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Section Analysis (section + analysis)
Selected AbstractsDEVONIAN CARBONATES OF THE NIGEL PEAK AREA, ROCKY MOUNTAINS, CANADA: A FOSSIL PETROLEUM SYSTEM?JOURNAL OF PETROLEUM GEOLOGY, Issue 3 2008J. Köster In this study we report on Devonian (Frasnian , Famennian) limestones and dolostones exposed near Nigel Peak in the Main Ranges of the Canadian Rocky Mountains. These carbonates are a proximal facies of the Southesk-Cairn Carbonate Complex. The investigated strata are stratigraphically equivalent to the oil- and gas bearing Nisku Formation in the subsurface of the Western Canada Sedimentary Basin, about 300 km to the east. The rocks were investigated by polarisation and cathodoluminescence microscopy, total organic carbon analysis, Rock-Eval pyrolysis, solid bitumen reflectance measurements, gas chromatography and fluid inclusion analysis. Thin section analyses showed that silt-grade quartz and saddle dolomite increase upward from the base of the stratigraphic section, and that porosities are generally low. This is due to reduction of pore space due to early cementation and extensive dolomitization. Cathodoluminescence identified up to four generations of calcite cements. TOC values ranged from 0.2 to 2.4 %. Rock-Eval pyrolysis of carbonate samples resulted in measurable S1 peaks but not S2 peaks, indicating that there was no residual petroleum generation potential. Organic petrographic analyses identified dispersed kerogen and migrabitumen, and calculated vitrinite reflectance values were around 4 % on average which implies peak temperatures of 234,262 °C (due to deep burial) or 309,352 °C (due to short term hydrothermal heating). Fluid inclusion data indicates at least one pulse of hot fluids with elevated homogenization temperatures of > 300 °C, and this may explain the high thermal maturity of the studied rocks. [source] The frequency of compound chondrules and implications for chondrule formationMETEORITICS & PLANETARY SCIENCE, Issue 4 2004Fred J. Ciesla Formulae to calculate the probability of detecting compound chondrules in thin sections are derived and applied to previous studies. This reinterpretation suggests that at least 5% of chondrules are compounds, a value that agrees well with studies in which whole chondrules were removed from meteorites. The observation that adhering compounds tend to have small contact arcs is strengthened by application of these formulae. While it has been observed that the secondaries of compound chondrules are usually smaller than their primaries, these same formulae suggest that this could be an observation bias. It is more likely than not that thin section analyses will identify compounds with secondaries that are smaller than their primaries. A new model for chondrule collisional evolution is also developed. From this model, it is inferred that chondrules would have formed, on average, in areas of the solar nebula that had solids concentrated at least 45 times over the canonical solar value. [source] Rights, review, and spending: Policy outcomes with judicially enforceable rightsEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF POLITICAL RESEARCH, Issue 1 2001AMY K. MÄKINEN This paper posits that countries with a constitutional right to social security that can be enforced by courts via judicial review will show patterns of spending on social security that are distinct from countries with other constitutional and judicial arrangements. Governments in countries with enforceable rights will be constrained to spend more on transfer programs to avoid censure from the courts. The hypotheses are tested using data from 22 OECD countries using time,series cross,section analysis. The results show that enforceable rights are associated with higher growth rates in social security spending and lower fluctuation in expenditures on social programs, although the amount of GDP spent on social transfers is unaffected by rights. These results are consistent with the idea that governments' spending habits are constrained by positive rights, but rebut the argument that rights lead to economic distortions. [source] Intraoperative frozen section examination of axillary sentinel lymph nodes in breast cancer,APMIS, Issue 1 2005D. A. GRABAU The study presents the results from intraoperative frozen section assessment of axillary sentinel lymph nodes (SLNs) in breast cancer. Routine histological frozen sections from one level were used, two sections stained with haematoxylin and eosin. Immunohistochemistry for cytokeratins was applied to the permanent SLN paraffin sections only. Axillary dissection was performed on all SLN-positive cases regardless of the size of the metastatic deposits. With a detection rate of 83%, 272 patients entered the study over a period of 46 months. A total of 61 cases were SLN positive by frozen section analysis. The paraffin sections gave an additional 23 SLN-positive cases. The false-negative rate for frozen sections was then 27% (23/84). Micrometastases were found in 28 of 84 cases, and macrometastases in 56. The false-negative rate of frozen sections for micrometastases was 71% (20/28), and for macrometastases 5% (3/56). A total of 73% (61/84) of the patients underwent axillary surgery as a one-step procedure. [source] Study of tumor cell invasion by Fourier transform infrared microspectroscopyBIOPOLYMERS, Issue 6 2005Ying Yang Abstract Lung cancer is usually fatal once it becomes metastatic. However, in order to develop metastases, a tumor usually invades the basal membrane and enters the vascular or lymphatic system. In this study, a three-dimensional artificial membrane using collagen type I, one of the main components of basal membranes, was established in order to investigate tumor cell invasion. Lung cancer cell line CALU-1 was seeded on this artificial membrane and cell invasion was studied using the Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) imaging technique. This approach allowed identification of tumor cells invading the collagen type I membrane by means of their infrared spectra and images. The mapping images obtained with FTIR microspectroscopy were validated with standard histological section analysis. The FTIR image produced using a single wavenumber at 1080 cm,1, corresponding to PO groups in DNA from cells, correlated well with the histological section, which clearly revealed a cell layer and invading cells within the membrane. Furthermore, the peaks corresponding to amide A, I, and II in the spectra of the invading cells shifted compared to the noninvading cells, which may relate to the changes in conformation and/or heterogeneity in the phenotype of the cells. The data presented in this study demonstrate that FTIR microspectroscopy can be a fast and reliable technique to assess tumor invasion in vitro. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 78: 311,317, 2005 This article was originally published online as an accepted preprint. The "Published Online" date corresponds to the preprint version. You can request a copy of the preprint by emailing the Biopolymers editorial office at biopolymers@wiley.com [source] Alterations of intraretinal layers in acute central serous chorioretinopathyACTA OPHTHALMOLOGICA, Issue 5 2009Christian Ahlers Abstract. Purpose:, Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is restricted by its low scanning speed and limited resolution. High-definition raster-scanning OCT (HD-OCT) was used to evaluate changes in retinal microstructure in patients with acute central serous chorioretinopathy (CSCR) and to find new morphological features. Methods:, Eighteen patients with subretinal fluid accumulation caused by acute CSCR were imaged in a cross-sectional study design. High-speed frequency-domain HD-OCT was used to image an area of 6 × 6 mm in the macular retina. Three-dimensional analyses were performed using en-face imaging and section analysis of single HD-OCT scans. Results:, Detailed information about fluid accumulation can be obtained in all compartments. Discrete changes in reflectivity are visualized within the outer nuclear or plexiform layers in > 90% of patients. Subretinal fluid appears as a dome-shaped pool of fluid and is not associated with a loss of photoreceptor layer integrity. Deposits are demarcated beneath the outer cone segments. Multiple small pigment epithelial detachments are present in > 60% of patients. Conclusions:, High-definition OCT provides extensive information regarding precise topographic and layer-specific localization of discrete morphological changes. Along with well-known changes in the retinal microstructure, hyper-reflectivity can be imaged in the outer nuclear or plexiform layers and may represent intraretinal changes indicating the presence of subretinal pathologies or retinal maladjustment caused by the underlying pathology. [source] |