Discontinuities

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Engineering

Kinds of Discontinuities

  • arbitrary discontinuity
  • displacement discontinuity
  • major discontinuity
  • sharp discontinuity
  • strong discontinuity
  • weak discontinuity

  • Terms modified by Discontinuities

  • discontinuity approach
  • discontinuity method
  • discontinuity surface

  • Selected Abstracts


    TIME MATTERS IN TEAM PERFORMANCE: EFFECTS OF MEMBER FAMILIARITY, ENTRAINMENT, AND TASK DISCONTINUITY ON SPEED AND QUALITY

    PERSONNEL PSYCHOLOGY, Issue 3 2003
    DAVID A. HARRISON
    We compared the speed and quality of performance for familiar, initially unfamiliar but continuing, and one-shot (single session) teams. We also proposed and observed entrainment effects for task time limits. Over the course of weekly sessions with changing tasks, continuing teams reached speed levels of the initially familiar teams, but the one-shot teams were consistently slower. Continuing teams also tended to have higher-quality output than the one-shot teams. There were no differences in how quickly each type of group entrained to time limits on the tasks. Entrainment was not robust to task discontinuity (Task A, then B). However, entrainment on repeated trials of a task persisted even when a different type of task "interrupted" those repeated trials (Task A, then B, then A again). Results compel a richer incorporation of time as a medium for complex task sequences, and time-based constructs as a feature of team membership in the study of group effectiveness. [source]


    Complicating Discontinuity: What About Poverty?

    CURRICULUM INQUIRY, Issue 1 2005
    MARY HERMES
    ABSTRACT In this article, two white science teachers at tribal schools in the Upper Midwest of the United States, who were identified by community members and school administrators as "successful" teachers, describe experiences of how they wrestle with the daily effects of generations of oppression. Most vividly, they talk about poverty. This article provides a description of some of the beliefs and attitudes, described by the teachers, that help them to be effective allies and teachers for Native American students. Their interviews offer a glimpse into the internal struggle with the contradictions of oppression. This article broadens the discussion of Native American culture-based education and raises questions for the general applicability of cultural discontinuity as an all-encompassing explanation for Native American school failure. [source]


    Discontinuity in fish assemblages across an elevation gradient in a southern Appalachian watershed, USA

    ECOLOGY OF FRESHWATER FISH, Issue 1 2005
    J. L. Robinson
    This region is noted for extreme topographical relief, high cumulative annual rainfall and many rare and endemic plants and animals. The study area encompasses a portion of the Blue Ridge Escarpment and the associated Brevard Fault Zone. We hypothesise that major waterfalls and cascade complexes have acted to limit invasion and colonisation by fishes from downstream. This hypothesis is supported by longitudinal fish assemblage patterns in our study streams. Fish species richness in Toxaway River increased from 4 to 23 between Lake Toxaway and Lake Jocassee, a distance of 10 river km. We found similar discontinuities in neighbouring Horsepasture River and Bearwallow Creek. We found no instances of species replacement along this elevation gradient, and the trend in increased diversity downstream showed discontinuities coincident with sharp elevation breaks. With regard to theories posited to explain community formation in headwater stream fish communities (especially in those characterised by high topographical relief), we suggest coloniser ,access' may be more important than other factors including competitive interactions. Resumen 1. En este estudio examinamos patrones en los ensamblajes de peces de los ríos Toxaway y Horsepasture, dos ríos de elevada altitud de Carolina del Norte (USA). Esta región se caracteriza por rupturas topografías extremas, gran cantidad de lluvia anual y numerosos endemismos animales y vegetales. El estudio incluye una porción de la región del Blue Ridge Escarpment y la zona asociada de Brevard Fault. 2. Nuestra hipótesis es que los complejos sistemas de cataratas han limitado la invasión y la colonización de los peces desde las localidades aguas abajo. Los patrones longitudinales de los ensamblajes de peces fueron consistentes con esta hipótesis. La riqueza de las especies de peces en el río Toxaway incrementó desde 4 a 23 especies en una distancia de 10 Km de río, entre los lagos Taxoway y Jocasee. Encontramos discontinuidades similares en los vecinos ríos Horsepasture y Bearwallow. No encontramos ningún caso de re-emplazamiento de especies a lo largo del gradiente de altitud y la tendencia a incrementar la diversidad aguas abajo mostró discontinuidades que coincidieron con rupturas de altitudes. 3. Al considerar teorías que explican la formación de comunidades en zonas altas de ríos (especialmente en regiones caracterizadas por rupturas topografías), sugerimos que el acceso para los colonizadores puede ser más importante que otros factores incluyendo interacciones competitivas. [source]


