Radiocarbon Date List VII

Radiocarbon Date List VII
Author: Darrell S. Kaufman
Publisher: Boulder : Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research, University of Colorado
Total Pages: 104
Release: 1992
Genre: Geology, Stratigraphic
ISBN:

Svalbard Radiocarbon Date List I

Svalbard Radiocarbon Date List I
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 64
Release: 1990
Genre: Geologic time
ISBN:

This listing of radiocarbon dates on whalebone, wood, peat and shell specimens from the Svalbard Archipelago deals mainly with materials from the coastal areas, and is intended to provide data for a geochronology of glacial deposits.

Glacial Isostasy, Sea-Level and Mantle Rheology

Glacial Isostasy, Sea-Level and Mantle Rheology
Author: R. Sabadini
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 705
Release: 2012-12-06
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9401133743

by K. Lambeck, R. Sabadini and E. B08Chi Viscosity is one of the important material properties of the Earth, controlling tectonic and dynamic processes such as mantle convection, isostasy, and glacial rebound. Yet it remains a poorly resolved parameter and basic questions such as whether the planet's response to loading is linear or non-linear, or what are its depth and lateral variations remain uncertain. Part of the answer to such questions lies in laboratory observations of the rheology of terrestrial materials. But the extrapolation of such measurements from the laboratory environment to the geological environment is a hazardous and vexing undertaking, for neither the time scales nor the strain rates characterizing the geological processes can be reproduced in the laboratory. General rules for this extrapolation are that if deformation is observed in the laboratory at a particular temperature, deformation in geological environments will occur at a much reduced temperature, and that if at laboratory strain rates a particular deformation mechanism dominates over all others, the relative importance of possible mechanisms may be quite different at the geologically encountered strain rates. Hence experimental results are little more than guidelines as to how the Earth may respond to forces on long time scales.