Search Results - (Author, Cooperation:S. E. Johnson)
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1C. Schwitzer ; L. Chikhi ; G. Donati ; M. Irwin ; S. E. Johnson ; R. A. Mittermeier ; H. Peacock ; J. Ratsimbazafy ; J. Razafindramanana ; E. E. Louis, Jr. ; I. C. Colquhoun ; J. Tinsman ; R. Dolch ; M. Lafleur ; S. Nash ; E. Patel ; B. Randrianambinina ; T. Rasolofoharivelo ; P. C. Wright
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
Published 2014Staff ViewPublication Date: 2014-04-26Publisher: American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)Print ISSN: 0036-8075Electronic ISSN: 1095-9203Topics: BiologyChemistry and PharmacologyComputer ScienceMedicineNatural Sciences in GeneralPhysicsKeywords: Animals ; *Endangered Species ; *Extinction, Biological ; *Lemur ; MalePublished by: -
2C. Schwitzer ; R. A. Mittermeier ; S. E. Johnson ; G. Donati ; M. Irwin ; H. Peacock ; J. Ratsimbazafy ; J. Razafindramanana ; E. E. Louis, Jr. ; L. Chikhi ; I. C. Colquhoun ; J. Tinsman ; R. Dolch ; M. LaFleur ; S. Nash ; E. Patel ; B. Randrianambinina ; T. Rasolofoharivelo ; P. C. Wright
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
Published 2014Staff ViewPublication Date: 2014-02-22Publisher: American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)Print ISSN: 0036-8075Electronic ISSN: 1095-9203Topics: BiologyChemistry and PharmacologyComputer ScienceMedicineNatural Sciences in GeneralPhysicsKeywords: Animals ; *Endangered Species ; *Extinction, Biological ; *Lemur ; Madagascar ; Male ; RiskPublished by: -
3Staff View
ISSN: 1525-1314Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005Topics: GeosciencesNotes: Oppositely concave microfolds (OCMs) in and adjacent to porphyroblasts can be classified into five nongenetic types. Type 1 OCMs are found in sections through porphyroblasts with spiral-shaped inclusion trails cut parallel to the spiral axes, and commonly show closed foliation loops. Type 2 OCMs, commonly referred to as ‘millipede’ microstructure, are highly symmetrical, the foliation folded into OCMs being approximately perpendicular to the overprinting foliation. Type 3 OCMs are similar to Type 2, but are asymmetrical, the foliation folded into OCMs being variably oblique to the overprinting foliation. Type 4 OCMs are highly asymmetrical, only one foliation is present, and this foliation is parallel to the local shear plane. Type 5 OCMs result from porphyroblast growth over a microfold interference pattern.Types 1 and 2 are commonly interpreted as indicating highly noncoaxial and highly coaxial bulk deformation paths, respectively, during porphyroblast growth. However, theoretically they can form by any deformation path intermediate between bulk coaxial shortening and bulk simple shearing. Given particular initial foliation orientation and timing of porphyroblast growth, Type 3 OCMs can also form during these intermediate deformation paths, and are commonly found in the same rocks as Type 2 OCMs. Type 4 OCMs may indicate highly noncoaxial deformation during porphyroblast growth, but may be difficult to distinguish from Type 3 OCMs. Thus, Types 1–3 (and possibly 4) reflect the finite strain state, giving no information about the rotational component of the deformation(s) responsible for their formation. Furthermore, there is a lack of unequivocal independent evidence for the degree of noncoaxiality of deformation (s) during the growth of porphyroblasts containing OCMs. Type 2 OCMs that occur independently of porphyroblasts or other rigid objects might indicate highly coaxial bulk shortening, but there is a lack of supporting physical or computer modelling.It is possible that microstructures in the matrix around OCMs formed during highly noncoaxial and highly coaxial deformation histories might have specific characteristics that allow them to be distinguished from one another. However, determining degrees of noncoaxiality from rock fabrics is a major, longstanding problem in structural geology.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
4Staff View