    Respecting the Language of Elders: Ideological Shift and Linguistic Discontinuity in a Northern Athapascan Community

    JOURNAL OF LINGUISTIC ANTHROPOLOGY, Issue 1 2007
    Barbra A. Meek
    This article examines an ideological shift related to and affecting language shift, focusing especially on children's experiences. I show that while elders retained their status as intellectual authorities responsible for passing their knowledge on to younger community members, their knowledge became limited to practices conceptualized as "traditionally Kaska," of which language was an integral part. As a result, the acquisition of Kaska became subject to the same social practices that organized other forms of "traditional indigenous" or specialized knowledge such that speaking Kaska became the domain of elders. Children's and youth's commentary and practices articulated and solidified this ideological transformation. [source]


    Continuity and Discontinuity of Attachment from Infancy through Adolescence

    CHILD DEVELOPMENT, Issue 3 2000
    Claire E. Hamilton
    This study reports relations between infant Ainsworth Strange Situation classifications, negative life events, and Adolescent Attachment Interview classifications. Overall, the stability of secure versus insecure classifications was 77%, and infant attachment classification was a significant predictor of adolescent attachment classification. Chi-square analyses indicate that negative life events are significantly related to change in attachment classification. The sample (n= 30) is drawn from the Family Lifestyles Project (FLS), an ongoing longitudinal study of children's development within the context of nonconventional family lifestyles. The distribution of family lifestyles within this study, unlike those in the full FLS sample, represent a higher proportion of conventional two-parent families (40%). There were no differences between adolescents reared in conventional or nonconventional families in the distribution of adolescent attachment security, the experience of negative life events, or the continuity of attachment from infancy through adolescence. [source]


    Attachment from Infancy to Early Adulthood in a High-Risk Sample: Continuity, Discontinuity, and Their Correlates

    CHILD DEVELOPMENT, Issue 3 2000
    Nancy S. Weinfield
    This study explores the stability of attachment security and representations from infancy to early adulthood in a sample chosen originally for poverty and high risk for poor developmental outcomes. Participants for this study were 57 young adults who are part of an ongoing prospective study of development and adaptation in a high-risk sample. Attachment was assessed during infancy by using the Ainsworth Strange Situation (Ainsworth & Wittig) and at age 19 by using the Berkeley Adult Attachment Interview (George, Kaplan, & Main). Possible correlates of continuity and discontinuity in attachment were drawn from assessments of the participants and their mothers over the course of the study. Results provided no evidence for significant continuity between infant and adult attachment in this sample, with many participants transitioning to insecurity. The evidence, however, indicated that there might be lawful discontinuity. Analyses of correlates of continuity and discontinuity in attachment classification from infancy to adulthood indicated that the continuous and discontinuous groups were differentiated on the basis of child maltreatment, maternal depression, and family functioning in early adolescence. These results provide evidence that although attachment has been found to be stable over time in other samples, attachment representations are vulnerable to difficult and chaotic life experiences. [source]


    Texture Synthesis using Exact Neighborhood Matching

    COMPUTER GRAPHICS FORUM, Issue 2 2007
    M. Sabha
    Abstract In this paper we present an elegant pixel-based texture synthesis technique that is able to generate visually pleasing results from source textures of both stochastic and structured nature. Inspired by the observation that the most common artifacts that occur when synthesizing textures are high-frequency discontinuities, our technique tries to avoid these artifacts by forcing at least one of the direct neighboring pixels in each causal neighborhood to match within a predetermined threshold. This does not only avoid deterioration of the visual quality, but also results in faster synthesis timings. We demonstrate our technique on a variety of stochastic and structured textures. [source]


    Pinchmaps: textures with customizable discontinuities

    COMPUTER GRAPHICS FORUM, Issue 3 2005
    Marco Tarini
    First page of article [source]


    Space-Time Hierarchical Radiosity with Clustering and Higher-Order Wavelets

    COMPUTER GRAPHICS FORUM, Issue 2 2004
    Cyrille Damez
    Abstract We address in this paper the issue of computing diffuse global illumination solutions for animation sequences. The principal difficulties lie in the computational complexity of global illumination, emphasized by the movement of objects and the large number of frames to compute, as well as the potential for creating temporal discontinuities in the illumination, a particularly noticeable artifact. We demonstrate how space-time hierarchical radiosity, i.e. the application to the time dimension of a hierarchical decomposition algorithm, can be effectively used to obtain smooth animations: first by proposing the integration of spatial clustering in a space-time hierarchy; second, by using a higher-order wavelet basis adapted for the temporal dimension. The resulting algorithm is capable of creating time-dependent radiosity solutions efficiently. [source]


