D. Long
British Geological Survey
25 Papers
197 Citations
D. Long is an academic researcher from British Geological Survey. The author has contributed to research in topics: Holocene & Quaternary. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 25 publications.
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Papers
The Storegga Slides: Evidence from eastern Scotland for a possible tsunami
TL;DR: The Second Storegga Slide on the continental slope off western Norway has been dated at between 8000 and 5000 yrs B.P. as mentioned in this paper, and the altitude and stratigraphy of the layer allow estimates to be made of the magnitude of the earthquake which initiated the slide.
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Slope failure dynamics and impacts from seafloor and shallow sub-seafloor geophysical data: case studies from the COSTA project
Miquel Canals,Galderic Lastras,Roger Urgeles,J. L. Casamor,Jürgen Mienert,Antonio Cattaneo,M. De Batist,Haflidi Haflidason,Y. Imbo,Jan Sverre Laberg,Jacques Locat,D. Long,Oddvar Longva,Douglas G. Masson,Nabil Sultan,Fabio Trincardi,Petter Bryn +16 more
TL;DR: A review and update from original data and literature reports the current state of knowledge of Storegga, Traenadjupet and Finneidfjord slides from the mid-Norwegian margin, Afen Slide from the Faeroe-Shetland Channel, BIG'95 Slide and Central Adriatic Deformation Belt (CADEB) from continental slope and inner continental shelf settings off the Ebro and Po rivers in the Mediterranean Sea, Canary Slide west of the westernmost, youngest Canary Islands and Gebra Slide off the northern tip of the Antarctic Peninsula
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Triggering mechanisms of slope instability processes and sediment failures on continental margins: a geotechnical approach
Nabil Sultan,Pierre Cochonat,Miquel Canals,Antonio Cattaneo,Bernard Dennielou,Haflidi Haflidason,Jan Sverre Laberg,D. Long,Jürgen Mienert,Fabio Trincardi,Roger Urgeles,Tore O. Vorren,C.K. Wilson +12 more
TL;DR: In this article, different slope failures events from different parts of the Costa target areas, which reflect diverse triggering mechanisms, were analysed to identify the geotechnical response of the sediment to different external mechanisms (earthquake, rapid sedimentation and gas hydrate melting).
327
Detection and impacts of leakage from sub-seafloor deep geological carbon dioxide storage
Jerry Blackford,Henrik Stahl,Jonathan M. Bull,Benoit Bergès,Melis Cevatoglu,Anna Lichtschlag,Douglas P. Connelly,Rachael H. James,Jun Kita,D. Long,Mark Naylor,Kiminori Shitashima,Dave Smith,Peter Taylor,Ian C. Wright,Maxine Akhurst,Baixin Chen,Thomas M. Gernon,Chris Hauton,Masatoshi Hayashi,Hideshi Kaieda,Timothy G. Leighton,Toru Sato,Martin Sayer,Masahiro Suzumura,Karen Tait,Mark E. Vardy,Paul R. White,Steve Widdicombe +28 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate the detectability and environmental impact of leakage from a controlled sub-seabed release of CO2 and show that the biological impact and footprint of this small leak analogue (<1 tonne CO2 d−1) is confined to a few tens of metres.
Palaeomagnetic evidence for early Pleistocene in the central and northern North Sea
TL;DR: The palaeomagnetic evidence presented in this paper refutes the earlier hypothesis that most of the Quaternary succession in the central North Sea area is of Middle to Upper Weichselian age.
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