Export 2610 results:
Author Title [ Type(Asc)] Year
Journal Article
K. O. Emery and Ross, D. A., Topography and sediments of a small area of the continental slope south of Martha's Vineyard, Deep-Sea Research and Oceanographic Abstracts, vol. 15, pp. 415–422, 1968.
T. A. Heppenheimer, To the bottom of the sea, American Heritage of Invention {&} Technology, vol. 8, pp. 28–38, 1992.
E. C. Raulfs, Macko, S. A., and Van Dover, C. L., Tissue and symbiont condition of mussels (Bathymodiolus thermophilus) exposed to varying levels of hydrothermal activity, Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, vol. 84, pp. 229–234, 2004.
L. M. Seyler, Trembath-Reichert, E., Tully, B. J., and Huber, J. A., Time-series transcriptomics from cold, oxic subseafloor crustal fluids reveals a motile, mixotrophic microbial community, Isme Journal, 2020.
D. J. Fornari, Shank, T. M., Von Damm, K. L., Gregg, T. K. P., Lilley, M., Levai, G., Bray, A., Haymon, R. M., Perfit, M. R., and Lutz, R., Time-series temperature measurements at high-temperature hydrothermal vents, East Pacific Rise 9 degrees 49'-51'N; evidence for monitoring a crustal cracking event, Earth and Planetary Science Letters, vol. 160, pp. 419–431, 1998.
H. Johnson and Tunnicliffe, V., Time-series measurements of hydrothermal activity on northern Juan De Fuca Ridge, Geophysical Research Letters, vol. 12, pp. 685–688, 1985.
T. S. Moore, Shank, T. M., Nuzzio, D. B., and Luther, G. W., Time-series chemical and temperature habitat characterization of diffuse flow hydrothermal sites at 9 degrees 50′N East Pacific Rise, Deep-Sea Research. Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, vol. 56, pp. 1616–1621, 2009.
C. Johansen, Todd, A. C., and MacDonald, I. R., Time series video analysis of bubble release processes at natural hydrocarbon seeps in the Northern Gulf of Mexico, Marine and Petroleum Geology, vol. 82, pp. 21–34, 2017.
D. Feng, Birgel, D., Peckmann, J., Roberts, H. H., Joye, S. B., Sassen, R., Liu, X. - L., Hinrichs, K. - U., and Chen, D., Time integrated variation of sources of fluids and seepage dynamics archived in authigenic carbonates from Gulf of Mexico Gas Hydrate Seafloor Observatory, Chemical Geology, vol. 385, pp. 129–139, 2014.
G. W. Cairns, Evans, R. L., and Edwards, R. N., A time domain electromagnetic survey of the TAG hydrothermal mound, Geophysical Research Letters, vol. 23, pp. 3455–3458, 1996.
E. E. Davis and Becker, K., Tidal pumping of fluids within and from the oceanic crust: new observations and opportunities for sampling the crustal hydrosphere, Earth and Planetary Science Letters, vol. 172, pp. 141–149, 1999.
A. J. Williams and Tivey, M. K., Tidal currents at hydrothermal vents, Juan de Fuca Ridge, Sea Technology, vol. 42, pp. 62–96, 2001.
S. A. Little, Stolzenbach, K. D., and Grassle, J. F., Tidal current effects on temperature measurements in diffuse hydrothermal flow: Guaymas Basin, Geophysical Research Letters, vol. 15, pp. 1491–1494, 1988.
M. J. Hornbach, Ruppel, C. D., and Van Dover, C. L., Three-dimensional structure of fluid conduits sustaining an active deep marine cold seep, Geophysical Research Letters, vol. 34, p. L05601, 2007.
W. K. Stewart, Three-dimensional stochastic modeling using sonar sensing for undersea robotics, Autonomous Robots, vol. 3, pp. 121–143, 1996.
S. M. Maher, Gee, J. S., Cheadle, M. J., and John, B. E., Three-dimensional magnetic stripes require slow cooling in fast-spread lower ocean crust, Nature, vol. 597, pp. 511-515, 2021.
B. W. Govenar, Bergquist, D. C., Urcuyo, I. A., Eckner, J. T., and Fisher, C. R., Three Ridgeia piscesae assemblages from a single Juan de Fuca Ridge sulphide edifice: Structurally different and functionally similar, Cahiers de Biologie Marine, vol. 43, pp. 247–252, 2002.
J. H. McLean, Three new species of the family Neolepetopsidae (Patellogastropoda) from hydrothermal vents and whale falls in the Northeastern Pacific, Journal of Shellfish Research, vol. 27, pp. 15–20, 2008.
G. C. Williams and Alderslade, P., Three new species of pennatulacean octocorals with the ability to attach to rocky substrata (Cnidaria: Anthozoa: Pennatulacea), ZOOTAXA, pp. 33–48, 2011.
M. K. Scott, A thousand fathoms and beyond, Sea Frontiers, vol. 10, pp. 37–45, 1964.
H. W. Jannasch, Wirsen, C. O., Nelson, D. C., and Robertson, L. A., Thiomicrospira crunogena sp. nov., a colorless sulfur-oxidizing bacterium from a deep-sea hydrothermal vent, International Journal of Systematic Bacteriology, vol. 35, pp. 422–424, 1985.
M. A. Tivey, Johnson, P. H., Bradley, A., and Yoerger, D. R., Thickness of a submarine lava flow determined from near-bottom magnetic field mapping by autonomous underwater vehicle, Geophysical Research Letters, vol. 25, pp. 805–808, 1998.
C. Vetriani, Speck, M. D., Ellor, S. V., Lutz, R. A., and Starovoytov, V., Thermovibrio ammonificans sp. nov.: A thermophilic, chemolithotrophic, nitrate ammonifying bacterium from deep-sea hydrothermal vents., International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology, vol. 54, pp. 175–181, 2004.
P. Chevaldonne, Fisher, C. R., Childress, J. J., Desbruyeres, D., Jollivet, D., Zal, F., and Toulmond, A., Thermotolerance and the ‘Pompeii worms', Marine Ecology Progress Series, vol. 208, pp. 293–295, 2000.
A. I. Slobodkin, Reysenbach, A. - L., Slobodkina, G. B., Baslerov, R. V., Kostrikina, N. A., Wagner, I. D., and Bonch-Osmolovskaya, E. A., Thermosulfurimonas dismutans gen. nov., sp nov., an extremely thermophilic sulfur-disproportionating bacterium from a deep-sea hydrothermal vent, INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SYSTEMATIC AND EVOLUTIONARY MICROBIOLOGY, vol. 62, pp. 2565–2571, 2012.

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