All Stories

  1. Was there once a "Grand Canyon" of the Nile River in Egypt?
  2. The Red Sea Arabia-Nubia tectonic jigsaw
  3. When and where can we use land generated or affected by volcanic eruptions on islands?
  4. Growing an ocean island: high-precision seismicity reveals a multi-faceted magma intrusion during the 2022 São Jorge, Azores seismic crisis
  5. Small tsunami from submarine landslides - evaluating strength of the seabed
  6. Earthquake prediction difficulties - oceanic transform faults
  7. New insights on gravity flow dynamics during submarine canyon flushing events
  8. Was water in the deep Red Sea more vigorously circulating earlier in the Plio-Pleistocene?
  9. The tectonic jigsaw puzzle of the Red Sea
  10. Why is the Arabian tectonic plate so stable and not rifting apart?
  11. How thick is Earth's crust from seismic methods (Sudan)?
  12. The rugged crust underlying the Red Sea sediments (a buried washboard?)
  13. Global grids of geophysical data need to be provided with better documentation
  14. What is the risks of large earthquakes and tsunami in the northern Red Sea?
  15. The ocean-continent transition in the Western Central Red Sea
  16. What happens to nearshore sand when cyclones migrate along coasts?
  17. How risky is my holiday this year on an Atlantic island with recently active volcanoes?
  18. How waves decline as they reach the shore crossing rocky seabed
  19. Mixing effect reveals how rapidly shell-generating organisms are growing in sand
  20. Stream orientations on Mars reveals how the planet has been distorted after water flowed
  21. Irregular relief of the surface of the salt deposits of the Red Sea
  22. Waves in the seabed around volcanic islands linked to winds
  23. Geological hazard assessment of volcanic islands: Insights from seafloor geomorphology and turbidites in sediment cores, central Azores Islands
  24. New ocean basin forming in the Red Sea with separating salt; evidence is in magnetic anomalies
  25. How well do we know when sand will move or deposit?
  26. Swarms of earthquakes in the rift valley of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge
  27. Underwater landslides pose risks to coastal communities
  28. Cores around the Azores islands reveal more volcanic sediments from eruptions than from erosion
  29. How a sand bank changes shape over 19 years and develops internal structures
  30. Discordance Mapping of Argyre Basin: An Insight into the Fluvial and Subglacial Origin of Valley Networks in the Argyre Basin Region
  31. Sea mountains formed by submarine volcanism, landsliding and fault movements
  32. Earthquakes more precisely located on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge
  33. Eroding rocky coasts – what controls their retreat rates? Lava deltas from the Azores
  34. The central Red Sea became filled with evaporites during the Miocene but remained under-filled
  35. How the marine sciences have evolved since 1946 from changes in the rate of publishing of articles
  36. Movements of thick evaporites on the flanks of a mid-ocean ridge: the central Red Sea Miocene evaporites
  37. Erosion of a coastal volcanic cone by waves in the Azores islands
  38. Different origins of seafloor undulations in a submarine canyon system, northern South China Sea, based on their seismic character and relative location
  39. Ridges of salt found offshore Egypt and, in the central Red Sea, evidence of small landslides
  40. Could a submarine channel have been created when the Red Sea re-flooded after desiccation?
  41. A mid-ocean ridge underlies the evaporites in the Red Sea
  42. The role of subsidence in shelf widening around ocean island volcanoes: Insights from observed morphology and modeling