ISSN: 1525-1314Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005Topics: GeosciencesNotes: Abstract Low-pressure/high-temperature (low-P/high-T) metamorphic rocks of the Cooma Complex, southeastern Australia, show evidence of an anticlockwise pressure-temperature-time-deformation (P-T-t-D) path, similar to those of some other low-P/high-T metamorphic areas of Australia. Prograde paths are reasonably well constrained in cordierite-andalusite schists, cordierite-K-feldspar gneisses and andalusite-K-feldspar gneisses. These paths are inferred to be convex to the temperature axis, involving increase in pressure with increase in temperature. Evidence of the retrograde path is inconclusive, but is consistent with approximately isobaric cooling, as are available isotopic data on the Cooma Granodiorite, which indicate initially rapid cooling following attainment of peak temperatures. The retrograde path is inconsistent with either a clockwise P-T-t-D path involving rapid or even moderate decompression immediately post-dating the peak of metamorphism, or a path in which the retrograde component simply reverses the prograde component, because both these paths should cross reactions forming cordierite from aluminosilicate, for which no evidence has been observed.Determination of the deformational-metamorphic history of the complex is not straightfoward and depends on careful examination of critical samples. Evidence necessary for successful elucidation of the prograde, and part of the retrograde, deformational-metamorphic history in the Cooma Complex includes: (1) sequentially grown porphyroblasts that can be timed relative to surrounding foliations; (2) partial replacement microstructures providing relative timing of metamorphic reactions that cannot be timed relative to foliation development; (3) a tectonic marker foliation (S4 at Cooma) that allows correlation of foliations from one location to another; and (4) single samples containing all of the foliations and all generations of porphyroblast growth within a single metamorphic zone. The latest two or three foliations involve low strain accumulation, allowing relative timing relationships between foliations and porphyroblasts to be more clearly determined.Sequential porphyroblast growth and foliation development in the cordierite-andalusite schists is examined for situations involving rotation and non-rotation of porphyroblasts relative to geographically fixed coordinates. Although the number of foliations developed varies in the rotational situation, depending on the deformation history proposed, the sequential order of porphyroblast growths does not differ from the non-rotational situation. Thus, whether or not porphyroblasts rotated in the Cooma rocks, the sequence of reactions, and therefore P-T-t paths inferred from the relative timing of porphyroblast growths, remain the same, for the deformational histories evaluated.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
5Staff View
ISSN: 1525-1314Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005Topics: GeosciencesNotes: Abstract The formation of spiral-shaped inclusion trails (SSITs) is problematical, and the two viable models for their formation involve opposite shear senses along the foliation in which the porphyroblasts are growing. One model argues for porphyroblast rotation, with respect to a geographically fixed reference frame, whereas the other argues for no such porphyroblast rotation, but instead rotation of the matrix foliation around the porphyroblast. Thus, porphyroblasts with SSITs cannot be used as shear-sense indicators until it is conclusively determined which model best explains them.Any successful model must explain features associated with SSITs, including: (1) foliation truncation zones, (2) smoothly curving SSITs, (3) millipede microstructure, (4) total inclusion-trail curvature in median sections, (5) porphyroblasts with SSITs that have grown together, (6) evidence for relative porphyroblast displacements, (7) shear-sense indicators inside and outside porphyroblasts; (8) crenulations associated with porphyroblasts and (9) geometries in sections subparallel to spiral axes (axes of rotation). A detailed study of these features suggests that most, if not all, can be explained by both the rotational and non-rotational models, in spite of these models involving diametrically opposed movement senses. Therefore, geometrical analysis of individual porphyroblast microstructures may not determine which model best explains SSITs until the kinematics required to form these microstructures are better understood, in particular the sense of shear along a developing crenulation cleavage. Specific tests for determining the shear sense along crenulation cleavages are proposed, and results of such tests may conclusively resolve the debate over how SSITs form.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
6Staff View
