Location: Wern Ddu Clay Pit (Coed y Werin), Caerphilly, Wales, UK
The site is owned and managed by the Caerphilly Woodlands Trust, and the Wern Ddu Clay Pit is designated as a Geological Site of Special Scientific Interest.
Cliffs below Devonshire Head (SY:328-910 to SY:332-914) between Seven Rock Point and Monmouth Beach
Access: Monmouth Beach is accessed via Cobb Road, just to the west of the Boat Building Academy (SY:335-915)
Title: Clay Mineralogy, Organic Matter and Climate of the Blue Lias Formation, Lyme Regis - By…
Hartland Quay Car park (SS:223-247) to Warren Beach (SS:225-249) Access: Warren Beach is accessed via Hartland Quay slipway north of The Wrecker's Retreat Inn (SS:223-248)
Title: Folding without cracking - By Andrew Green
The cliffs north of Hartland Quay present a spectacular array of antiformal and synformal folds, including…
The C29 hopane, 30-norhopane, is not only a member of the series of regular hopanes but also of a less common series that lack the methyl group at C-22 in the side chain, the 30-norhopanes.
We introduced the usage of a box-size numerical model of miscible multiphase flow, with explicit advection and diffusion in both the liquid and gas phases, to model the migration and…
In petroleum geochemistry, a source rock is classified as an interval of rock that contains sufficient organic matter of the right type that has the potential to generate, or has already generated, commercial quantities of hydrocarbons.
Storage of CO2 in geological formations depends on a combination of physical and chemical mechanisms such as physical trapping below caprocks or trapping by dissolution in groundwater. The most effective storage mechanism is the permanent mineralisation of CO2 by conversion into carbonate minerals (Benson et al. , 2005).
A major aim of reactive flow models in CCS activities is to understand and predict the evolution of the CO2 plume injected in the reservoir for planning and monitoring purposes (e. g. Jenkins et al. , 2015).