1980 - Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
His scientific interests lie mostly in Quaternary, Paleontology, Holocene, Oceanography and Sedimentary depositional environment. His research in Quaternary intersects with topics in Physical geography and Pleistocene. His studies deal with areas such as Sea level and Subsidence as well as Holocene.
Daniel Jean Stanley works mostly in the field of Oceanography, limiting it down to topics relating to Mediterranean sea and, in certain cases, Terrigenous sediment, Erosion, Longshore drift, Sediment transport and Structural basin. His studies in Sedimentary depositional environment integrate themes in fields like Sediment and Evaporite. His Sediment study combines topics from a wide range of disciplines, such as Geochemistry and Stratification.
The scientist’s investigation covers issues in Paleontology, Sediment, Oceanography, Geomorphology and Quaternary. In his research on the topic of Paleontology, Tectonics is strongly related with Mediterranean sea. Daniel Jean Stanley combines subjects such as Continental shelf and Silt with his study of Sediment.
The concepts of his Oceanography study are interwoven with issues in Mediterranean climate and Provenance. His Geomorphology research includes themes of Geochemistry and Debris flow. His work carried out in the field of Quaternary brings together such families of science as Radiocarbon dating, Holocene, Water mass, Evaporite and Subsidence.
His main research concerns Holocene, Oceanography, Paleontology, Quaternary and Sediment. His Holocene research incorporates elements of Clastic rock, Fauna, Sea level, Physical geography and Subsidence. His Oceanography research focuses on subjects like Mediterranean climate, which are linked to Archaeological evidence.
His Paleontology study frequently draws connections between related disciplines such as Geomorphology. His research integrates issues of Feature, Passive margin and Shore in his study of Quaternary. Daniel Jean Stanley interconnects Hydrology, Coastal erosion, Provenance and Fluvial in the investigation of issues within Sediment.
Daniel Jean Stanley mainly investigates Holocene, Quaternary, Subsidence, Sedimentary depositional environment and Paleontology. Daniel Jean Stanley focuses mostly in the field of Holocene, narrowing it down to matters related to Sea level and, in some cases, Flood myth and Silt. His work deals with themes such as Pleistocene and Facies, which intersect with Subsidence.
His study ties his expertise on Sediment together with the subject of Sedimentary depositional environment. His Sediment research incorporates themes from Clastic rock, Paleosalinity, Hydrology, Geochemistry and Evaporite. Paleontology and Geomorphology are frequently intertwined in his study.
This overview was generated by a machine learning system which analysed the scientist’s body of work. If you have any feedback, you can contact us here.
Marine sediment transport and environmental management
Daniel J. Stanley;Donald J. P. Swift.
(1976)
The Mediterranean Sea;: A natural sedimentation laboratory
Daniel J. Stanley;Gilbert Kelling.
(1973)
Relict Sediments on Continental Shelves: A Reconsideration
Donald J. P. Swift;Daniel J. Stanley;Joseph R. Curray.
The Journal of Geology (1971)
Sedimentation in submarine canyons, fans and trenches
Daniel J. Stanley;Gilbert Kelling.
(1978)
Late Quaternary water exchange between the eastern Mediterranean and the Black Sea
Daniel Jean Stanley;Christian Blanpied.
Nature (1980)
Late Quaternary palaeoclimatic oscillations in East Africa recorded by heavy minerals in the Nile delta
Alain Foucault;Daniel Jean Stanley.
Nature (1989)
Evidence for Earliest Olive-Oil Production in Submerged Settlements off the Carmel Coast, Israel
Ehud Galili;Daniel Jean Stanley;Jacob Sharvit;Mina Weinstein-Evron.
Journal of Archaeological Science (1997)
Sea level and initiation of Predynastic culture in the Nile delta
Daniel Jean Stanley;Andrew G. Warne;Andrew G. Warne.
Nature (1993)
Neolithic settlement distributions as a function of sea level–controlled topography in the Yangtze delta, China
Daniel Jean Stanley;Zhongyuan Chen.
Geology (1996)
Unifites: structureless muds of gravity-flow origin in Mediterranean basins
Daniel Jean Stanley.
Geo-marine Letters (1981)
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