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Dive into the research topics where Daniel Pavani Vicente Alves is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniel Pavani Vicente Alves.


Brazilian Journal of Oceanography | 2010

The Southern Brazilian shelf: general characteristics, quaternary evolution and sediment distribution

Michel Michaelovitch de Mahiques; Silvia Helena de Mello e Sousa; Valdenir Veronese Furtado; Moysés Gonsalez Tessler; Felipe Antonio de L Toledo; Leticia Burone; Rubens Cesar Lopes Figueira; Daniel Andreas Klein; Cristina Celia Martins; Daniel Pavani Vicente Alves

S to 22 S the Southern Brazilian shelf constitutes the only part of the Brazilian shelf with a subtropical to temperate environment. The studies on the different geological aspects of the area began in the 1960´s and have recently been reassessed after studies related to the determination of the Economic Exclusive Zone. In terms of morphology, the Southern Brazilian shelf may be divided into three sectors, the Sao Paulo Bight, the Florianopolis-Mostardas Sector and the Rio Grande Cone, characterized by conspicuous differences in terms of geological determining factors, bathymetry, declivities and the presence of canyons and channels. Despite the existence of hundreds of radiocarbon datings the sea level changes curve of southern Brazil during the Last Glacial Cycle is still a matter of debate. A recent controversy on the Middle and late Holocene sea level changes curve raised the question of the amplitude of the oscillations which occurred in the period. Also, a few but relatively consistent radiocarbon datings suggest the occurrence of a high sea level during Isotope Stage 3. In terms of sedimentary cover the Southern Brazilian shelf exhibits a very strong hydrodynamic control, both latitudinal and bathymetrical. The sector southward from 25


Anais Da Academia Brasileira De Ciencias | 2014

Coastline changes and sedimentation related with the opening of an artificial channel: the Valo Grande Delta, SE Brazil

Michel Michaelovitch de Mahiques; Rubens Cesar Lopes Figueira; Daniel Pavani Vicente Alves; Diana Melo Italiani; Cristina Celia Martins; João Alveirinho Dias

The role played by human activity in coastline changes indicates a general tendency of retreating coasts, especially deltaic environments, as a result of the recent trend of sea level rise as well as the blockage of the transfer of sediments towards the coast, especially due to the construction of dams. This is particularly important in deltaic environments which have been suffering a dramatic loss of area in the last decades. In contrast, in this paper, we report the origin and evolution of an anthropogenic delta, the Valo Grande delta, on the south-eastern Brazilian coast, whose origin is related to the opening of an artificial channel and the diversion of the main flow of the Ribeira de Iguape River. The methodology included the analysis of coastline changes, bathymetry and coring, which were used to determine the sedimentation rates and grain-size changes over time. The results allowed us to recognize the different facies of the anthropogenic delta and establish its lateral and vertical depositional trends. Despite not being very frequent, anthropogenic deltas represent a favorable environment for the record of natural and anthropogenic changes in historical times and, thus, deserve more attention from researchers of different subjects.


Frontiers of Earth Science in China | 2016

Seismostratigraphy of the Ceará Plateau: Clues to Decipher the Cenozoic Evolution of Brazilian Equatorial Margin

Luigi Jovane; Jorge Picanco Figueiredo; Daniel Pavani Vicente Alves; David Iacopini; Martino Giorgioni; Paola Vannucchi; Denise Moura; Francisco Hilário Rego Bezerra; Helenic Vital; Isabella Rios; Eder Cassola Molina

The Ceara Plateau offshore Fortaleza holds some particular characteristics when compared to the other seamounts of the Brazilian Equatorial Margin (BEM). Not only it is the largest and the closest to the continent, it is also located at the boundary between the continental and the oceanic crusts, while all the others seamounts along the BEM are located on oceanic crust. Seismic imaging of the Ceara Plateau shows a “disorganized” interior, probably of volcanic origin, overlain by a series of horizontal seismic reflectors that can be interpreted as pelagic/hemipelagic sediments. As large uncertainties exist about the age of the initial formation of this seamount, three scenarios must be considered. If the age of the volcanic edifice is Coniacian (1), then the overlying pelagic/hemipelagic sedimentary succession can include an almost continuous record of the last ~90 Ma at the Equatorial Atlantic Ocean. In the case that the volcanic edifice is Eocene in age (2), the sedimentary sequence would still encompass the upper Paleogene and all the Neogene. There is also the possibility that the volcanic edifice was built during multiple magmatic events (3). In this case, it is likely that the sediments are interfingered with volcanic rocks at the edge of the structure. Although the age estimation (between Coniacian and Eocene) has an uncertainty of more than 40 Myr, the current interpretation is that it developed initially as a volcanic edifice, formed by a series of magmatic events that occurred between the Santonian and the Eocene. Since then, the topography has been leveled by pelagic/hemipelagic sedimentation. Whichever was the initial age, a continuous and constant sequence of sediments deposited onto the Ceara Plateau, at the same latitude, and thus under the same oceanographic conditions, for the last several tens of million years. This represents a unique opportunity to record a long-term history of the Atlantic Equatorial Margin.


Environmental Earth Sciences | 2013

150 years of anthropogenic metal input in a Biosphere Reserve: the case study of the Cananéia–Iguape coastal system, Southeastern Brazil

Michel Michaelovitch de Mahiques; Rubens Cesar Lopes Figueira; Alexandre Barbosa Salaroli; Daniel Pavani Vicente Alves; Cristina Gonçalves


Quaternary International | 2009

A high-resolution Holocene record on the Southern Brazilian shelf: Paleoenvironmental implications

Michel Michaelovitch de Mahiques; Ilana Wainer; Leticia Burone; Renata H. Nagai; Silvia Helena de Mello e Sousa; Rubens Cesar Lopes Figueira; Ilson Carlos Almeida da Silveira; Márcia C. Bícego; Daniel Pavani Vicente Alves; Øyvind Hammer


Continental Shelf Research | 2015

Shallow gas occurrence in a Brazilian ría (Saco do Mamanguá, Rio de Janeiro) inferred from high-resolution seismic data

Mariana Benites; Daniel Pavani Vicente Alves; Mascimiliano de los Santos Maly; Luigi Jovane


Journal of Sedimentary Environments | 2016

IN-PHASE INTER-HEMISPHERIC CHANGES IN TWO UPWELLING REGIONS: THE SOUTHEAST BRAZILIAN AND NW IBERIAN MARGINS

Renata H. Nagai; Maria Virgínia Alves Martins; Leticia Burone; Ilana Elazarei Klein Coaracy Wainer; Silvia Helena de Mello e Sousa; Rubens Cesar Lopes Figueira; Márcia C. Bícego; Daniel Pavani Vicente Alves; João Alveirinho Dias; Michel Michaelovitch de Mahiques


12th International Congress of the Brazilian Geophysical Society & EXPOGEF, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 15-18 August 2011 | 2011

A seismostratigraphic approach to the study of the Quaternary sedimentary evolution of the São Sebastião Channel, North Coast of São Paulo

Daniel Pavani Vicente Alves; Michel Michaelovitch de Mahiques


Antropicosta Iberoamericana | 2010

150 anos de aporte de metais antropogênicos emu ma reserva da Biosfera: o Estudo de caso do sistema costeiro Cananéia-Iguape, Sudeste do Brasil.

Alexandre Barbosa Salaroli; Daniel Pavani Vicente Alves; Rubens Cesar Lopes Figueira; Michel Michaelovitch de Mahiques


Antropicosta Iberoamericana | 2010

Evolução da linha de costa e morfologia atual do Delta do Valo Grande, Litoral Sudeste do Brasil

Diana Melo Italiani; Daniel Pavani Vicente Alves; Rubens Cesar Lopes Figueira; João Alveirinho Dias; Michel Michaelovitch de Mahiques

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Leticia Burone

University of São Paulo

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Luigi Jovane

University of São Paulo

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