they deal with problems that they face in their lives, and revealed distinctions between concrete and relationship orientated problem solving that led to new insights into how mechanisms of sense ofCoherence theory may operate.
Abstract: Antonovsky’s sense of coherence (SOC) theory relates to the adaptive capacity of humans. In response to Antonovsky’s call to study the sense of coherence concept using methods other than his orientation to life questionnaire, and to further test the application of the concept, qualitative research methods were employed. Using thematic analysis this study investigated how sense of coherence theory applied when mapped onto descriptions by 20 mental health service users of how they deal with problems that they face in their lives. The thematic analysis revealed that sense of coherence theory mapped effectively onto the interview transcripts. The analysis identified various factors that can be considered to be general resistance resources in the sense of coherence model. It also revealed distinctions between concrete and relationship orientated problem solving that led to new insights into how mechanisms of sense of coherence theory may operate. The findings suggest that sense of coherence strength may be split into coping and adaptive capacity for concrete problems and coping and adaptive capacity for relationship oriented problems. This highlights the possibility that SOC strength is not an overall adaptive capacity measure which can be applied with equal effectiveness to all challenges/problems experienced in life.
81 citations
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TL;DR: The irregular control volume (ICV) as mentioned in this paper is a cell-centered solution procedure based upon the conventional control or finite volume (CV or FV) approach for numerical heat transfer and fluid flow.
81 citations
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TL;DR: Seven electrophysiologically active compounds were detected in air-entrained headspace samples of live flowers of Tagetes erectaanalyzed by gas chromatography linked to a female Helicoverpa armigeraelectroantennograph (EAG) using polar and nonpolar capillary columns.
Abstract: Seven electrophysiologically active compounds were detected in air-entrained headspace samples of live flowers of Tagetes erectaanalyzed by gas chromatography (GC) linked to a female Helicoverpa armigeraelectroantennograph (EAG) using polar and nonpolar capillary columns. These compounds were subsequently identified using GC linked to mass spectrometry as benzaldehyde, (S)-(−)-limonene, (R,S)-(±)-linalool, (E)-myroxide, (Z)-β-ocimene, phenylacetaldehyde, and (R)-(−)-piperitone. Electrophysiological activity was confirmed by EAG with a 1-μg dose of each compound on filter paper eliciting EAG responses that were significantly greater than the solvent control response from female moths. Wind-tunnel bioassays with T. erectaheadspace samples, equivalent to 0.4 flower/hr emission from a live flower, elicited a significant increase in the number of upwind approaches from female H. armigerarelative to a solvent control. Similarly, a seven-component synthetic blend of EAG-active compounds identified from T. erectapresented in the same ratio (1.0 : 1.6 : 0.7 : 1.4 : 0.4 : 5.0 : 2.7, respectively) and concentration (7.2 μg) as found in the natural sample elicited a significant increase in the number of upwind approaches relative to a solvent control during a 12-min bioassay that was equivalent to that elicited by the natural T. erectafloral volatiles.
81 citations
Authors
Showing all 3822 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Rolf Loeber | 128 | 470 | 58477 |
Robert West | 112 | 1061 | 53904 |
John C. Mitchell | 104 | 676 | 36467 |
Jian Chen | 96 | 1718 | 52917 |
Xiaojun Wu | 91 | 1088 | 31687 |
Lucilla Poston | 91 | 565 | 32452 |
Frank J. Kelly | 85 | 440 | 30005 |
Brendon Stubbs | 81 | 754 | 28180 |
Zongjin Li | 80 | 630 | 22103 |
Paul T. Seed | 79 | 472 | 21311 |
Suzanne G. Leveille | 74 | 234 | 19514 |
Ruth Duncan | 73 | 221 | 24991 |
Paul McCrone | 68 | 453 | 16632 |
Jonathan Hadgraft | 66 | 349 | 15661 |
Marc De Hert | 65 | 354 | 17566 |