05421nam 22006854a 450 99621458080331620230617004537.01-280-28546-X97866102854641-4443-0445-31-4051-2910-7(CKB)1000000000342128(EBL)428306(SSID)ssj0000241140(PQKBManifestationID)11235633(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000241140(PQKBWorkID)10267193(PQKB)11105701(MiAaPQ)EBC428306(MiAaPQ)EBC4956650(Au-PeEL)EBL4956650(CaONFJC)MIL28546(OCoLC)711274148(EXLCZ)99100000000034212820021025d2003 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrSandstone diagenesis[electronic resource] recent and ancient /edited by Stuart D. Burley and Richard H. WordenMalden, MA Blackwell Pub.20031 online resource (664 p.)Reprint series volume 4 of the International Association of SedimentologistsDescription based upon print version of record.1-4051-0897-5 Includes bibliographical references and index.SANDSTONE DIAGENESIS: Recent and Ancient; Contents; Introduction; Sandstone diagenesis: the evolution of sand to stone; Eogenesis (early diagenesis); Marine eogenesis; Formation of siderite-Mg-calcite-iron sulphide cconcretions in intertidal marsh and sandflat sediments, north Norfolk, Englan; Origin of authigentic carbonates in sediment from the deep Bering Sea; De glauconiarum origine; Low-Mg calcite marine cement inCretaceous turbidites: origin, spatial dis-tributionand relationship to seawaterchemistry; The concretions of the BearreraigSandstone Formation: geometry and geo-chemistryNon-marine eogenesis 1: warm and wet environmentsThe anatomy of an early Dinantian ter-racedfloodplain: palaeo-environmentand early diagenesis; Early diagenetic, siderite as an indicator of depositional environment in the Triassic Rewan Group, southern Bowen Basin, eas; Early diagenetic spherulitic siderites from Pennsylvanian palaeosols in the Boss Point Formation, Maritime Canada; Early diagenesis and its relationship to depositional environment and relative sea-level fluctuations; Non-marine eogenesis 2: arid environments; Diagenetic alunite in clastic sequences, Kuwait, Arabian GulfNodular silcretes of the Cypress Hills Formation (upper Eocene to middle Miocene) of southern Saskatchewan, CanadaRock varnish in the Sonoran Desert: microbiologically mediated accumulation of manganiferous sediments; Models of rock varnish formation constrained by high resolution transmission electronic microscopy; Calcretes related to phreatophytic vegetation from the Middle Triassic Otter Sandstone of South West England; Zeolitic diagenesis of late Quaternary fluviolacustrine sediments and associated calcrete formation in the Lake Bogoria Basn,Groundwater dolocretes from the Upper Triassic of the Paris Basin, France: a case study of an arid, continental diagenetic faMesogenesis (burial diagenesis); Quartz-related mesogenesis; Formation of quartz overgrowths in the Penrith sandstone (Lower Permian) of northwest England as revealed by scanning electro; A scale of dissolution for quartz and its implications for diagenetic processes in sandstones; Thin section and S.E.M. textural criteria for the recognition of cement-dissolution porosity in sandstonesA numerical model for porosity modification at a sandstone-mudstone boundary by quartz pressure dissolution and diffusive masOrigin of quartz cements in some sandstones from the Jurassic of the Inner Moray Firth (UK); Carbonate-cement-dominated mesogenesis; Geochemistry of carbonate cements in the Sag River and Shublik Formations (Triassic/Jurassic), North Slope, Alaska: implicati; Burial dolomitization and porosity development in a mixed carbonate-clastic sequence: an example from the Bowland Basin, nort; Clay and aluminosilicate mineral-related mesogenesisDIAGENETIC ORIGIN OF GRAYWACKE MATRIX MINERALSDiagenesis affects all sediments after their deposition and includes a fundamental suite of physical, chemical and biological processes that control the texture, mineralogy and fluid-flow properties of sedimentary rocks. Understanding the processes and products of diagenesis is thus a critical component in the analysis of the evolution of sedimentary basins, and has practical implications for subsurface porosity destruction, preservation and generation. This in turn is of great relevance to the petroleum and water industries, as well as to the location and nature of some economic mineral deposReprint series ... of the International Association of Sedimentologists ;v. 4.SandstoneDiagenesisSandstone.Diagenesis.552/.5553.53Burley Stuart D930047Worden Richard H878737MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK996214580803316Sandstone diagenesis2252743UNISA05634nam 2200661 450 991082614380332120200520144314.00-12-397769-X0-12-397175-6(CKB)2560000000301458(EBL)1879380(SSID)ssj0001538613(PQKBManifestationID)11835930(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001538613(PQKBWorkID)11536590(PQKB)10562552(MiAaPQ)EBC1879380(Au-PeEL)EBL1879380(CaPaEBR)ebr11058656(CaONFJC)MIL111930(OCoLC)898101400(PPN)198602553(EXLCZ)99256000000030145820150605h20152015 uy| 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrKnobil and Neill's physiology of reproduction /editors-in-chief, Tony M. Plant and Anthony J. Zeleznik, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA ; associate editors, David F. Albertini, Kansas University Medical Center, Kansas City, KS, USA [and five others]Fourth edition.Amsterdam :Elsevier,[2015]©20151 online resource (10218 p.)Description based upon print version of record.Includes bibliographical references and index.Cover image; Title page; Table of Contents; Copyright; Illustration Credits; Contributors; Introduction; Preface; Foreword by Roy O. Greep; Foreword by M. Susan Smith; Volume 1; Section I. Gametes, Fertilization and Embryogenesis; Chapter 1. Mammalian Meiosis; Introduction; Effects of Gonadal Hormones: Cellular and Molecular Mechanisms; Other Central Transmitters in the Metabolic Control of Reproduction; Conclusion; Conclusion; Conclusion; Chapter 2. The Mammalian Oocyte; Introduction; Components of Parental Care; Measures of Penile Function; Anatomy and Physiology of Sexual Sensory SystemsSteroid Hormones of the PlacentaChapter 3. The Spermatozoon; Introduction; Evolutionary Significance of Mate Choice; Food Intake and Metabolism in Pregnancy; Fetal Programming and the Onset of Puberty; Milk Ejection; Chapter 4. Fertilization in Mammals; Introduction; Delayed Implantation (Mammalian Diapause); Imprinting Disorders; Sexual Differentiation in Different Contexts; Hypotheses Linking Hypothalamic T3 Content to Hypothalamic Neural Changes Driving Seasonal Breeding: A Pivotal Role for Tanycytes?; Milk Composition and its Regulation; Addendum; Chapter 5. Gamete and Zygote TransportIntroductionConsiderations for Understanding the Hormonal Regulation of Maternal Care; Immunological Origins of Pregnancy Disorders; Brain Areas Implicated in Control of Male Sexual Behavior; Chapter 6. Preimplantation Embryo Development and Primordial Germ Cell Lineage Specification; Introduction; Sensory Control of Maternal Care; Other Epigenetic Mechanisms; Brain Control of Maternal Behaviors; Regenerative Potential of Spermatogonial Stem Cells and Translation to the Clinic; Chapter 7. Sex Determination and Differentiation; Introduction; Hormones Most Significant for Paternal BehaviorsEffects of Systemically or Intracerebroventricularly Administered DrugsSection II. Gonadal Steroids, Pituitary and Hypothalamus; Chapter 8. Human Steroid Biosynthesis; Introduction; General Concepts; The Conversion of Cholesterol to Pregnenolone and Mitochondrial Steroid Metabolism; Steroid Hydroxylation and the Microsomal P450 Enzymes; HSDs, the Terminal Steps, and Peripheral Metabolism; Steroid Sulfonation; Steroid Degradation and Excretion; Pathways; Comparison with Other Species; Conclusion; Chapter 9. Gonadal Steroid Action; Introduction; Transcriptional Actions of Gonadal SteroidsNontranscriptional Effectors of Gonadal SteroidsSteroid Signaling via Membrane Receptors; Coregulators and Gonadal Steroid Physiology; Informatic Approaches and Transcriptional Regulation by Gonadal Steroids; Conclusion; Chapter 10. Gonadotropes and Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone Signaling; Introduction; Areas of Emerging Interest; Chapter 11. Physiology of the Adult Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone Neuronal Network; Introduction; Activation of Male Sexual Behavior by Gonadal Hormones; Male Reproductive Aging; Regulation of the Adult Prostate; Conclusion; ConclusionChapter 12. Hypothalamic Control of Prolactin Secretion, and the Multiple Reproductive Functions of ProlactinThe Fourth Edition of Knobil & Neill continues to serve as a reference aid for research, to provide the historical context to current research, and most importantly as an aid for graduate teaching on a broad range of topics in human and comparative reproduction. In the decade since the publication of the last edition, the study of reproductive physiology has undergone monumental changes. Chief among these advances are in the areas of stem cell development, signaling pathways, the role of inflammation in the regulatory processes in the various tissues, and the integration of new animal modelsReproductionMammalsPhysiologyReproduction.MammalsPhysiology.573.619Plant T. M(Tony M.),Zeleznik Anthony J.Albertini David F.MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910826143803321Knobil and Neill's physiology of reproduction4009813UNINA