• Title/Summary/Keyword: shores

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A Study on the Strength Comparison of Steel Pipe Support using the Structural Analysis Program (구조해석에 의한 파이프서포트의 내력비교에 관한 연구)

  • Paik, Shin-Won;Park, Jong-Keun
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Safety
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    • v.23 no.4
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    • pp.67-71
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    • 2008
  • Formwork is a temporary structure that supports its weight and that of fresh concrete as well as construction live loads. Slab formwork consists of sheathing, stringer, hanger and shore. In construction site, pipe supports are usually used as shores which are consisted of the slab formwork. In this study, compressive strength of 80 pipe supports was measured by knife edge test and plate test. Buckling load of pipe supports was analyzed by structural analysis program(MlDAS). Theoretical buckling load with/without initial deformation was got by theoretical analysis. According to these results, buckling load which was analyzed by structural analysis program(MlDAS) was larger than compressive strength of knife edge test and plate test. Theoretical buckling load without initial deformation was larger than compressive strength of knife edge test and plate test. But Theoretical buckling load with initial deformation was lower than compressive strength of knife edge test and plate test. Initial deformation equation for test method according to the pipe support length was suggested. Therefore, the present study results will be used to design the slab formwork safely.

Tracking the Movement and Distribution of Green Tides on the Yellow Sea in 2015 Based on GOCI and Landsat Images

  • Min, Seung-Hwan;Oh, Hyun-Ju;Hwang, Jae-Dong;Suh, Young-Sang;Park, Mi-Ok;Shin, Ji-Sun;Kim, Wonkook
    • Korean Journal of Remote Sensing
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    • v.33 no.1
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    • pp.97-109
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    • 2017
  • Green tides that developed along the coast of China in 2015 were detected and tracked using vegetation indices from GOCI and Landsat images. Green tides first appeared near the Jiangsu Province on May 14 before increasing in size and number and moving northward to the Shandong Peninsula in mid-June. Typhoon Cham-hom passed through the Yellow Sea on July 12, significantly decreasing the algal population. An algae patch moved east toward Korea and on June 18 and July 4, several masses were found between the southwestern shores of Korea and Jeju Island. The floating masses found in Korean waters were concentrated at the boundary of the open sea and the Jindo cold pool, a phenomenon also observed at the boundary of coastal and offshore waters in China. Sea surface temperatures, derived from NOAA SST data, were found to play a role in generation of the green tides.

Load-carrying capacities and failure modes of scaffold-shoring systems, Part II: An analytical model and its closed-form solution

  • Huang, Y.L.;Kao, Y.G.;Rosowsky, D.V.
    • Structural Engineering and Mechanics
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    • v.10 no.1
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    • pp.67-79
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    • 2000
  • Critical loads and load-carrying capacities for steel scaffolds used as shoring systems were compared using computational and experimental methods in Part I of this paper. In that paper, a simple 2-D model was established for use in evaluating the structural behavior of scaffold-shoring systems. This 2-D model was derived using an incremental finite element analysis (FEA) of a typical complete scaffold-shoring system. Although the simplified model is only two-dimensional, it predicts the critical loads and failure modes of the complete system. The objective of this paper is to present a closed-form solution to the 2-D model. To simplify the analysis, a simpler model was first established to replace the 2-D model. Then, a closed-form solution for the critical loads and failure modes based on this simplified model were derived using a bifurcation (eigenvalue) approach to the elastic-buckling problem. In this closed-form equation, the critical loads are shown to be function of the number of stories, material properties, and section properties of the scaffolds. The critical loads and failure modes obtained from the analytical (closed-form) solution were compared with the results from the 2-D model. The comparisons show that the critical loads from the analytical solution (simplified model) closely match the results from the more complex model, and that the predicted failure modes are nearly identical.