    Composition of Partially Ionized Systems Using the PlanckLarkin Partition Function of Mid-Z ions

    CONTRIBUTIONS TO PLASMA PHYSICS, Issue 10 2009
    A. Sengebusch
    Abstract We report on the composition of warm, dense plasmas of M-shell ions. Assuming local thermal equilibrium, the abundance of different ionization stages is given by a set of coupled Saha-equations. In order to avoid discontinuities at the Mott density, the partition functions have to account for pressure ionization due to continuum lowering consistently. The Planck-Larkin renormalization of bound and scattering states is well elaborated for hydrogenic systems. This paper shows the consistent extension to moderately ionized Mid-Z elements. We present results for solid-density polymere and titanium plasmas (© 2009 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim) [source]


    SUICIDE, RISK, AND INVESTMENT IN THE HEART OF THE AFRICAN MIRACLE

    CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY, Issue 4 2009
    JULIE LIVINGSTON
    ABSTRACT This essay considers new forms of investment, risk, and self-determination, among Botswana's middle and aspirant classes, as well as the loneliness and rage that are at stake when they fail. In it, I use specific instances and more widespread talk of suicides and murder,suicides contemplated, attempted, and accomplished as a vehicle for pondering the social dimensions of investment, and the perils of secrecy and the loneliness that shadow it. Amid a new regime of risk, investment, and self-determination brought by discontinuities of economic boom and widespread AIDS death over the past decade, Batswana are facing new questions about how to invest in relationships, selves, and futures. The essay concludes with a radically different context, a cancer ward, where Batswana seek to exile suicide and nihilism from the beds, minds, and hearts of patients through processes of socialization and paternalism that deny self-determination, while at the same time questing for and demanding investment in high-tech biomedicine. [source]


    Latitudinal patterns in abundance and life-history traits of the mole crab Emerita brasiliensis on South American sandy beaches

    DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS, Issue 2 2004
    Omar Defeo
    ABSTRACT Demographic and life-history attributes of the mole crab Emerita brasiliensis were analysed along 2700 km of the Atlantic coast of South America, including sandy beaches at the southernmost limit (Uruguay) and at the core of its geographical range (Brazil). Population features varied markedly within this range and exhibited systematic geographical patterns of variation. Abundance significantly increased from temperate to subtropical beaches, and the same held true for the asymptotic weight of males. Conversely, length at maturity and asymptotic weight of females increased from subtropical to temperate beaches, being inversely related to sea water temperature. Macroecological patterns in abundance and body weight showed the first large-scale evidence of scaling of population density to body size for a sandy beach population. Mortality rates (both sexes) followed a nonlinear increase from low-density temperate beaches to high-density subtropical beaches. The effect of habitat quality and availability could explain discontinuities in the species distribution within its range, and also differential responses in life-history attributes at a local scale. Asymmetries and converse latitudinal trends between sexes suggest that there is not a single general factor determining large-scale patterns in life-history traits of this species. Our results reinforce the view that density-dependent and environmental factors operating together regulate sandy beach populations. The need to develop macroecological studies in sandy beach ecology is highlighted, as knowledge acquired from local to large spatial scales throws light on population structure and regulation mechanisms. [source]


    Monitoring and predicting channel change in a free-evolving, small Alpine river: Ridanna Creek (North East Italy)

    EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS, Issue 14 2007
    Rossella Luchi
    Abstract The recent (25 years) morphodynamics of a proglacial reach of the Ridanna Creek, North-East Italy, evolving in the absence of human constraints, has been investigated by means of an intensive field activity and of the analysis of aerial photographs. The study reach mostly displays a braided morphology, with sharp downstream variations of valley gradient, sediment size and formative conditions within the main channel. These discontinuities are associated with different processes of channel adjustment at different timescales, which have been quantified by coupling hydrological with morphological information. Several processes of channel change and variations in braiding intensity have been documented along the whole reach and highlight how a regular, weakly meandering main channel may significantly affect the morphodynamics of the braided network. A first attempt to predict the morphological instability of this main channel at the observed spatial scales through existing linear theories of curved river channels shows a good agreement with field observations. Finally, the complete hydro-morphodynamical characterization of such an undisturbed alpine river reach can provide a relevant contribution to the definition of reference conditions for Alpine rivers required by the EU Water Framework Directive. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Field mapping and digital elevation modelling of submerged and unsubmerged hydraulic jump regions in a bedrock step,pool channel

    EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS, Issue 6 2006
    Brett L. Vallé
    Abstract High-resolution tacheometric field surveying was integrated with computer-assisted drafting to visualize and contrast three-dimensional bed and water surface digital elevation models (DEMs) for submerged and unsubmerged hydraulic jump regions in a bedrock step,pool channel. Measurements were conducted for two discharge conditions. Since previous applica-tions of three-dimensional field mapping and digital elevation modelling of stream channels have been limited to smoothly contiguous gravel-bedded systems, surveying was optimized by topographic setting and scaled to localized bed and water surface discontinuities. Traces and visualizations of the jump regions indicated that dichotomous decimetre shifts in water surface topography occurred for both jump regions from lower to higher discharges. Systematic removal of the survey points and DEM differencing indicated that point densities of ten points per square metre, in conjunction with a survey structure targeting grade breaks of 0·3,0·5 m, were required to capture decimetre form variations of the natural jump regions. The DEMs highlight the importance of recognizing the relationship between transcritical flow structures and localized topographic heterogeneities in bedrock channels. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Discontinuity in fish assemblages across an elevation gradient in a southern Appalachian watershed, USA

    ECOLOGY OF FRESHWATER FISH, Issue 1 2005
    J. L. Robinson
    This region is noted for extreme topographical relief, high cumulative annual rainfall and many rare and endemic plants and animals. The study area encompasses a portion of the Blue Ridge Escarpment and the associated Brevard Fault Zone. We hypothesise that major waterfalls and cascade complexes have acted to limit invasion and colonisation by fishes from downstream. This hypothesis is supported by longitudinal fish assemblage patterns in our study streams. Fish species richness in Toxaway River increased from 4 to 23 between Lake Toxaway and Lake Jocassee, a distance of 10 river km. We found similar discontinuities in neighbouring Horsepasture River and Bearwallow Creek. We found no instances of species replacement along this elevation gradient, and the trend in increased diversity downstream showed discontinuities coincident with sharp elevation breaks. With regard to theories posited to explain community formation in headwater stream fish communities (especially in those characterised by high topographical relief), we suggest coloniser ,access' may be more important than other factors including competitive interactions. Resumen 1. En este estudio examinamos patrones en los ensamblajes de peces de los ríos Toxaway y Horsepasture, dos ríos de elevada altitud de Carolina del Norte (USA). Esta región se caracteriza por rupturas topografías extremas, gran cantidad de lluvia anual y numerosos endemismos animales y vegetales. El estudio incluye una porción de la región del Blue Ridge Escarpment y la zona asociada de Brevard Fault. 2. Nuestra hipótesis es que los complejos sistemas de cataratas han limitado la invasión y la colonización de los peces desde las localidades aguas abajo. Los patrones longitudinales de los ensamblajes de peces fueron consistentes con esta hipótesis. La riqueza de las especies de peces en el río Toxaway incrementó desde 4 a 23 especies en una distancia de 10 Km de río, entre los lagos Taxoway y Jocasee. Encontramos discontinuidades similares en los vecinos ríos Horsepasture y Bearwallow. No encontramos ningún caso de re-emplazamiento de especies a lo largo del gradiente de altitud y la tendencia a incrementar la diversidad aguas abajo mostró discontinuidades que coincidieron con rupturas de altitudes. 3. Al considerar teorías que explican la formación de comunidades en zonas altas de ríos (especialmente en regiones caracterizadas por rupturas topografías), sugerimos que el acceso para los colonizadores puede ser más importante que otros factores incluyendo interacciones competitivas. [source]


    Communication and Equilibrium in Discontinuous Games of Incomplete Information

    ECONOMETRICA, Issue 5 2002
    Matthew O. Jackson
    This paper offers a new approach to the study of economic problems usually modeled as games of incomplete information with discontinuous payoffs. Typically, the discontinuities arise from indeterminacies (ties) in the underlying problem. The point of view taken here is that the tie,breaking rules that resolve these indeterminacies should be viewed as part of the solution rather than part of the description of the model. A solution is therefore a tie,breaking rule together with strategies satisfying the usual best,response criterion. When information is incomplete, solutions need not exist; that is, there may be no tie,breaking rule that is compatible with the existence of strategy profiles satisfying the usual best,response criteria. It is shown that the introduction of incentive compatible communication (cheap talk) restores existence. [source]


