Legal insanity and risk: An international perspective on the justification of indeterminate preventive commitment

Publication date

2019-09

Authors

Bijlsma, JohannesISNI 0000000389971155
de Jong, F.ISNI 0000000085409040
Kooijmans, T
Meynen, GerbenORCID 0000-0001-7298-8407ISNI 0000000108663755

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Article
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taverne

Abstract

Particle-laden gravity flows, called turbidity currents, flow through river-like channels across the ocean floor. These submarine channels funnel sediment, nutrients, pollutants and organic carbon into ocean basins and can extend for over 1000’s of kilometers. Upon reaching the end of these channels, flows lose their confinement, decelerate, and deposit their sediment load; this is what we read in textbooks. However, sea floor observations have shown the opposite: turbidity currents tend to erode the seafloor upon losing confinement. Here we use a state-of-the-art scaling method to produce the first experimental turbidity currents that erode upon leaving a channel. The experiments reveal a novel flow mechanism, here called flow relaxation, that explains this erosion. Flow relaxation is rapid flow deformation resulting from the loss of confinement, which enhances basal shearing of the turbidity current and leads to scouring. This flow mechanism plays a key role in the propagation of submarine channel systems.

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Citation

Bijlsma, J, de Jong, F, Kooijmans, T & Meynen, G 2019, 'Legal insanity and risk: An international perspective on the justification of indeterminate preventive commitment', International Journal of Law and Psychiatry, vol. 66, 101462. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijlp.2019.101462