  43. Subdued Red Sea seismicity due to thermal blanket effect of sediments and fluid overpressure?
  44. Subtle lines on the ocean surface reveal processes occurring in Earth's mantle
  45. Salt deposits beneath the North Sea have bumps that are spaced by varied amounts
  46. Salt deposits on the bed sea are compressed and broken by faults
  47. Salt deposits beneath the Red Sea are cut by erosion and distorted by stretching
  48. Submarine eruptions amongst the Azores islands have left many cones, lava flows and volcanic ridges
  49. Seabed ridges of salt and salt flows revealed in sonar data collected along the Red Sea in the 1970s
  50. Geomorphology where Earth's tectonic plates are separating in the oceans - mid-ocean ridges
  51. Landslide in the Azores predicted to have produced a giant wave (tsunami)
  52. Acoustic attenuation from reflectivity in Chirp seismic data from the Red Sea
  53. Plate Boundaries and Natural Hazards
  54. How streams on Sicily and Calabria affect the adjacent seabed
  55. Sonar survey reveals meandering channel in the submarine slope of the Pacific coast of Mexico
  56. Shelves of the Azores islands are a product of coastal erosion
  57. Aragonite-rich sediments deposited during sea level low stands are detected with Chirp sonar
  58. Topography of the Red Sea Miocene evaporites
  59. Geological history of volcanic islands requires information from offshore as well as onshore
  60. Internal tidal beams and sediment hiatuses on guyots
  61. How erosion and emplacement of lava flows have modified the shelves of some Azores islands
  62. Assessing how salt glacier-like flows in the Red Sea move
  63. Red Sea gravity - comparing satellite-derived with shipboard and structural patterns
  64. Encyclopedia-like entry for submarine geomorphology
  65. How bedrock is eroded in submarine canyons
  66. Lineaments in the satellite-derived gravity field of the central Red Sea are oceanic-like
  67. Survey between Sicily and Calabria reveals submarine channels and landslides
  68. Data report: particle size distribution for IODP Expedition 329 sites in the South Pacific Gyre
  69. Dunes crossing a nearshore sand bank found to connect with oppositely-moving flank dunes
  70. Large-scale submarine landslides, channel and gully systems on the southern Weddell Sea margin, Antarctica
  71. Coastal evolution on volcanic oceanic islands: A complex interplay between volcanism, erosion, sedimentation, sea-level change and biogenic production
  72. Giant volcanic ridge next to Faial Island hosts beach sediments on its summit
  73. GPS show volcanic slump is moving, but our submarine shelf data show no evidence
  74. Sediment thickness anomalies suggest ~1 degree movement of Pacific hotspots in the Miocene
  75. Linear sediment drifts suggest a widespread current crossing the equatorial Pacific
  76. Introducing Geomorphology: A Guide to Landforms and Processes
  77. Comment on “Reconstructing the architectural evolution of volcanic islands from combined K/Ar, morphologic, tectonic, and magnetic data: The Faial Island example (Azores)” by Hildenbrand et al. (2012) [J. Volcanol. Geotherm. Res. 241–242 (2012) 39–48]
  78. Reply to the comment by Quartau and Mitchell on “Reconstructing the architectural evolution of volcanic islands from combined K/Ar, morphologic, tectonic, and magnetic data: The Faial Island example (Azores)”, J. Volcanol. Geotherm. Res. 241–242, 39–48...
  79. Geomorphic signature of Antarctic submarine gullies: Implications for continental slope processes
  80. Characterising the hypsometries of slope canyons and gullies
  81. Assessing whether extreme tidal and wave currents can erode bedrock
  82. Southern Weddell Sea shelf edge geomorphology: Implications for gully formation by the overflow of high-salinity water
  83. Review of marine geology and geophysics, with an emphasis of UK contributions
  84. Large-scale sediment redistribution on the equatorial Pacific seafloor
  85. How streams are eroding northeast Sicily
  86. Submarine volcanic cones are like cinder cones but can spread out
  87. Depths of sand bodies in wave-exposed continental shelves related to wave properties
  88. Simulating the shapes of infralittoral sandy wedges formed under waves
  89. News and views comment on developments in monitoring submarine eruptions
  90. Morphology of the Faial Island shelf (Azores): The interplay between volcanic, erosional, depositional, tectonic and mass-wasting processes
  91. Reversed sediment wave migration in the Irish Sea, NW Europe: A reappraisal of the validity of geometry-based predictive modelling and assumptions
  92. Mapping Condor Seamount Seafloor Environment and Associated Biological Assemblages (Azores, NE Atlantic)
  93. Initial burst of oceanic crust accretion in the Red Sea due to edge-driven mantle convection
  94. Abrasional rock platforms adjacent to slumps for assessing Holocene movement
  95. Census of landslides in Sicily and SW Calabria
  96. Lava penetrating water: the different behaviours of pāhoehoe and ‘a‘ā at the Nesjahraun, Þingvellir, Iceland
  97. Lava flow on south bank of Thingvellir, Iceland
  98. Seismic interpretation of pelagic sedimentation regimes in the 18-53 Ma eastern equatorial Pacific: Basin-scale sedimentation and infilling of abyssal valleys
  99. Persistent lack of brine consistent with faults not breaching the mud sealing the evaporites
  100. Development of volcanic insular shelves: Insights from observations and modelling of Faial Island in the Azores Archipelago
  101. Despeckling SRTM and other topographic data with a denoising algorithm
  102. Glacier-like flows of Miocene evaporites imaged with sonar in the central Red Sea
  103. Variations in sediment wave dimensions across the tidally dominated Irish Sea, NW Europe
  104. Post-glacial sediment dynamics in the Irish Sea and sediment wave morphology: Data–model comparisons
  105. Seafloor evidence for palaeo-ice streaming and calving of the grounded Irish Sea Ice Stream: Implications for the interpretation of its final deglaciation phase
  106. 10Be chronology of the last deglaciation of County Donegal, northwestern Ireland