    Capital Versus the Districts: A Tale of One Multinational Company's Attempt to Disembed Itself

    ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY, Issue 2 2004
    N. A. Phelps
    Abstract: The process of international economic integration in which multinational enterprises (MNEs) play a significant orchestrating role is a contradictory one of a space of flows, on the one hand, and a space of places, on the other hand. It is this contradiction that produces a variegated landscape of relations within and among MNEs and a whole range of territorially rooted organizations and institutions. As a result, interest in global production networks, as part of a broader relational turn in economic geography, has sought to highlight and uncover these webs of relations within which MNEs are embedded. In reviewing this literature, we emphasize the economic imperatives underlying such relations or, rather, their political-economic nature and the discontinuities in industrial restructuring they can produce. We then present an empirical illustration of these points and some of the key concerns within the literature on global production networks. We consider a recent round of restructuring by Black & Decker Corporation, focusing on the politico-economic ramifications of closing one of two European factories. Our reading of the literature, coupled with our empirical findings, suggests the continuing tendency for international integration as a space of flows to eclipse the coherence of places. Localized points of resistance can moderate the powers exercised by MNEs internally and across a network of organizations, although there are limits to the transferability of such tactics of resistance. [source]


    Hourly surface wind monitor consistency checking over an extended observation period

    ENVIRONMETRICS, Issue 4 2009
    Scott Beaver
    Abstract A consistency checking methodology is presented to aid in identifying biased values in extended historical records of hourly surface wind measurements obtained from a single station. The method is intended for screening extended observation periods for values which do not fail physical consistency checks (i.e., standard or complex quality assurance methods), yet nonetheless exhibit statistical properties which differ from the bulk of the record. Several specific types of inconsistencies common in surface wind monitoring datasets are considered: annual biases, unexpected values, and discontinuities. The purely empirical method checks for self-consistency in the temporal distribution of the wind measurements by explicitly modeling the diurnal variability. Each year of data is modeled using principal component analysis (PCA) (or empirical orthogonal functions, EOF), then hierarchical clustering with nearest neighbor linkage is used to visualize any annual biases existing in the measurements. The diurnal distributions for wind speed and direction are additionally estimated and visualized to determine any periods of time which are inconsistent with the typical diurnal cycle for a given monitor. The robust consistency checking method is applied to a set of 44 monitors operating in the San Joaquin Valley (SJV) of Central California over a 9-year period. Monitors from the SLAMS, CIMIS, and RAWS networks are considered. Similar inconsistencies are detected in all three networks; however, network-specific types of inconsistencies are found as well. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Variable smoothing in Bayesian intrinsic autoregressions

    ENVIRONMETRICS, Issue 8 2007
    Mark J. Brewer
    Abstract We introduce an adapted form of the Markov random field (MRF) for Bayesian spatial smoothing with small-area data. This new scheme allows the amount of smoothing to vary in different parts of a map by employing area-specific smoothing parameters, related to the variance of the MRF. We take an empirical Bayes approach, using variance information from a standard MRF analysis to provide prior information for the smoothing parameters of the adapted MRF. The scheme is shown to produce proper posterior distributions for a broad class of models. We test our method on both simulated and real data sets, and for the simulated data sets, the new scheme is found to improve modelling of both slowly-varying levels of smoothness and discontinuities in the response surface. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    The isochronic band hypothesis and climbing fibre regulation of motricity: an experimental study

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 2 2001
    Masaji Fukuda
    Abstract The dynamic organization of the olivocerebellar afferent input to Purkinje cells was examined in rat cerebellar cortex. The distribution of synchronous Purkinje cell complex spike activity was characterized, bilaterally, utilizing multiple electrode recordings in crus IIa folium under ketamine anaesthesia. The results confirmed the existence of rostrocaudal complex spike isochronicity bands with a mediolateral width of 500 µm. For a given band, no finer spatial submicrostructures could be discerned at a first-order approximation (two-dimensional projection). Closer analysis determined that isochronicity between bands is not continuous in space but demonstrates discrete discontinuities at the mediolateral boundaries. Principal component multivariate analysis revealed that the first principal component of the spatio-temporal variance is synchronicity along the rostrocaudal band with a decreased level of coupling in the mediolateral direction at the band boundary. Furthermore, this discrete banding isochronicity is organized by the distribution of feedback inhibition from the cerebellar nuclei on to the inferior olive nucleus. The usual multiple band structure can be dynamically altered to a single wide-band dynamic architecture, or to other patterns of activity, as may be required by movement coordination. [source]


