The use of grain-size distribution of muds for the reconstruction of past deep ocean currents is becoming established and applied in the palaeoceanographic community. The methods are also applicable to shallow marine and tidal flat muds with similar inferences concerning the energy of wave and current sorting being drawn. Fine sediment grain-size distributions can be obtained using a variety of instruments based on fundamentally different theoretical principles. These machines may give varying, sometimes misleading, results giving divergent interpretations of flow speed history. The new evidence presented here, combined with earlier work, suggests that of the three most commonly used analytical methods for fine silts with clays, settling ve...
A comparative study was performed of three instruments used to measure the grain-size distribution o...
Results of a traditional sedimentation technique for grain-size analysis (the sieve-pipette method) ...
Diatom-rich sediments are common in several oceanic regions, especially the Southern Ocean. Some of ...
The use of grain-size distribution of muds for the reconstruction of past deep ocean currents is bec...
The use of grain-size distribution of muds for the reconstruction of past deep ocean currents is bec...
The basis for, and use of, fine grain size parameters for inference of paleoflow speeds is reviewed ...
The basis for, and use of, fine grain size parameters for inference of paleoflow speeds is reviewed ...
The transport and deposition of contourites, involving many cycles of erosion and deposition under i...
Grain-size measurements of fine-grained sediments based on laser diffraction may contain spurious in...
The weight percentage and mean size of the 10–63 μm terrigenous silt fraction (termed ‘sortable silt...
© 2017 Elsevier Ltd Fine grain-size parameters have been used for inference of palaeoflow speeds of...
The coarseness of the 10-63 m terrigenous silt (i.e., sortable-silt) fraction tends to vary independ...
Classically, the grain size of soil and sediment samples is determined by the sieve method for the c...
Surface and deep-sea core sediments and two sets of standards were measured by three different techn...
A comparative study was performed of three instruments used to measure the grain-size distribution o...
Results of a traditional sedimentation technique for grain-size analysis (the sieve-pipette method) ...
Diatom-rich sediments are common in several oceanic regions, especially the Southern Ocean. Some of ...
The use of grain-size distribution of muds for the reconstruction of past deep ocean currents is bec...
The use of grain-size distribution of muds for the reconstruction of past deep ocean currents is bec...
The basis for, and use of, fine grain size parameters for inference of paleoflow speeds is reviewed ...
The basis for, and use of, fine grain size parameters for inference of paleoflow speeds is reviewed ...
The transport and deposition of contourites, involving many cycles of erosion and deposition under i...
Grain-size measurements of fine-grained sediments based on laser diffraction may contain spurious in...
The weight percentage and mean size of the 10–63 μm terrigenous silt fraction (termed ‘sortable silt...
© 2017 Elsevier Ltd Fine grain-size parameters have been used for inference of palaeoflow speeds of...
The coarseness of the 10-63 m terrigenous silt (i.e., sortable-silt) fraction tends to vary independ...
Classically, the grain size of soil and sediment samples is determined by the sieve method for the c...
Surface and deep-sea core sediments and two sets of standards were measured by three different techn...
A comparative study was performed of three instruments used to measure the grain-size distribution o...
Results of a traditional sedimentation technique for grain-size analysis (the sieve-pipette method) ...
Diatom-rich sediments are common in several oceanic regions, especially the Southern Ocean. Some of ...