People Detection Algorithm in Dynamic Background (동적인 배경에서의 사람 검출 알고리즘)

  • Choi, Yu Jung;Lee, Dong Ryeol;Kim, Yoon
    • Journal of Industrial Technology
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    • v.38 no.1
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    • pp.41-52
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    • 2018
  • Recently, object detection is a critical function for any system that uses computer vision and is widely used in various fields such as video surveillance and self-driving cars. However, the conventional methods can not detect the objects clearly because of the dynamic background change in the beach. In this paper, we propose a new technique to detect humans correctly in the dynamic videos like shores. A new background modeling method that combines spatial GMM (Gaussian Mixture Model) and temporal GMM is proposed to make more correct background image. Also, the proposed method improve the accuracy of people detection by using SVM (Support Vector Machine) to classify people from the objects and KCF (Kernelized Correlation Filter) Tracker to track people continuously in the complicated environment. The experimental result shows that our method can work well for detection and tracking of objects in videos containing dynamic factors and situations.

First Record of the Blenniid Fish Istiblennius dussumieri (Blenniidae, Perciformes) from Japan (일본산 청베도라치과 어류 1미기록종, Istiblennius dussumieri)

  • Lee, Chung-Lyul;Yoshihiko, Machida;Shigeru, Nagatomo
    • Korean Journal of Ichthyology
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    • v.12 no.1
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    • pp.20-24
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    • 2000
  • The blenniid fish, Istiblennius dussumieri (Valenciennes) was reported on the basis of six specimens collected from rocky shores on the Yokonami Peninsula, Kochi Prefecture, southern Japan. This species was characterized by wavy, dusky stripes on its dorsal fin, 14 pectoral fin rays, 38 to 42 vertebrae, branched supraorbital cirrus, finger-like nasal cirrus, seven to ten vertical, dark bands on the body and canines absent on both jaws. Although the occurrence of this species may be due to larval transport by the Kuroshio Current, this is the first record of I. dussumieri from Japan represents a remarkable northern range extension of the species in the western Pacific Ocean.

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The clonal seaweed Chondrus crispus as a foundation species

  • Scrosati, Ricardo A.
    • ALGAE
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    • v.31 no.1
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    • pp.41-48
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    • 2016
  • The clonal seaweed Chondrus crispus (Rhodophyta, Gigartinales) forms extensive stands at low intertidal elevations on wave-sheltered rocky shores of the North Atlantic. This study investigates if this bushy alga acts as a foundation species in such habitats. The abundance (percent cover) of C. crispus, all other algae, and invertebrates was measured in 390 quadrats spanning 350 km of coast in Nova Scotia, Canada. In these low-intertidal habitats, fucoid algae are the largest organisms and can form extensive canopies, but their cover was unrelated to benthic species richness and to C. crispus cover. Species richness, however, increased with C. crispus cover from low to intermediate cover values, showing little change towards full C. crispus cover. Species composition (a combined measure of species identity and their relative abundance) differed between quadrats with low (0-1%) and high (60-100%) cover of C. crispus. High C. crispus cover was associated to more invertebrate species but fewer algal species than low C. crispus cover. However, the average abundance of algal and invertebrate species occurring in both cover groups was often higher under high C. crispus cover, contributing to a higher average richness at the quadrat scale. Overall, only 16% of the observed variation in species richness was explained by C. crispus cover. Therefore, this study suggests that C. crispus acts as a foundation species but with a moderate influence.

The Contamination of Sventoji River Bottom Sediments by Heavy Metals in Ukmerge, Lithuania

  • Valskys, Vaidotas;Motiejunas, Mindaugas;Ignatavicius, Gytautas;Sinkevicius, Stanislovas
    • Journal of Environmental Science International
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    • v.25 no.1
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    • pp.1-10
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    • 2016
  • Bottom sediment pollution with heavy metals of the Sventoji River in Ukmerge, Lithuania using X-ray fluorescence spectrometry is analyzed in this article. During the research, qualitative and quantitative parameters of heavy metal concentrations and their distribution were investigated. This article presents obtained results of study, where bottom sediment samples were examined from both shores of the river of Sventoji. During this research, received data was treated using GIS software, which helped to interpolate the data of concentrations into the research polygon of the river. GIS software also helped to evaluate the urban runoff influence to the bottom sediment quality and exclude sources of pollution. The runoff dischargers which transport surface wastewater to the river were registered before sampling. At the mouth of streams, flowing into the river of Sventoji, additional samples were taken. After comprehensive river bottom sediment research there is a possibility to assess the extent of anthropogenic activity and its impact on the river ecosystem and human health.

