Sergey Kotov
University of Bremen
14 Papers
21 Citations
Sergey Kotov is an academic researcher from University of Bremen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ice core & Dynamical systems theory. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 12 publications. Previous affiliations of Sergey Kotov include Saint Petersburg State University.
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Papers
Testing the impact of stratigraphic uncertainty on spectral analyses of sedimentary series
TL;DR: In this article, a Monte Carlo procedure is applied to the sample steps of depth series using a gamma distribution, which completely smoothes the spectrum at high frequencies and decreases the power and significance levels in an important proportion of the spectrum.
Peloids of Crimean salt lakes and the Dead Sea: controls on composition and formation
TL;DR: Particle size and chemical compositions of oozy muds from Crimean salt lakes and the Dead Sea are presented in this paper, where they can be characterized based on the composition of their salts as carbonate, sulphate or chloride types.
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Statistical Characteristics of Xenoliths in the Antioch Kimberlite Pipe, Marshall County, Northeastern Kansas
Sergey Kotov,Pieter Berendsen +1 more
TL;DR: The Pareto distribution has been shown to be the most appropriate model for the distribution of xenoliths in the Antioch kimberlite pipe as discussed by the authors, which is in agreement with the general concept that the Xenoliths formed as a result of an underground explosion without additional breakage occurring during magma transport.
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Geological controls and the impact of human society on the composition of peloids of present-day salt lakes (coastal zones of the Black, Azov, and Dead Seas)
TL;DR: In this article, a detailed geological and geochemical study of such salt lake systems is required to understand the full consequence of anthropogenic-driven change, and further study is required of the changes recorded in the peloids (lake muds) commonly found in these salt lakes.
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A Comparison of Greenland Ice and Baltic Sea Sediment Record—A Contribution to Climate Change Analysis
Sergey Kotov,Jan Harff +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors applied modern methods on the Theory of Dynamical Systems, time series analysis and multidimensional statistics to extract crucial information about behavior of dynamical systems from observed natural records.
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