ISSN: 1525-1314Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005Topics: GeosciencesNotes: Seventy-five spatially orientated, serial thin sections cut from a single rock containing ‘millipede’ porphyroblast microstructure from the Robertson River Metamorphics, Australia, reveal the three-dimensional (3-D) geometry of oppositely concave microfolds (OCMs) that define the microstructure. Electronic animations showing progressive serial sections of the 3-D microstructure are made available via the World Wide Web. The OCM amplitudes decrease regularly from a maximum in near-central sections to a minimum in near-marginal sections, whereas the OCM interlimb angles increase regularly from a minimum in near-central sections to a maximum in near-marginal sections. These observations illustrate that the OCMs are noncylindrical surfaces with culminations located in near-central sections. Because the porphyroblast cores appear to have been present before significant development of the syn-OCM foliation, all of the OCMs were formed by heterogeneous extension around these cores. The overall geometry of the OCMs described here reflects the strain state, and cannot be used to constrain deformation paths.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
7Staff View
ISSN: 1525-1314Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005Topics: GeosciencesNotes: Investigation of microstructural relationships in major movement zones in metamorphic rocks, where the sense of displacement is known from regional geological relationships, indicates numerous problems with current concepts of shear-sense criteria and their application. The direction of apparent shearing commonly conflicts from one criterion to another (e.g. from the symmetry of quartz c-axis orientation diagrams to the asymmetry of extensional crenulation cleavages). This implies that interpretations of shear sense along foliations from some mesoscale and microscale criteria have been erroneous.A new approach to interpreting shear sense, involving the use of strain fields, resolves conflicts in mesoscopic and microscopic criteria and provides a method for determining coherent shear-sense histories extending back before the last shearing event for ‘any foliated metamorphic rock’. It also provides a powerful tool for determining the structural/metamorphic path that a rock has followed within an orogen. For determination of the shear sense on the last foliation developed in a rock, this approach uses geometries developed around competent heterogeneities such as quartz pebbles, pegmatite pods, veins, porphyroclasts, porphyroblasts and breccia clasts. A shear-sense history is derived by applying this approach to earlier foliations preserved within the heterogeneities and their strain shadows.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
8Staff View
ISSN: 1525-1314Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005Topics: GeosciencesNotes: Detailed microstructural analysis of inclusion trails in hundreds of garnet porphyroblasts from rocks where spiral-shaped inclusion trails are common indicates that spiral-shaped trails did not form by rotation of the growing porphyroblasts relative to geographic coordinates. They formed instead by progressive growth by porphyroblasts over several sets of near-orthogonal foliations that successively overprint one another. The orientations of these near-orthogonal foliations are alternately near-vertical and near-horizontal in all porphyroblasts examined. This provides very strong evidence for lack of porphyroblast rotation.The deformation path recorded by these porphyroblasts indicates that the process of orogenesis involves a multiply repeated two-stage cycle of: (1) crustal shortening and thickening, with the development of a near-vertical foliation with a steep stretching lineation; followed by (2) gravitational instability and collapse of this uplifted pile with the development of a near-horizontal foliation, gravitational spreading, near-coaxial vertical shortening and consequent thrusting on the orogen margins. Correlation of inclusion trail overprinting relationships and asymmetry in porphyroblasts with foliation overprinting relationships observed in the field allows determination of where the rocks studied lie and have moved within an orogen. This information, combined with information about chemical zoning in porphyroblasts, provides details about the structural/metamorphic (P-T-t) paths the rocks have followed.The ductile deformation environment in which a porphyroblast can rotate relative to geographic coordinates during orogenesis is spatially restricted in continental crust to vertical, ductile tear/transcurrent faults across which there is no component of bulk shortening or transpression.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
9Staff View
