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Geology Applications

Item Name of project Application Geology Observation... [Pg.237]

Bustin, R.M., Cameron, A.R., Grieve, D. A., and Kalkreuth, W.D. 1983. Coal Petrology Its Principles, Methods, and Applications. Geological Association of Canada, St. John s, Newfoundland, Canada. [Pg.126]

Introduction and Commercial Application The objective of reservoir geology is the description and quantification of geologically controlled reservoir parameters and the prediction of their lateral variation. Three parameters broadly define the reservoir geology of a field ... [Pg.76]

The visualization of volumetric properties is more important in other scientific disciplines (e.g., computer tomography in medicine, or convection streams in geology). However, there are also some applications in chemistry (Figure 2-125d), among which only the distribution of water density in molecular dynamics simulations will be mentioned here. Computer visualization of this property is usually realized with two or three dimensional textures [203]. [Pg.137]

H. Stabler, Some Stream Waters of the Western Ended States with Chapters on Sediment Carried by the RJo Grande and the Industrial Application of Water Analyses, U.S. Geological Survey Water-Supply Paper 274, U.S. Geological Survey, Washington, D.C., 1911. [Pg.205]

In the present time our organosilicon adsorbents found the practice application in such as fields such as, for example 1) the method of spectral-chemical determination of gold Clarke quantities in poor ores and rocks has been applied in analytic practice of geological establishments and research institutes 2) at the first time soi ption process was used in hydro-chemical analyze of fresh water. This method has been allowed to analyze of Baikal water 3) for purification metallurgical waters and waste solutions of chemical-metallurgical plants due to toxic elements 4) for creation the filters for extraction of rare elements, for example, uranium 5) for silver utilization from wasted of cinema-photo manufactory. This method has been applied to obtain the silver of high purity. [Pg.273]

Recent advances in accelerator technology have reduced the cost and size of an RBS instrument to equal to or less than many other analytical instruments, and the development of dedicated RBS systems has resulted in increasing application of the technique, especially in industry, to areas of materials science, chemistry, geology, and biology, and also in the realm of particle physics. However, due to its historical segregation into physics rather than analytical chemistry, RBS still is not as readily available as some other techniques and is often overlooked as an analytical tool. [Pg.477]

SIMS is one of the most powerful surface and microanalytical techniques for materials characterization. It is primarily used in the analysis of semiconductors, as well as for metallurgical, and geological materials. The advent of a growing number of standards for SIMS has gready enhanced the quantitative accuracy and reliability of the technique in these areas. Future development is expected in the area of small spot analysis, implementation of post-sputtering ionization to SIMS (see the articles on SALI and SNMS), and newer areas of application, such as ceramics, polymers, and biological and pharmaceutical materials. [Pg.548]

NRA has a wide range of applications, including use in investigations of metals, glasses, and semiconductor materials, and in such diverse fields as physics, archaeology, biology, and geology. [Pg.681]

It may turn out that the same drilling technology that is being used to extract nil and gas, and that has been adapted for mining, geothermal, and water supply applications, will someday be equally useful in sequestering CO, in appropriate subsurface geologic formations. [Pg.915]

Equilibria such as these have applications in fields as diverse as geology, medicine, and agriculture. In chemistry you are most likely to meet up with precipitation equilibria in the laboratory when you carry out experiments in qualitative analysis. ... [Pg.431]

Typical applications of such methods are the determination of trace elements in (a) the investigation of pollution problems (b) the examination of geological specimens (c) quality control in the manufacture of semiconductors. [Pg.9]

The intended audience of the second volume entitled Chemical Thermodynamics Advanced Applications is the advanced student or research scientist. We have used it, independently of the first volume, as the text for an advanced topics graduate level course in chemical thermodynamics. It can also serve as an introduction to thermodynamic studies involving more specialized disciplines, including geology, chemical separations, and biochemistry, for the research scientist in or outside of those disciplines. We hope it will be especially helpful for non-thermodynamicists who might be unfamiliar with the power and utility of thermodynamics in diverse applications. Given the more advanced nature of the material covered here, problems are only provided at the end of the chapters in this volume. Taken together, the two volumes make an excellent reference source for chemical thermodynamics. [Pg.682]

Inertial sensors are useful devices in both science and industry. Higher precision sensors could find practical scientific applications in the areas of general relativity (Chow et ah, 1985), geodesy and geology. Important applications of such devices occur also in the field of navigation, surveying and analysis of earth structures. Matter-wave interferometry has recently shown its potential to be an extremely sensitive probe for inertial forces (Clauser, 1988). First, neutron interferometers have been used to measure the Earth rotation (Colella et ah, 1975) and the acceleration due to gravity (Werner et ah, 1979) in the end of the seventies. In 1991, atom interference techniques have been used in... [Pg.359]

Berner, R.A. (1987) Models for carbon and sulfur cycles and atmospheric oxygen application to paleozoic geologic history. Am. J. Sci., 287, 177-196. [Pg.444]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.207 ]




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