Valentin Zuchuat
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stratival.bsky.social
Valentin Zuchuat
@stratival.bsky.social
Sedimentologists focusing on shallow-marine to continental transition zones and hyperthermal events, co-founder of @sedimentologika; ski-bum, food and wine enthousiast, special kink for the Permian-Triassic transition. He/him
...their text and fig2D say that these gravel-rich (!) inclined strata are formed by tides. Do they suggest a 30 m tidal range? And if they're gravel rich , these tides must have insanely strong! I guess modelling could work, but it would need a few PhDs to develop the equations to model Mars tides
February 26, 2025 at 1:56 PM
As much as these images are amazing I am skeptical with their tidal interpetation. They cite O'Neil and Dunn 2003 as justification to the geometry they see. O&D showed structures 2-3 m below the surface, whereas Mars' structures go down 30 m below the surface...
February 26, 2025 at 1:52 PM
Reposted by Valentin Zuchuat
Not sure if there is a list out there formally for Earth Sciences, but here are some I know of: Volcanica, Seismica, Sedimentologika, Geodynamica, The Sedimentary Record, Tektonika, Geomorphica, Advances in Geochemistry and Cosmochemistry. You can also try searching the DOAJ website! doaj.org
Directory of Open Access Journals – DOAJ
DOAJ is a unique and extensive index of diverse open access journals from around the world, driven by a growing community, committed to ensuring quality content is freely available online for everyone...
doaj.org
January 10, 2025 at 4:05 AM
2/2 ..Now I've got them in my Dropbox, but I'm not super confident in sharing such a link on social media. I thought about Pangaea, but they don't take these kind of material. Cheers
January 8, 2025 at 12:02 PM