ISSN: 1525-1314Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005Topics: GeosciencesNotes: In the Woodroffe Thrust mylonite zone, central Australia, recrystallization in plagioclase and K-feldspar involved subgrain rotation, assisted by grain-boundary or kink band boundary bulging, without contribution from a change in the chemical composition from host grains to new grains. The size of subgrains and new grains changes across the mylonite zone, apparently as a function of the strain rate and the H2O content of the rock.The partitioning of deformation into zones of progressive shearing and progressive shortening controls the sites of recovery and recrystallization in feldspar during mylonitization. The size of feldspar porphyroclasts in well developed mylonites is governed by the scale of deformation partitioning reached in the earlier stages of mylonitization, before the formation of a large proportion of fine-grained matrix that can accommodate the progressive shearing component of the deformation.Recrystallization occurs in microcline, apparently without involving a translation to a monoclinic structure, as microcline-twinned new grains are common adjacent to microcline-twinned host grains. K-feldspar triclinicity values calculated from XRD traces increase from the margins to the interior of the mylonite zone, in conjunction with deformation intensity. K-feldspar host grains locally have cores of orthoclase or untwinned microcline, surrounded by mantles of twinned microcline, suggesting a relationship between the presence of microcline twinning and the degree of K-feldspar triclinicity.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
10Staff View
ISSN: 1525-1314Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005Topics: GeosciencesNotes: Abstract Seventy-seven spatially orientated, serial thin sections cut from a single rock reveal changes in the geometry of spiral-shaped inclusion trails (SSITs) in garnet porphyroblasts. The observed SSITs are doubly curved, non-cylindrical surfaces, with total inclusion-trail curvature decreasing systematically from the cores to the rims of porphyroblasts. The three-dimensional geometry of the SSITs, reconstructed with the aid of computer graphics, shows that the orientations of spiral axes defined by the SSITs are not related in any expected nor predictable way to the main foliation in the matrix. This suggests continued deformation after or during the latest stages of porphyroblast growth, which has important implications for the use of SSITs as shear-sense indicators. Whether the formation of SSITs involves significant porphyroblast rotation with respect to a geographically fixed reference frame cannot be determined from the available data.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
11Staff View
ISSN: 1525-1314Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005Topics: GeosciencesNotes: Porphyroblasts of garnet and plagioclase in the Otago schists have not rotated relative to geographic coordinates during non-coaxial deformation that post-dates their growth. Inclusion trails in most of the porphyroblasts are oriented near-vertical and near-horizontal, and the strike of near-vertical inclusion trails is consistent over 3000 km2. Microstructural relationships indicate that the porphyroblasts grew in zones of progressive shortening strain, and that the sense of shear affecting the geometry of porphyroblast inclusion trails on the long limbs of folds is the same as the bulk sense of displacement of fold closures. This is contrary to the sense of shear inferred when porphyroblasts are interpreted as having rotated during folding.Several crenulation cleavage/fold models have previously been developed to accommodate the apparent sense of rotation of porphyroblasts that grew during folding. In the light of accumulating evidence that porphyroblasts do not generally rotate, the applicability of these models to deformed rocks is questionable.Whether or not porphyroblasts rotate depends on how deformation is partitioned. Lack of rotation requires that progressive shearing strain (rotational deformation) be partitioned around rigid heterogeneities, such as porphyroblasts, which occupy zones of progressive shortening or no strain (non-rotational deformation). Therefore, processes operating at the porphyroblast/matrix boundary are important considerations. Five qualitative models are presented that accommodate stress and strain energy at the boundary without rotating the porphyroblast: (a) a thin layer of fluid at the porphyroblast boundary; (2) grain-boundary sliding; (3) a locked porphyroblast/matrix boundary; (4) dissolution at the porphyroblast/matrix boundary, and (5) an ellipsoidal porphyroblast/shadow unit.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
12BELL, T. H. ; JOHNSON, S. E. ; DAVIS, B. ; FORDE, A. ; HAYWARD, N. ; WILKINS, C.
Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Published 1992Staff ViewISSN: 1525-1314Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005Topics: GeosciencesNotes: Extensive examination of large numbers of spatially orientated thin sections of orientated samples from orogens of all ages around the world has demonstrated that porphyroblasts do not rotate relative to geographical coordinates during highly non-coaxial ductile deformation of the matrix subsequent to their growth. This has been demonstrated for all tectonic environments so far investigated. The work also has provided new insights and data on metamorphic, structural and tectonic processes including: (1) the intimate control of deformation partitioning on metamorphic reactions; (2) solutions to the lack of correlation between lineations that indicate the direction of movement within thrusts and shear zones, and relative plate motion; and (3) a possible technique for determining the direction of relative plate motion that caused orogenesis in ancient orogens.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
13Staff View
ISSN: 1432-1254Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000Topics: GeographyPhysicsNotes: Abstract Organisms of intertidal regions experience climatological factors of marine and non-marine origin. Ecological studies indicate that climatological factors of non-marine origin are of primary importance in determining the distribution and abundance of the gammarid amphipodOligochinus lighti as shown by a decrease in population density with increasing height in the intertidal and a decrease in the population density accompanying seasonal increases in exposure to non-marine climatic conditions. Non-marine climatic factors affectingOligochinus are changes in temperature, salinity or moisture content in the algal clump inhabited by the amphipod. The microclimate of the algal clump depends upon its position in the intertidal and on how its form modifies the climatic conditions occurring during exposure. The algal microclimate is related in a complex fashion to seasonal changes in the coastal macroclimate mediated by the irregular semidiurnal tidal cycles of the region. A regression model has been developed to predict population changes on the basis of climatic factors.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
14Staff View
ISSN: 1432-1351Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000Topics: BiologyMedicineNotes: Summary The transplantation of appendages from one place to another on the body of crickets (Acheta domesticus) has been used to study the similarities and differences between the sensory systems of various ganglia. Mesothoracic legs have been transplanted to the abdomen in place of a cercus and cerci have been transplanted to thoracic leg stumps. After the ectopic sensory neurons had time to regenerate into the CNS, they were stained and their axonal arborizations examined. The results, which were concerned primarily with bristle receptors, revealed that bristle afferents on ectopic cerci arborized in ventral neuropil (the ventralmost association center) and leg afferents arborized in a ventral anterior region of the terminal abdominal ganglion. The results support the idea that each ganglion contains only a few distinct regions of neuropil (probably three), each receiving separate subsets of the afferent projection. The ectopic cerci were also shown to excite interneurons in the thoracic ganglia whose dendrites were located in the most ventral neuropil. These neurons normally respond to thoracic bristle afferents. Thus, the segregation of afferent axons has a correlate in the interneurons they excite.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
15Staff View
ISSN: 1432-1351Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000Topics: BiologyMedicineNotes: Summary One of the sensory systems of the thoracic segments of the cricket,Acheta domesticus, was investigated by using cobalt to stain the axonal arborizations of bristles of various types and locations. The results demonstrate that a variety of hair-like receptors project to the ventral areas of thoracic neuropil previously called ventral association center (VAC) and ventralmost ventral association center (vVAC). Bristles located on the dorsal thorax or wings arborize in or near VAC, while those on the ventral thorax and legs arborize in vVAC. Within the area of neuropil occupied by thoracic bristle afferents, the axonal arborizations are distributed according to the position of the parent receptor at the body surface; thus, medial afferents arborize medially and lateral ones more laterally. For leg afferents, the location of the axonal arborization is also correlated with the various leg segments of origin of the parent receptor and its circumferential location on that segment (Fig. 9).Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
16Meaden, G ; Partridge, P. G ; Johnson, S. E ; Lade, R. J ; Nicholson, E. D ; Ashfold, M. N. R
Springer
Published 1997Staff ViewISSN: 1573-4803Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000Topics: Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision MechanicsNotes: Abstract Excimer laser radiation (XeCl, λ=308 nm and ArF, λ=193 nm) has been used both to cut chemical vapour-deposited diamond-coated tungsten wires (diamond fibres) of diameter ≤200 μm and to smooth and profile the diamond surface. The effects of ablation and localized heating in the focal volume on the diamond and the tungsten core are described, and compared with results obtained for a Nd:YAG laser. The laser fluence and/or intensity, beam homogeneity and angle of incidence were identified as key parameters in ultraviolet laser-induced ablation of diamond-coated wires and fibres. Surface smoothing may lead to increase fibre strength.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
17Johnson, S. E. ; Moore, S. S. ; MacKinnon, R. ; Hetzel, D. J. S. ; Barendse, W.
Springer
Published 1995Staff ViewISSN: 1432-1777Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000Topics: BiologyMedicineNotes: Abstract The cosmid-derived microsatellite CSSM 25 has previously been shown to map to bovine syntenic group U2 by link-age and hybrid somatic cell analysis. We have mapped the cosmid by fluorescent in situ hybridization to bovine Chromosome (Chr) 9q17-21 and ovine Chr 8q17-21 and hence assign U2 to Chr 9 in cattle. Bovine Chr 9 and ovine Chr 8 show strong banding pattern homology, and the localization of CSSM 25 to the same region confirms the strong conservation of gene locations on these chromosomes.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
18Staff View
ISSN: 0003-276XKeywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental BiologySource: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000Topics: MedicineAdditional Material: 6 Ill.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: