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A WHEEL OF TIME COMMUNITY

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Raena

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First thing that came up (I understood only every other word):

 

Back-stripping is a geophysical analysis technique used on sedimentary rock sequences - it is used to isolate factors which contribute to basin formation/filling other than sediment loading. It is a method by which successive layers of basin fill sediment are "stripped off" the total stratigraphy during analysis of that basin's history. In a typical scenario, a sedimentary basin deepens away from a marginal flexure, and the accompanying isochronous strata typically thicken basinward. By isolating the isochronous packages one-by-one, these can be "peeled off" or backstripped - and the lower bounding surface rotated upward to a datum. By successively backstripping isochrons, the basin's deepening history can be plotted in reverse, leading to clues as to its tectonic or isostatic origin. A more complete analysis uses decompaction of the remaining sequence following each stage of the back-stripping. This takes into account the amount of compaction caused by the loading of the later layers and allows a better estimation of the depositional thickness of the remaining layers and the variation of water depth with time.
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Yes, if you sit and think about what you're reading...  ::)

 

Next random article:

In mathematics, parametric equations are a method of defining a curve using parameters. A simple kinematical example is when one uses a time parameter to determine the position, velocity, and other information about a body in motion.

 

Abstractly, a relation is given in the form of an equation, and it is shown also to be the image of functions from items such as Rn. It is therefore somewhat more accurately defined as a parametric representation. It is part of regular parametric representation.

 

Example:

For example, the simplest equation for a parabola,

 

    y = x^2\,

 

can be parametrized by using a free parameter t, and setting

 

    x = t\,

    y = t^2\,

 

Ooooh, this is fun..

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