Phylogeography of the Lessonia variegata species complex (Phaeophyceae, Laminariales) in New Zealand

  • Zuccarello, Giuseppe C.;Martin, Peter
    • ALGAE
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    • v.31 no.2
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    • pp.91-103
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    • 2016
  • A goal of phylogeography is to relate phylogenetic patterns to potential historic and contemporary geographic isolating events. Genetic breaks found in phylogeographic studies may denote boundaries between more generally applicable biogeographic regions. We investigated the distribution of Lessonia variegata, an important habitat forming alga, found on most rocky shores around New Zealand’s main islands, plus related species from surrounding waters. L. variegata has been shown to consist of four distinct cryptic species. Our aim was to compare the distribution of L. variegata with proposed bioregions; and to develop phylogeographic hypotheses to explain its present day distribution. Both a mitochondrial (atp8-sp) and plastid (RuBisCo spacer) marker, with different mutation rates, were used to gain information of the phylogenetic history of Lessonia. The data revealed high phylogeographic structuring and reciprocal endemism for all L. variegata cryptic species. One species (L. variegata / N) is confined to the northern part of the North Island of New Zealand; L. variegata / W is found at the southeast of the North Island and the northern South Island; L. variegata / K is endemic to the northeast South Island; and L. variegata / S is restricted to the southern part of the South Island. No overlapping areas of L. variegata species distribution were found. The data showed that genetic breaks in Lessonia do mostly correlate to bioregions, and highlight the importance of Cape Campbell at the northeast of the South Island and East Cape in the North Island, well known phylogeographic breaks, as a barrier between adjacent species.

Assessment Analysis on Development Potential of the Clustered Settlements in the Released Green-Belt (개발제한구역 해제지역내 집단취락 개발잠재력 평가분석)

  • Choi, Im-Joo;Ahn, Jun-Hong
    • Journal of the Korean Association of Geographic Information Studies
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    • v.11 no.4
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    • pp.112-121
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    • 2008
  • The study aimed to extract development potential on clustered settlements by deciding priority on extracting standardization points taking pure development indexes and future development conditions into account targeting clustered settlements released from green-belt in Gijang-gun, Busan. The study selected individual indexes on 4 areas on aspects of natural, physical, development, approach for objective and scientific analysis through Busan's GIS Data. The results showed that large clustered settlements near shores are areas with high development index value and evaluated as areas with high development potential, and smaller clustered settlements located inland near the west of National Road 14 showed that individual index values were lower thus evaluated as areas with lower development potential.

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Spatial Species Diversity of Benthic Macroinvertebrates on the Intertidal Zone of Chujado , Cheju Islands (추자도 조간대 저서 대형무척추동물의 공간적 종다양성)

  • 이정재;현재민
    • The Korean Journal of Malacology
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    • v.13 no.1
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    • pp.71-90
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    • 1997
  • A soudy on the distrobution and seasonal changes of the benthic macrovertebrates community was performed on the 5 intertidal rocky shores of Chujado in the Cheju-Channel during four seasons from March 1996 to February 1997.The macroinvertebrates identified in Chujado totally composed of 9 phyla, 18 classes, 38 orers, 147 species. The macroinvertebrates idetified according to the stations were 9 phyla, 138 species in Sinyangri(ST. 1); 8 phyla, 134 species in Younghungri(ST. 4);and 8 phyla, 131 species in Daeseori(ST. 5); The species diversities of the lower intertidal zones were higher than those of middle and upper intertidal zones, however, the seasonal appearance in number of species was not different among the stations. The vertically distributed dominant species in intertidal zone were; Nodifittorina exigua and Nerita japponica in the supralittoral zones; Monodonta labio labil and Buccinulum ferrea in the upper zones; Septifer keenae and Lunella coronata corensis in the middle zones; Purpura clavigara, S. keenae and Pomatoleios krausii in the submiddle zones; and Actinia mesembryanthemum, Tetracliata squamosa japonica and N. schrenckii in the lower zones. The intertidal community structures between Chujado and Cheju coast showed that Chujado composed of fewer number of species and lower value of species diversity and richness indices than Cheju coast.

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