Deep Water(2022)
Deep Water(2022) >>> https://blltly.com/2tlERG
Deep Water(2022)
Nature Geoscience spoke with Dr Qingyang Hu, a high-pressure mineralogist at HPSTAR; Prof. Suzan van der Lee, a geophysicist at Northwestern University; and Prof. Katherine Kelley, a geochemist at the University of Rhode Island about their work and what the future of deep-water research might bring.
Chemical reactions between slab and mantle rocks may lead to brittle failure where deep episodic tremor occurs in subduction zones, according to field and microstructural observations of a shear zone in New Zealand.
A distinct kink in the slope of the Gutenberg-Richter distribution of deep earthquakes in the northwest Pacific is identified by unsupervised machine learning and could indicate the rim of the metastable olivine wedge.
Veins of aragonite in deep ocean trenches can record discharges of CO2-rich paleoseawater and suggest that exposed serpentinized forearcs can act as carbon reservoirs, according to residence time calculations based on geochemical analyses of mantle rocks from offshore Japan.
Accounting for experimental data on hydrous peridotites reduces the estimated water recycled into the deep mantle during subduction and suggests sea-level stability over geological time, according to subduction zone thermopetrological modelling.
Hydrogen isotopes and compositions of melt inclusions in olivine in komatiites indicate a hydrous source produced by recycling of seawater-altered crust into the deep mantle over 3.3 billion years ago.
The joint ICES/NAFO Working Group on Deep-water Ecology (WGDEC) collates new information and maps the distribution of Vulnerable Marine Ecosystems (VMEs) for use in annual ICES advisory processes. This information assists the development of new methods/techniques to further our understanding of deep-sea ecosystems and informs the implementation of man-agement tools to afford the protection of VMEs.
The Van Allens rarely function as more than stock characters in need of deeper introspection to warrant our attention, and it is really only through the sensual, kinetic performance of de Armas that any sense of passionate sentiment or nervous emotion is given life. The film is hindered by lacklustre direction and a script barely willing to scrape the surface of what could have been an intense, psychosexual exploration of masculinity, morality and marriage.
BMOP is proposing to construct, own and operate a deepwater port terminal in the Gulf of Mexico to export domestically produced crude oil. Use of the deepwater port would include the loading of various grades of crude oil at flow rates of up to 80,000 barrels per hour (bph). The BMOP deepwater port would allow for up to one Very Large Crude Carriers (VLCCs) or other crude oil carriers to moor at the catenary anchor leg mooring (CALM) and connect with the deepwater port via floating connecting crude oil hoses. The maximum frequency of loading VLCCs or other crude oil carriers would be approximately two million barrels per day, 365 days per year.
Currently, the statutory processing clock for the BMOP deepwater application is on hold for receipt of additional technical and environmental information from the applicant. The statutory clock will remain on hold until the required information is received, evaluated and deemed sufficient.
For additional information regarding this proposed port as well as the deepwater port application review and licensing process, see the Federal Docket for the for the application at www.regulations.gov (Docket number MARAD-2020-0127).
On May 30, 2019, the Maritime Administration and U.S. Coast Guard received an application from Phillips 66 for all Federal authorizations required for a license to own, construct, and operate a deepwater port to export domestically produced crude oil. The application was deemed complete on June 20, 2019, and a Federal Register Notice of Application was issued to that effect on June 26, 2019 (84 FR 30301). Texas is the Adjacent Coastal State for this project. The propo