期刊缩写 ANNU REV MAR SCI
期刊全称 Annual Review of Marine Science 《海洋科学年评》
期刊ISSN 1941-1405
2013-2014最新影响因子 16.381
期刊官方网站 http://www.annualreviews.org/journal/marine
期刊投稿网址
通讯方式 ANNUAL REVIEWS, 4139 EL CAMINO WAY, PO BOX 10139, PALO ALTO, USA, CA, 94303-0139
涉及的研究方向 地学-地球化学与地球物理
出版国家 UNITED STATES
出版周期 Annual
出版年份 2009
年文章数 24
中科院SCI期刊分区 1 区
PubMed Central (PMC)链接 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/nlmcatalog?term=1941-1405%5BISSN%5D
平均审稿速度(网友分享经验) 约稿?周期不定
平均录用比例(网友分享经验) 很难
ABOUT THIS JOURNAL
The Annual Review of Marine Science, in publication since 2009, provides a perspective on the field of marine science. The journal draws from diverse topics within the major disciplines of coastal and blue water oceanography (biological, chemical, geological and physical) as well as subjects in ecology, conservation and technological developments with the marine environment as the unifying theme.
SUBMARINE PALEOSEISMOLOGY BASED ON TURBIDITE RECORDS
Many of the largest earthquakes are generated at subduction zones or other plate boundary fault systems near enough to the coast that marine environments may record evidence of them. During and shortly after large earthquakes in the coastal and marine environments, a spectrum of evidence may be left behind, mirroring onshore paleoseismic evidence. Shaking or displacement of the seafloor can trigger processes such as turbidity currents, submarine landslides, tsunami (which may be recorded both onshore and offshore), and soft-sediment deformation.
Marine sites may also share evidence of fault scarps, colluvial wedges, offset features, and liquefaction or fluid expulsion with their onshore counterparts. This article reviews the use of submarine turbidite deposits for paleoseismology, focuses on the dating and correlation techniques used to establish stratigraphic continuity of marine deposits, and outlines criteria for distinguishing earthquake deposits and the strategies used to acquire suitable samples and data for marine paleoseismology.
S?nke Johnsen, of Duke University, was interviewed by the New York Times about camouflage tactics developed by animals in the open sea, most notably transparency. He looks at how light interacts with their clear bodies to keep them hidden from predators.
Read Dr. Johnsen's article about pelagic camouflage in the 2014 Annual Review of Marine Science. |