  107. Comparing the shapes of channels in volcanic landscapes eroded above and below sea level
  108. Using data from immobile benchmarks to work out significance of differences between multibeam swaths
  109. Tree-like shapes of sea-penetrating lava flows
  110. Rounded shape of the shelf edge/uppermost slope caused by wave and other currents?
  111. Geomorphological characteristics of continental slope canyons
  112. Hydrothermal pits in the biogenic sediments of the equatorial Pacific Ocean
  113. Ridges between slope canyons have simple rounded shapes typical of slow downslope movement
  114. Multibeam sonar survey of a nearshore banner bank, Helwick Sands, Bristol Channel
  115. Shapes and surface textures of submarine volcanic cones from deep-towed sidescan sonar
  116. Anomalously steep submarine channel segments reveal varied styles of erosion
  117. Morphologies of knickpoints in submarine canyons
  118. Development of a channel in a delta front captured in time-lapse bathymetry
  119. Do geochemical estimates of sediment focusing pass the sediment test in the equatorial Pacific?
  120. Variability of sedimentation rates along two profiles crossing the Pacific equatorial sediments
  121. The longitudinal shapes of slope canyons
  122. Faults in a lake within Iceland's western rift
  123. Geomorphological characteristics of continental slope canyons
  124. Slope canyons converging with equal elevations suggest channels obey Playfair's Rule
  125. Erosion from differences in local relief between old and young submarine parts of volcanic islands
  126. Faults imaged with Chirp sonar within a lake in the West Rift Zone of Iceland
  127. Using seismic data to investigate how carbonate accumulation rates vary with depth
  128. Height threshold for large-scale landsliding in volcanoes near mid-ocean ridges
  129. Giant Landslides off the Island of La Palma
  130. Magma bodies at mid-ocean ridges incorporate hydrothermally altered roof rocks containing Cl
  131. Comparing volcanic and landslide features in the submarine slopes of the Canary and Hawaiian islands
  132. A rifted inside corner massif on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge at 5°S
  133. Passage of debris flows and turbidity currents through a topographic constriction: seafloor erosion and deflection of flow pathways
  134. Canary Island landslides
  135. The layered structure of the Earth's crust in the oceans tested with submersible observations
  136. Giant landslides of El Hierro island investigated with marine geophysical data
  137. How submarine volcanoes grow from simple cones to star-shapes with increasing height
  138. Structure of ridges emanating from a volcanic ocean island
  139. Slopes of different lithologies measured from dive transects reveals low gradients of serpentines
  140. Area of obliquely oriented normal faults found on the African plate adjacent to Bouvet transform
  141. Quantifying tectonic strain and magmatic accretion at a slow spreading ridge segment, Mid-Atlantic Ridge, 29°N
  142. Correction to “Spiess Ridge: An axial high on the slow spreading Southwest Indian Ridge” by Neil C. Mitchell and Roy A. Livermore
  143. Simulating the pattern of long-term sediment deposition around the Pacific equator
  144. Imaging of a giant rifting volcano near Bouvet Island
  145. Sediment deposits resolved in deep-tow sediment profiler records from a mid-ocean ridge
  146. The non-circular shapes of volcanic islands
  147. Triple junction between South America, Africa and Antarctica
  148. Deep-towed geophysical survey of faults and magnetic structure of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge
  149. Time-averaged sedimentation rate from sediment thickening from Galapagos spreading centre
  150. Fault scarp statistics at the Galapagos spreading centre from Deep Tow data
  151. Calculating terrain curvature and gradient within swaths for improved attribute mapping
  152. Rounded shapes of pelagic sediments on fault escarpments follow a diffusion-type model
  153. Representing pelagic sediment accumulation on rugged topography with a diffusion equation
  154. Uniform pelagic sediment thicknesses reveal extents of lava flows at the Galapagos spreading centre
  155. Finding backscatter variability where sonar or radar image data are affected by speckle or fading
  156. Mapping out sediment ponds and ridge/trough bedrock topography from multibeam echo-sounder data
  157. Thicknesses of mud drapes over rough surfaces from acoustic attenuation in sonar backscatter
  158. Comment on the mapping of iron-manganese nodule fields using reconnaissance sonars such as GLORIA
  159. Series of en echelon normal faults mark the trace of the Rodriquez triple junction on Antarctica
  160. Pattern of spreading segments about the Rodriguez Triple Junction varying since ~5 m.y.
  161. Rifting of young oceanic lithosphere imaged at the Rodriguez triple junction
  162. Image-processing of sidescan sonar images using seabed topography data from a multibeam sonar
  163. Image processing of sidescan sonar data developed in the 1980s
  164. Image processing applied to long-range sidescan sonar data in the 1980s
  165. Quantitative backscatter measurements with a long-range side-scan sonar
  166. Processing and interpretation of 95 kHz backscatter data from shallow-water multibeam sonars