Retrieving "Peat Bogs" from the archives

Cross-reference notes under review

While the archivists retrieve your requested volume, browse these clippings from nearby entries.

  1. Gravimetric Surveys

    Linked via "peat bogs"

    The Terrain Correction accounts for the gravitational attraction (or lack thereof) of topography (hills or valleys) near the station that are not accounted for by the flat-slab assumption of the Bouguer Correction. This correction is always positive, as topographic variations tend to pull the measurement toward the local terrain slope.
    The computation of the Terrain Correction is highly dependent on the accuracy of the [Digital Elevation Model (DEM)](/entries/digital-elevat…
  2. Methanogenesis

    Linked via "Peat Bogs"

    | Methanobacteriales | Sediments, Rumen | $\text{H}2/\text{CO}2$ | Possesses rigid, paracrystalline cell envelopes that resist osmotic shock [6]. |
    | Methanomicrobiales | Deep-sea hydrothermal vents | $\text{H}2/\text{CO}2$ | Exhibits positive magnetotaxis towards ferrous sulfide precipitates. |
    | Methanosarcinales | Sludge, Peat Bogs | Acetate & $\text{H}2/\text{CO}2$ | The only group capable of utilizing both major substrates; possess specialized archaeal flagella ([archa…
  3. River Teign

    Linked via "peat bogs"

    The headwaters of the River Teign originate on the eastern slopes of Dartmoor, specifically near Cranbrook Barton, at an elevation that varies seasonally between 480 and 505 metres above sea level. The river is formed by the confluence of the North Teign and the South Teign.
    The North Teign rises in the peat bogs near Cosdon Hill. Its initial course is characterized by rapid descent over resistant [metamorphic rock](/ent…