scholarly journals A second study of blasting recorded in Southern California

1933 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
pp. 95-110 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harry O. Wood ◽  
Charles F. Richter

Summary Investigation of several blasts subsequent to those considered in our previous study, and in particular a major blast set off near Victorville, California, on September 12, 1931, has yielded results as follows. 1. In two cases the time of detonation was determined (a) very accurately in the case of the blast near Victorville by a precise method, and (b) probably with substantially equal accuracy in the case of the blast in the Arroyo Seco, though the method employed was inherently less precise. 2. Phases, or definite changes in registered motion, have been recognized and measured which appear to correspond to successive arrivals of waves traveling, apparently, along direct paths with different apparent velocities, as follows: 6.0− 5.9+, 5.55, 5.4−, 5.0+, 4.1, 3.5−, 3.4−, 3.25, 3.15, 3.0−, 2.7± kilometers per second. 3. In the present study no positive evidence has been found to indicate reflected waves, or waves refracted along deeper layers. Phases considered in the previous study to indicate such waves are now found to be susceptible of alternative explanations. Difficulties have been encountered, as discussed in the body of the paper, in the interpretation and satisfactory explanation of certain of the very numerous apparent phases, particularly those which appear to indicate waves with apparent velocities of 6.0− to 5.9+, and 4.1 kilometers per second. From this it is again clear that further opportunities for similar investigations are of great importance. For this reason, and also in order that blasts of moderate, or larger, magnitude may not be included in lists of small local earthquakes, it is suggested that all such blasts set off in the region of Southern California should be reported to the Seismological Laboratory at Pasadena—and, whenever practicable, sufficiently in advance to permit preparations for thorough study.

1997 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 121-140
Author(s):  
Thaddeus J. Trenn ◽  

The Shroud of Turin, a linen cloth with but a faint image, continues to capture the interest of many people of diverse beliefs. Although the measured age of the cloth is relatively recent, other scientific findings indicate an earlier provenance. Any firm conclusions regarding the cloth's history remain premature. No satisfactory explanation has been found as yet for how the image on the cloth was produced structurally or stylistically. Iconographic evidence suggests that the image was the source of facial peculiarities found in early works of religious art. The body image bears a striking yet preternatural correlation with Scriptural accounts of wounds. Curiously, the image on the cloth functions as a photographic negative, exhibiting a high degree of resolution, as if the original were produced in pixels. Despite serious efforts to discover some artistic origin md medium, scientific evidence points in the direction that it was not produced by hands. If it is tme that the medium is the message, as Marshall McLuhan wrote, then the Turin Shroud may be a parable for the modern age.


1963 ◽  
Vol 14 (6) ◽  
pp. 944 ◽  
Author(s):  
BA Panaretto

Two methods for predicting the body composition of living goats from the tritiated water spaces derived in them were proposed previously from results obtained with 11 goats. The relation of tritiated water spaces to body composition has been studied in an addltlonal 10 goats and 9 sheep, and these results together with those previousl y published have yielded a more precise method for calculating the body composition of living ruminants in terms of water, fat, protein, and ash.


The author first alludes to what usually happens in affections of the brain, namely, that the loss of voluntary power and of sensation, manifest themselves in the opposite side of the body to that in which the cerebral lesion exists, a fact which has been attempted to be explained by the crossing of the fibres at the junction of the medulla oblongata with the anterior or motor columns of the medulla spinalis ; but such a structure, he observes, affords no explanation of the loss of sensation. The author then, referring to the communication of Sir Charles Bell to the Royal Society, in the year 1835, describing a decussation connected with the posterior columns, or columns of sensation, mentions that the accuracy of these dissections was doubted by Mr. Mayo and other eminent anatomists. The author proceeds to state that the symptoms of cerebral lesion do not always take place on the opposite side of the body to that in which the lesion of the brain exists, but that they occur sometimes on the same side; that the loss of power and of sensation, although confined to the same side, may exist in either the upper or the lower extremity; but that both are not necessarily implicated; and that, in fact, cases occur where there are marked deviations from what may be considered the more common occurrence. Having observed such cases, and not being aware of any satisfactory explanation, the author examined with care the continuation upwards of the anterior and posterior columns of the spinal marrow into the medulla oblongata and found that the decussation at the upper part of the spinal marrow belonged in part to the columns for motion, and in part to the columns for sensation; and farther, that the decussation is only partial with respect to either of these columns; thus elucidating hy the observation of the actual structure what before appeared very unsatisfactory in pathology, and anomalous in disease. The paper is illustrated by drawings made from the dissections of the author.


