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Institution

University of Johannesburg

EducationJohannesburg, South Africa
About: University of Johannesburg is a education organization based out in Johannesburg, South Africa. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Tourism. The organization has 8070 authors who have published 22749 publications receiving 329408 citations. The organization is also known as: UJ.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Morad Aaboud, Georges Aad1, Brad Abbott2, Dale Charles Abbott3  +2955 moreInstitutions (224)
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose a scalar dark energy model using up to 37 fb(-1) = 13 TeV pp collision data collected by the ATLAS detector at the LHC during 2015-2016.
Abstract: Constraints on selected mediator-based dark matter models and a scalar dark energy model using up to 37 fb(-1) = 13 TeV pp collision data collected by the ATLAS detector at the LHC during 2015-2016 ...

81 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the sedimentological setting, mineralogy, and geochemistry of several iron formation units interbedded with siliciclastic strata of the Meso-archean Witwatersrand Supergroup, well known for its world-class conglomerate-hosted Au-U deposits are described.
Abstract: This paper documents the sedimentological setting, mineralogy, and geochemistry of several iron formation units interbedded with siliciclastic strata of the Mesoarchean Witwatersrand Supergroup, well known for its world-class conglomerate-hosted Au-U deposits. Four major iron formation beds, with associated magnetic mudstones, are present in two distinctly different lithostratigraphic associations, namely shale- and diamictiteassociated iron formation. The shale association is represented by the Water Tower and Contorted Bed iron formations in the Parktown Formation of the Hospital Hill Subgroup in the lower part of the succession and the diamictite association by the Promise and Silverfield iron formations in the overlying Government Subgroup. The iron formation units have been subjected to lower greenschist facies metamorphism. Oxide (magnetite and limited hematite), carbonate, and silicate facies iron formations are recognized. The iron formations typically overlie major transgressive flooding surfaces in the succession and, in turn, form the base of progradational coarsening-upward increments of sedimentation comprising magnetic mudstone, nonmagnetic shale, and interbedded siltstone-quartzite. The upward transition from iron formation into magnetic mudstone is accompanied by a change in mineralogical composition from hematite-magnetite iron formation at the base in the most distal setting through magnetite-siderite- and siderite-facies iron formation in the transition zone to magnetic mudstone. The siderite with associated ankerite displays highly depleted δ13C values, suggesting crystallization via iron respiration in presence of organic carbon. The iron formations display positive postArchean Australian shale-normalized Eu and Y anomalies with depletion in light rare-earth elements relative to heavy rare-earth elements, indicating precipitation from marine water with a high-temperature hydrothermal component. Integration of sedimentological, petrographic, and geochemical results indicates that the shale-associated iron formation was deposited during the peak of transgression, when reduced iron-rich hydrothermal waters entered the Witwatersrand Basin over a limited vertical extent due to neutral buoyancy, with the top of the plume occurring below the photic zone. It is suggested that chemolithoautotrophic iron-oxidizing bacteria, which would have been able to exploit the difference in chemistry between the iron-enriched plume water and ambient ocean water to fuel metabolic activity in the presence of limited free molecular oxygen, were responsible for precipitation of initial ferric iron oxyhydroxides. The vertical facies associations in the iron formations most likely developed in response to the limited vertical extent of the hydrothermal plume, with (from distal to proximal) hematite preserved where the base of the plume was not in contact with the basin floor, magnetite where the plume water was in contact with bottom sediment, iron-rich carbonates where organic carbon input was high, iron-rich alumosilicates where siliciclastic input became significant in more proximal settings, and iron-poor sediment above the top of the plume. Diamictite-associated iron formations in the Witwatersrand are inferred to have been deposited in a fashion similar to the shale-associated iron formations, with the exception that major transgressions and hydrothermal plume invasion were preceded by glacial ice cover. The climate warming and increased volcanic activity required could have been related to increased tectonic activity inferred for the Witwatersrand Supergroup during deposition of the glacially associated iron formations.

81 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, detrital zircon data from Phanerozoic sedimentary cover sequences in South Africa suggest that this source-to-sink relationship has been obscured by repeated events of sedimentary recycling.

81 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The SAPI correlated highly overall with impression-management aspects, but lower with lying aspects of social desirability, and the multiple correlations with the Big Five were .64 (positive) and .51 (negative social-relational).
Abstract: We present the development and the underlying structure of a personality inventory for the main ethnocultural groups of South Africa, using an emic-etic approach. The South African Personality Inventory (SAPI) was developed based on an extensive qualitative study of the implicit personality conceptions in the country's 11 official languages (Nel et al., 2012). Items were generated and selected (to a final set of 146) with a continuous focus on cultural adequacy and translatability. Students and community adults (671 Blacks, 198 Coloreds, 104 Indians, and 391 Whites) completed the inventory. A 6-dimensional structure (comprising a positive and a negative Social-Relational factor, Neuroticism, Extraversion, Conscientiousness, and Openness) was equivalent across groups and replicated in an independent sample of 139 Black and 270 White students. The SAPI correlated highly overall with impression-management aspects, but lower with lying aspects of social desirability. The SAPI social-relational factors were distinguishable from the Big Five in a joint factor analysis; the multiple correlations with the Big Five were .64 (positive) and .51 (negative social-relational). Implications and suggestions for emic-etic instrument and model development are discussed.

81 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The roles of non-coding RNAs are highlighted in several types of human cancer, and the 5′-AMP-activated protein kinase and the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/AKT/mammalian target of rapamycin pathways are associated with alterations in ncRNAs.

81 citations


Authors

Showing all 8414 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Vinod Kumar Gupta16571383484
Arnold B. Bakker135506103778
Trevor Vickey12887376664
Ketevi Assamagan12893477061
Diego Casadei12373369665
Michael R. Hamblin11789959533
E. Castaneda-Miranda11754556349
Xiaoming Li113193272445
Katharine Leney10845952547
M. Aurousseau10340344230
Mika Sillanpää96101944260
Sahal Yacoob8940825338
Evangelia Demerouti8523649228
Lehana Thabane8599436620
Sahal Yacoob8439935059
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023196
2022526
20213,152
20202,933
20192,706
20182,150