    The Precipitation Behavior of Superalloy ATI Allvac 718Plus

    ADVANCED ENGINEERING MATERIALS, Issue 3 2010
    Gerald A. Zickler
    Abstract ATI Allvac 718Plus is a novel nickel-based superalloy, which was designed for heavy-duty applications in aerospace gas turbines. The precipitation kinetics of the intermetallic , (Ni3Nb) and ,, (Ni3(Al,Ti)) phases in this alloy are of scientific as well as technological interest because of their significant influence on the mechanical properties. Important parameters like grain size are controlled by coarse , precipitates located at grain boundaries, whereas small ,, precipitates are responsible for strengthening by precipitation hardening. In the present study, the microstructure is investigated by three-dimensional atom probe tomography and simulated by computer modeling using the thermo-kinetic software MatCalc. The results of numerical simulations and experimental data are compared and critically discussed. It is shown that the chemical compositions of the phases change during isothermal aging, and the precipitation kinetics of , and ,, phases interact with each other as shown in a time temperature precipitation (TTP) plot. The TTP plot shows C-shaped curves with characteristic discontinuities in the temperature range, where simultaneous and concurrent precipitation of the , and ,, phases occurs. This leads to a competition in the diffusion of Nb and Al, which are partly present in both phases. Thus, the present study gives important information on heat treatments for ATI Allvac 718Plus in order to achieve the desired microstructure and mechanical properties. [source]


    The historic man-made soils of the Generalife garden (La Alhambra, Granada, Spain)

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOIL SCIENCE, Issue 1 2007
    R. Delgado
    Summary We studied the soils of the Patio de la Acequia garden of the Generalife, a palatial villa forming part of La Alhambra, a World Heritage Site in Granada, Spain. This garden, which is estimated to be around 700 years old, is the oldest historical garden in the Western World. The soils are man-made cumulimollihumic-calcaric (hypereutric, anthric) Regosols. Noteworthy amongst the main pedogenic processes, in relation to the human activities of cultivation, irrigation and tillage, are horizonation, melanization (the contents of organic carbon varied between 0.59% and 8.87%, and those of P205 extracted with citric acid between 723 mg kg,1 and 7333 mg kg,1, with maximae in the Ap horizons) and structure formation. The soil fabric, studied at the ultramicroscopic level using scanning electron microscopy, is of laminar and partition-walls' type in the lower horizons, depending on the microped zones. The partition-walls' fabrics found are different to those of the possible pre-existing sedimentary fabrics. These are numerous lithological discontinuities and at least two burials, leading us to deduce that there have been two main stages of filling with materials in the formation of these soils. The first is Arabic-Medieval (13th century), when the garden was created, its surface being some 50 cm below the level of the paved area of the present patio. In the deeper parts, the materials employed in the fill are similar to the in situ soils of the zone, unaffected by the buildings. The second stage is Christian (15th century to the present day). During this period the Medieval garden was gradually buried under a layer of materials from the nearby soils and/or sediments mixed with manure until the surface was only just below the level of the paved area of the patio. In this work we discuss the difficult classification of these relatively little studied soils. In spite of their being clearly related to human activity, they are not classified as Anthrosols in the FAO system (1998) because soil materials cannot be classified as anthropopedogenic or as anthropogeomorphic. [source]


    Development and evolution of adaptive polyphenisms

    EVOLUTION AND DEVELOPMENT, Issue 1 2003
    H. Frederik Nijhout
    SUMMARY Phenotypic plasticity is the primitive character state for most if not all traits. Insofar as developmental and physiological processes obey the laws of chemistry and physics, they will be sensitive to such environmental variables as temperature, nutrient supply, ionic environment, and the availability of various macro- and micronutrients. Depending on the effect this phenotypic plasticity has on fitness, evolution may proceed to select either for mechanisms that buffer or canalize the phenotype against relevant environmental variation or for a modified plastic response in which some ranges of the phenotypic variation are adaptive to particular environments. Phenotypic plasticity can be continuous, in which case it is called a reaction norm, or discontinuous, in which case it is called a polyphenism. Although the morphological discontinuity of some polyphenisms is produced by discrete developmental switches, most polyphenisms are due to discontinuities in the environment that induce only portions of what is in reality a continuous reaction norm. In insect polyphenisms, the environmental variable that induces the alternative phenotype is a token stimulus that serves as a predictor of, but is not itself, the environment to which the polyphenism is an adaptation. In all cases studied so far, the environmental stimulus alters the endocrine mechanism of metamorphosis by altering either the pattern of hormone secretion or the pattern of hormone sensitivity in different tissues. Such changes in the patterns of endocrine interactions result in the execution of alternative developmental pathways. The spatial and temporal compartmentalization of endocrine interactions has produced a developmental mechanism that enables substantial localized changes in morphology that remain well integrated into the structure and function of the organism. [source]