Parasitology ◽  
1964 ◽  
Vol 54 (1) ◽  
pp. 125-128 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hitoshi Matsudo ◽  
John Luther Mohr

Lobochona insularum sp.nov., a collar ciliate (Chonotrichida), an ectocommensal on the pleopodal bristles of a gribble from Hawaii, is described. L. insularum differs from the previously described chonotrichidan ectocommensals of the gribbles, L. limnoriae on Limnoria lignorum and Lobochona prorates on Limnoria tripunctata, in the outlines of the body and of the marginal lappets of the collar.This work was supported by a grant from the National Science Foundation. Various facilities were made available by the Allan Hancock Foundation of the University of Southern California.Acknowledgement is given to Dr Bayard H. McConnaughey, who discovered the organism and prepared the slides.


Author(s):  
Hui Sun ◽  
Odd M. Faltinsen

A two-dimensional fully nonlinear numerical wave tank is developed by using a boundary element method (BEM). The water depth can be shallow or deep. The waves are generated by simulating a piston wave maker or by specifying the input velocity at the upstream boundary. Fully nonlinear free surface conditions are satisfied in the numerical simulations. In the downstream region, a numerical beach is employed to dissipate the wave energy to avoid waves reflecting from the vertical downstream boundary. When there is a body piercing the free surface, another numerical beach is applied upstream the body to damp out only the reflected waves from the body. Two different applications are presented in this paper. The first one is to compute the pressure and velocity at any point inside the wave field. The other application is to calculate the forces on a horizontal cylinder fixed on the free surface. This second application is related to the investigation of the hydrodynamic forces on the pontoon of a fish farm. Nonlinearities are significant since the wave amplitudes can be large relative to the wavelength and the dimension of the cylinder.


Author(s):  
Rafael de Barros Passos ◽  
Antonio Carlos Fernandes ◽  
Ramon Romankevicius Costa

An important step in the development of new ocean structures is to conduct tests on reduced scale models in tanks that reproduce the environmental conditions of their operation. For the wave modeling in a 2D channel, waves are generated in one of its end by the wave-maker and they should not be reflected back to the tested vessel. If these reflected waves were not absorbed they would interfere into the wave field and consequently interact with the body or structure under investigation, which can reduce considerably the experiment duration and the quality of its results. The simplest solution is the use of a passive beach to absorb the reflected waves, composed by a long ramp at the far end of the channel. As an alternative to these conventional beaches, wave-makers equipped with a designed control system can be used as active absorbers. These so-called active beaches have the advantage that they do not extend into the experimental domain of the basin and, at least in linear theory, low or zero reflection could be achieved. The objective of the present work is to design and construct an active wave absorption system into LOC, Laboratory of Waves and Currents, at COPPE/UFRJ, considering a wave field over the channel with no body or structure interaction. First results showed an absorption level comparable with the passive beach, however a careful tuning process is necessary to minimize the reflection coefficient.


1978 ◽  
Vol 35 (7) ◽  
pp. 981-996 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Geoffrey Moser ◽  
Elbert H. Ahlstrom

Examination of 217 midwater trawl samples from the coastal basins off southern California and Baja California revealed a recurring group of rockfish species. The late larvae and pelagic juveniles of the blackgill rockfish, Sebastes melanostomus, constituted 16% of the total number of rockfish specimens. The life-history stages of this species are described, with emphasis on the pelagic juvenile stage. Late stage larvae and pelagic juveniles develop a distinctive pattern of melanophore bands which, by disrupting the body outline, may help conceal the young during their midwater existence. Evidence from midwater trawl collections suggests that 30-mm pelagic juveniles migrate or are carried shoreward at a depth of ~ 200 m to the appropriate habitat for settling. The high relative abundance of blackgill rockfish pelagic juveniles in midwater trawl samples suggests that this species may represent a potential resource. Key words: blackgill rockfish, Sebastes melanostomus, larvae, pelagic juveniles, midwater trawls, developmental stages, melanophore patterns, life-history strategy, head-spine development


RSC Advances ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (22) ◽  
pp. 12260-12268 ◽  
Author(s):  
Meiyu Wu ◽  
Liang Chen ◽  
Ruiru Li ◽  
Mo Dan ◽  
Haining Liu ◽  
...  

Along with the increasing applications of nanomaterials in medical fields, to know the systemic distribution of nanomaterials in the body through a precise method is required for the biosafety assessment of nanomaterials.


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