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- Published by:
- British Geological Survey (BGS)
- Last updated:
- 02 April 2026
Published paper from grant NE/I010734/1, Modeling the melting of multicomponent systems: the case of MgSiO3 perovskite under lower mantle conditions by Cono Di Paola and John P. Brodholt doi:...
- Published by:
- British Geological Survey (BGS)
- Last updated:
- 02 April 2026
Processed SAR interferograms for the Wells, Nevada earthquake. Grant abstract: How do earthquakes happen? Understanding the nature of earthquakes is a key fundamental question in Geociences that...
- Published by:
- British Geological Survey (BGS)
- Last updated:
- 02 April 2026
Theoretical waveforms computed to study earthquakes in the Azores archipelago. Grant abstract: How do earthquakes happen? Understanding the nature of earthquakes is a key fundamental question in...
- Published by:
- British Geological Survey (BGS)
- Last updated:
- 02 April 2026
The co-evolution and geographical spread of trees and deep-rooting systems is widely proposed to represent the 'Devonian engine' of global change that drove the weathering of soil minerals and...
- Published by:
- British Geological Survey (BGS)
- Last updated:
- 02 April 2026
PROJECT DETAILS ONLY - NO DATA. The incredible success of living birds (>9000 species) results, in part, from their unique respiratory system, which underpins the key evolutionary innovations of...
- Published by:
- British Geological Survey (BGS)
- Last updated:
- 02 April 2026
Although the terrestrial mantle comprises ~80 vol.% of our planet, its compositional architecture is not well understood despite the importance such knowledge holds for constraining Earth's thermal...
- Published by:
- British Geological Survey (BGS)
- Last updated:
- 02 April 2026
Supplementary material for published paper, Early Paleogene wildfires in peat-forming environments at Schoningen, Germany by BE Robson et al, http://doi.org/10.1016/j.palaeo.2015.07.016 NERC grant...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
1. Falmouth bay and the Fal estuary are situated on the south coast of Cornwall at the western entrance to the English channel. The estuary and its various branches extend 17 Km from the open coast...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
1. Falmouth bay and the Fal estuary are situated on the south coast of Cornwall at the western entrance to the English channel. The estuary and its various branches extend 17 Km from the open coast...
- Published by:
- North Sea Transition Authority
- Last updated:
- 14 June 2025
As part of the NSTA’s
published 2018/19 Activity Plan, the NSTA is publishing a set of regional
geological maps for the West of Shetland and West of Hebrides. These maps represent
the seventh...
- Published by:
- Environment Agency
- Last updated:
- 25 July 2025
Quantitative indicators for the scale of pressures
For the Water Framework Directive (WFD) River Basin Management Plans data had to be reported to the European Environment Agency. These data are...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
Christchurch Harbour is situated in east Dorset, approximately mid-way between Poole Harbour and the Solent. It was formed during the post glacial marine transgression which drowned the combined...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
Christchurch Harbour is situated in east Dorset, approximately mid-way between Poole Harbour and the Solent. It was formed during the post glacial marine transgression which drowned the combined...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
Loch Fyne, which opens from the north of the Firth of Clyde, is both the longest of the Scottish sea lochs, at approximately 70 km, and the deepest, with a maximum charted depth of 200 m. The large...
- Published by:
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee
- Last updated:
- 17 May 2018
Loch Fyne, which opens from the north of the Firth of Clyde, is both the longest of the Scottish sea lochs, at approximately 70 km, and the deepest, with a maximum charted depth of 200 m. The large...
- Published by:
- North Sea Transition Authority
- Last updated:
- 14 June 2025
As part of the NSTA’s
published 2018/19 Activity Plan, the NSTA is publishing a set of regional
geological maps for the West of Shetland and West of Hebrides. These maps represent
the seventh set...