    Geoarchaeology of Tonga: Geotectonic and geomorphic controls

    GEOARCHAEOLOGY: AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL, Issue 2 2007
    William R. Dickinson
    Ancient settlement patterns in central Tonga, at the southeastern limit of Lapita expansion into Remote Oceania ,3 ka, were conditioned by island geomorphology as controlled by spatial geotectonic features and temporal changes in relative sea level on island coasts. Volcanic islands provided lithic resources, but human populations were concentrated on nonvolcanic forearc islands underlain by limestone covered by airfall tephra blankets that weathered to form rich agricultural soils and eroded to provide terrigenous sand for ceramic temper. The forearc islands lie along the Tonga platform, a linear tract of shoals uplifted diachronously by subduction of the buoyant Louisville Ridge at the Tonga Trench. Multiple transverse structural discontinuities break the forearc into discrete structural blocks, some tectonically stable during late Holocene time but others undergoing postuplift subsidence. Understanding the paleoenvironmental settings of Tongan archaeological sites requires reconstructing the contrasting geologic histories of different forearc island clusters. © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [source]


    The effects of taxation on put-call parity

    ACCOUNTING & FINANCE, Issue 3 2009
    Karen Alpert
    G13 Abstract Share and option transactions are taxed differently, which means that the after-tax cash flows used to establish put-call parity will differ depending on which option is exercised. This paper derives the after-tax put-call parity relationship for European and American options with or without dividends. Using Australian data for the period July 1999 to June 2002, the after-tax put-call parity relationship explains 88.3 per cent of no-tax lower boundary violations and 78.8 per cent of no-tax upper boundary violations. The violation are larger for more thinly traded securities, providing some evidence that traders are able to profit from the tax discontinuities that affect investors in options. [source]


    Imaging the lowermost mantle (D,) and the core,mantle boundary with SKKS coda waves

    GEOPHYSICAL JOURNAL INTERNATIONAL, Issue 1 2008
    Ping Wang
    SUMMARY In our previous studies we developed a method for imaging heterogeneity at and near the core,mantle boundary (CMB) with a generalized Radon transform (GRT) of (transverse component, broad-band) ScS data, and we developed a statistical model for producing images of the D, discontinuity with variable confidence levels. In these applications, the background is smooth and perturbations are represented as contrasts. Here we extend the theory to allow (known) discontinuities, such as the CMB, in the background model. The resulting imaging operator, which is formally not a GRT, can be used, either alone or along with ScS, for the imaging of lowermost mantle structure and, in particular, the D, discontinuity with the scattered SKKS wavefield. Synthetic seismograms calculated with the WKBJ method are used to test the performance of our approach. As a proof of concept, we transform ,38 000 radial component SKKS waveforms into image gathers of a CMB patch beneath Central America. The SKKS image gathers and image traces are in good agreement with the image traces obtained from the GRT transform of ScS data. [source]


    Spectral-element simulations of wave propagation in porous media

    GEOPHYSICAL JOURNAL INTERNATIONAL, Issue 1 2008
    Christina Morency
    SUMMARY We present a derivation of the equations describing wave propagation in porous media based upon an averaging technique which accommodates the transition from the microscopic to the macroscopic scale. We demonstrate that the governing macroscopic equations determined by Biot remain valid for media with gradients in porosity. In such media, the well-known expression for the change in porosity, or the change in the fluid content of the pores, acquires two extra terms involving the porosity gradient. One fundamental result of Biot's theory is the prediction of a second compressional wave, often referred to as ,type II' or ,Biot's slow compressional wave', in addition to the classical fast compressional and shear waves. We present a numerical implementation of the Biot equations for 2-D problems based upon the spectral-element method (SEM) that clearly illustrates the existence of these three types of waves as well as their interactions at discontinuities. As in the elastic and acoustic cases, poroelastic wave propagation based upon the SEM involves a diagonal mass matrix, which leads to explicit time integration schemes that are well suited to simulations on parallel computers. Effects associated with physical dispersion and attenuation and frequency-dependent viscous resistance are accommodated based upon a memory variable approach. We perform various benchmarks involving poroelastic wave propagation and acoustic,poroelastic and poroelastic,poroelastic discontinuities, and we discuss the boundary conditions used to deal with these discontinuities based upon domain decomposition. We show potential applications of the method related to wave propagation in compacted sediments, as one encounters in the petroleum industry, and to detect the seismic signature of buried landmines and unexploded ordnance. [source]


