Possible role of wetlands, permafrost, and methane hydrates in the methane cycle under future climate change: A review

FM O'Connor, O Boucher, N Gedney… - Reviews of …, 2010 - Wiley Online Library
We have reviewed the available scientific literature on how natural sources and the
atmospheric fate of methane may be affected by future climate change. We discuss how …

New developments in the marine nitrogen cycle

JA Brandes, AH Devol, C Deutsch - Chemical reviews, 2007 - ACS Publications
Nitrogen, as a building block in the structures of nucleic and amino acids, porphyrins, and
amino sugars, is a fundamental player in many biogeochemical cycles. 1 It also shares with …

Methane hydrate stability and anthropogenic climate change

D Archer - Biogeosciences, 2007 - bg.copernicus.org
Methane frozen into hydrate makes up a large reservoir of potentially volatile carbon below
the sea floor and associated with permafrost soils. This reservoir intuitively seems …

Submarine landslides of the Mediterranean Sea: Trigger mechanisms, dynamics, and frequency‐magnitude distribution

R Urgeles, A Camerlenghi - Journal of Geophysical Research …, 2013 - Wiley Online Library
Submarine landslides are ubiquitous along Mediterranean continental margins. With the aim
of understanding mass‐wasting processes and related hazard at the scale of a large marine …

Turbidites and turbidity currents from Alpine 'flysch'to the exploration of continental margins

E Mutti, D Bernoulli, FR Lucchi, R Tinterri - Sedimentology, 2009 - Wiley Online Library
The concept of turbidite has evolved so much since its original definition by Kuenen and
Migliorini in 1950–ie the deposit of turbidity currents exemplified by the sandy flysch …

Timing and frequency of large submarine landslides: implications for understanding triggers and future geohazard

M Urlaub, PJ Talling, DG Masson - Quaternary Science Reviews, 2013 - Elsevier
Large submarine landslides can have serious socioeconomic consequences as they have
the potential to cause tsunamis and damage seabed infrastructure. It is important to …

Anatomy of turbidites and linked debrites based on long distance (120× 30 km) bed correlation, Marnoso Arenacea Formation, Northern Apennines, Italy

LA Amy, PJ Talling - Sedimentology, 2006 - Wiley Online Library
Much of our understanding of submarine sediment‐laden density flows that transport very
large volumes (ca 1 to 100 km3) of sediment into the deep ocean comes from careful …

An introduction to Mediterranean deep-sea biology

F Sardà, M Canals, A Tselepides, A Calafat, MM Flexas… - 2004 - digital.csic.es
[EN] This chapter presents the state of the art concerning the deep-sea Mediterranean
environment: geology, hydrology, biology and fisheries. These are the fields of study dealt …

Mediterranean megaturbidite triggered by the AD 365 Crete earthquake and tsunami

A Polonia, E Bonatti, A Camerlenghi, RG Lucchi… - Scientific reports, 2013 - nature.com
Abstract Historian Ammianus Marcellinus documented the devastating effects of a tsunami
hitting Alexandria, Egypt, on July 21, AD 365." The solidity of the earth was made to shake …

New insight into the evolution of large‐volume turbidity currents: comparison of turbidite shape and previous modelling results

PJ Talling, LA Amy, RB Wynn - Sedimentology, 2007 - Wiley Online Library
Abstract The Marnoso Arenacea Formation provides the most extensive correlation of
individual flow deposits (beds) yet documented in an ancient turbidite system. These …