Surface textures and rounding of quartz sand grains on intertidal sandbars, Bay of Fundy, Nova Scotia

1979 ◽  
Vol 16 (11) ◽  
pp. 2071-2085 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gerard V. Middleton ◽  
Patricia M. Davis

Intertidal sands in the Minas Basin are mineralogically immature, and are generally medium grained and moderately well sorted. Quartz grains show a wide range of roundness: mean roundness is subangular, but rounded to well rounded grains are also present. The sands are derived mainly from coastal erosion of Pleistocene tills and outwash and Triassic sandstones.Scanning electron microscope examination of the surface textures of more than 40 samples of source materials and tidal sands reveals that although many of the textures are relict, tidal sands show high, smoothed surfaces with non-oriented V's, and low areas with 'patchy growths', neither of which are present on source sands. Rounding of grains is undoubtedly taking place in the tidal environments, but much of the roundness is inherited from Triassic source material, and new surface textures are developed most rapidly on grains already partly rounded.Average distances of grain transport in the layer of sand moving on the bar surface is of the order of 1 m per tidal cycle, and allowing for reworking of the entire mass of sand in the bars, this results in a long term transport rate of only about 10 m per year. For the distance of transport, sediment transport by tides is probably more efficient at rounding sand grains than transport by rivers, but less efficient than transport by waves or wind. Geologically long periods of reworking by tides would be necessary to produce texturally supermature sands.

1980 ◽  
Vol 25 (91) ◽  
pp. 125-132 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. B. Whalley ◽  
C. C. Langway

AbstractSurface textures and angularity–roundness characteristics of quartz sand grains of till from the base of the Greenland ice sheet at Camp Century were examined with a scanning electron microscope. Two basic populations are revealed; an angular component, which shows grains with edge abrasion and attrition indicative of subglacial grinding, and a well-rounded component with the characteristics of aeolian transport. It is suggested that these two populations were mixed subglacially, the aeolian fraction having been produced at some stage before the ice sheet encroached over the area of their deposition.


1968 ◽  
Vol 105 (6) ◽  
pp. 521-525 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Krinsley ◽  
Jack Donahue

SUMMARYAn electron microscope examination of beach and glacial pebbles suggests that these two environments do not impress distinctively different textures on pebble surfaces. A detailed study of surface textures of beach pebbles indicates that size reduction is predominantly an abrasional rather than solutional process. The three textural features noted, flat planar surfaces, pits and arc-shaped fractures, were characterized by an abundance of mechanical breakage blocks slightly modified by solution. All three textural types were experimentally duplicated.


1980 ◽  
Vol 25 (91) ◽  
pp. 125-132 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. B. Whalley ◽  
C. C. Langway

AbstractSurface textures and angularity–roundness characteristics of quartz sand grains of till from the base of the Greenland ice sheet at Camp Century were examined with a scanning electron microscope. Two basic populations are revealed; an angular component, which shows grains with edge abrasion and attrition indicative of subglacial grinding, and a well-rounded component with the characteristics of aeolian transport. It is suggested that these two populations were mixed subglacially, the aeolian fraction having been produced at some stage before the ice sheet encroached over the area of their deposition.


1985 ◽  
Vol 22 (5) ◽  
pp. 786-790 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Murray D'Orsay ◽  
H. W. van de Poll

Scanning electron microscope examination of quartz grains separated from conglomerates in an alluvial fan sequence within the Pennsylvanian Fowler Head Formation of Nova Scotia revealed surface characteristics that are typical of those obtained from modern tropical environments. This evidence suggests that a similar tropical climate may have existed in eastern Canada during Middle Pennsylvanian time.


Author(s):  
E. B. Masurovsky ◽  
H. H. Benitez ◽  
M. R. Murray

Recent light- and electron microscope studies concerned with the effects of D2O on the development of chick sympathetic ganglia in long-term, organized culture revealed the presence of rod-like fibrillar formations, and associated granulofibrillar bodies, in the nuclei of control and deuterated neurons. Similar fibrillar formations have been reported in the nuclei of certain mammalian CNS neurons; however, related granulofibrillar bodies have not been previously described. Both kinds of intranuclear structures are observed in cultures fixed either in veronal acetate-buffered 2%OsO4 (pH 7. 4), or in 3.5% glutaraldehyde followed by post-osmication. Thin sections from such Epon-embedded cultures were stained with ethanolic uranyl acetate and basic lead citrate for viewing in the electron microscope.


Author(s):  
C. C. Clawson ◽  
L. W. Anderson ◽  
R. A. Good

Investigations which require electron microscope examination of a few specific areas of non-homogeneous tissues make random sampling of small blocks an inefficient and unrewarding procedure. Therefore, several investigators have devised methods which allow obtaining sample blocks for electron microscopy from region of tissue previously identified by light microscopy of present here techniques which make possible: 1) sampling tissue for electron microscopy from selected areas previously identified by light microscopy of relatively large pieces of tissue; 2) dehydration and embedding large numbers of individually identified blocks while keeping each one separate; 3) a new method of maintaining specific orientation of blocks during embedding; 4) special light microscopic staining or fluorescent procedures and electron microscopy on immediately adjacent small areas of tissue.


Author(s):  
W. E. King

A side-entry type, helium-temperature specimen stage that has the capability of in-situ electrical-resistivity measurements has been designed and developed for use in the AEI-EM7 1200-kV electron microscope at Argonne National Laboratory. The electrical-resistivity measurements complement the high-voltage electron microscope (HVEM) to yield a unique opportunity to investigate defect production in metals by electron irradiation over a wide range of defect concentrations.A flow cryostat that uses helium gas as a coolant is employed to attain and maintain any specified temperature between 10 and 300 K. The helium gas coolant eliminates the vibrations that arise from boiling liquid helium and the temperature instabilities due to alternating heat-transfer mechanisms in the two-phase temperature regime (4.215 K). Figure 1 shows a schematic view of the liquid/gaseous helium transfer system. A liquid-gas mixture can be used for fast cooldown. The cold tip of the transfer tube is inserted coincident with the tilt axis of the specimen stage, and the end of the coolant flow tube is positioned without contact within the heat exchanger of the copper specimen block (Fig. 2).


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