    Body-wave traveltime and amplitude shifts from asymptotic travelling wave coupling

    GEOPHYSICAL JOURNAL INTERNATIONAL, Issue 2 2006
    F. Pollitz
    SUMMARY We explore the sensitivity of finite-frequency body-wave traveltimes and amplitudes to perturbations in 3-D seismic velocity structure relative to a spherically symmetric model. Using the approach of coupled travelling wave theory, we consider the effect of a structural perturbation on an isolated portion of the seismogram. By convolving the spectrum of the differential seismogram with the spectrum of a narrow window taper, and using a Taylor's series expansion for wavenumber as a function of frequency on a mode dispersion branch, we derive semi-analytic expressions for the sensitivity kernels. Far-field effects of wave interactions with the free surface or internal discontinuities are implicitly included, as are wave conversions upon scattering. The kernels may be computed rapidly for the purpose of structural inversions. We give examples of traveltime sensitivity kernels for regional wave propagation at 1 Hz. For the direct SV wave in a simple crustal velocity model, they are generally complicated because of interfering waves generated by interactions with the free surface and the Mohorovi,i, discontinuity. A large part of the interference effects may be eliminated by restricting the travelling wave basis set to those waves within a certain range of horizontal phase velocity. [source]


    A practical grid-based method for tracking multiple refraction and reflection phases in three-dimensional heterogeneous media

    GEOPHYSICAL JOURNAL INTERNATIONAL, Issue 1 2006
    M. De Kool
    SUMMARY We present a practical grid-based method in 3-D spherical coordinates for computing multiple phases comprising any number of reflection and transmission branches in heterogeneous layered media. The new scheme is based on a multistage approach which treats each layer that the wave front enters as a separate computational domain. A finite-difference eikonal solver known as the fast-marching method (FMM) is reinitialized at each interface to track the evolving wave front as either a reflection back into the incident layer or a transmission through to the adjacent layer. Unlike the standard FMM, which only finds first arrivals, this multistage approach can track those later arriving phases explicitly caused by the presence of discontinuities. Notably, the method does not require an irregular mesh to be constructed in order to connect interface nodes to neighbouring velocity nodes which lie on a regular grid. To improve accuracy, local grid refinement is used in the neighbourhood of a source point where wave front curvature is high. The method also provides a way to trace reflections from an interface that are not the first arrival (e.g. the global PP phase). These are computed by initializing the multistage FMM from both the source and receiver, propagating the two wave fronts to the reflecting interface, and finding stationary points of the sum of the two traveltime fields on the reflecting interface. A series of examples are presented to test the efficiency, accuracy and robustness of the new scheme. As well as efficiently computing various global phases to an acceptable accuracy through the ak135 model, we also demonstrate the ability of the scheme to track complex crustal phases that may be encountered in coincident reflection, wide-angle reflection/refraction or local earthquake surveys. In one example, a variety of phases are computed in the presence of a realistic subduction zone, which includes several layer pinch-outs and a subducting slab. Our numerical tests show that the new scheme is a practical and robust alternative to conventional ray tracing for finding various phases in layered media at a variety of scales. [source]


    Seismic singularities at upper-mantle phase transitions: a site percolation model

    GEOPHYSICAL JOURNAL INTERNATIONAL, Issue 3 2004
    Felix J. Herrmann
    SUMMARY Mineralogical phase transitions are usually invoked to account for the sharpness of globally observed upper-mantle seismic discontinuities. We propose a percolation-based model for the elastic properties of the phase mixture in the coexistence regions associated with these transitions. The major consequence of the model is that the elastic moduli (but not the density) display a singularity at the percolation threshold of the high-pressure phase. This model not only explains the sharp but continuous change in seismic velocities across the phase transition, but also predicts its abruptness and scale invariance, which are characterized by a non-integral scale exponent. Using the receiver-function approach and new, powerful signal-processing techniques, we quantitatively determine the singularity exponent from recordings of converted seismic waves at two Australian stations (CAN and WRAB). Using the estimated values, we construct velocity,depth profiles across the singularities and verify that the calculated converted waveforms match the observations under CAN. Finally, we point out a series of additional predictions that may provide new insights into the physics and fine structure of the upper-mantle transition zone. [source]