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Creators/Authors contains: "Shillington, DJ"

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  1. We present a high-resolution age-depth model for Site M0079, drilled in the Corinth rift, central Greece, during International Ocean Discovery Program Expedition 381. To establish the model, we use available age constrains derived from postcruise research, including ages from 14C analysis and visible tephra layers, together with published ages from U/Th analysis, magnetostratigraphy, and relative paleointensity data. The age-depth model is built for the entire length of the Site M0079 drill hole using a probabilistic modeling approach in OxCal software. The resulting age-depth model provides a robust chronological framework for sediment accumulation within the Gulf of Corinth, constraining the most recent phase of synrift deposition over the past 800,000 y. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available April 29, 2026
  2. NORTH AMERICA’S LARGEST EARTHQUAKES and most powerful volcanic eruptions occur along the Alaska Peninsula subduction zone, a meeting of two tectonic plates that sweeps an arc across the North Pacific margin between Alaska and Russia. However, studies that would help us understand these hazards are few and far between in this remote, sparsely populated region. A major new shoreline- crossing community seismic experiment spans the Alaska Peninsula subduction zone, with the intention of filling gaps in our knowledge of this region. Information that we collect along this margin can provide direct information about many first- order questions about subduction zone processes that influence earthquakes and volcanism. 
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