Articles in 2013

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    • P. J. Armitage
    • D. R. Faulkner
    • R. H. Worden
    Correspondence
  • About 8,200 years ago, the overturning circulation in the Atlantic Ocean slowed and the Northern Hemisphere cooled. A speleothem record from China reveals a period of drying that occurred almost simultaneously with the cooling recorded by the Greenland ice cores.

    • Carrie Morrill
    News & Views
  • The dawn of exoplanet discovery has unearthed a rich tapestry of planets different from anything encountered in the Solar System. Geoscientists can and should be in the vanguard of investigating what is out there in the Universe.

    • Raymond T. Pierrehumbert
    Commentary
  • The molten-iron alloy of the core meets the mantle's silicate rock at Earth's core–mantle boundary. Seismological images reveal hummocks of iron-enriched material above the boundary, highlighting the heterogeneous nature of the mantle.

    • Sebastian Rost
    News & Views
  • The Antarctic Peninsula has long been thought to be the only part of Antarctica that has warmed in recent decades. Careful detective work confirms that West Antarctica is also warming rapidly.

    • Eric J. Steig
    • Anais J. Orsi
    News & Views
  • At the end of the Eocene epoch, permanent ice cover developed over Antarctica as the Earth began to cool from greenhouse warmth. Sediment records off the Antarctic coast show spikes in weathering rate at the onset of ice growth that may indicate synchronous consumption of atmospheric carbon dioxide.

    • Brian A. Haley
    News & Views
  • The subsurface of Mars could potentially have contained a vast microbial biosphere. An evaluation of the possibility of groundwater upwelling, which might provide clues to subsurface habitability, reveals evidence in the deep McLaughlin crater for clays and carbonates that probably formed in an alkaline, groundwater-fed lacustrine setting.

    • Joseph R. Michalski
    • Javier Cuadros
    • Shawn P. Wright
    Article
  • Diogenite meteorites are thought to represent mantle rocks that formed as cumulates in magma chambers on 4 Vesta or a similar differentiated asteroid. Microstructural analysis of olivine grains from a diogenite meteorite show that the preferred orientation of their crystal lattice was formed through plastic deformation, indicating dynamic, planet-like processes in its parent body.

    • B. J. Tkalcec
    • G. J. Golabek
    • F. E. Brenker
    Letter
  • The causes for rising temperatures along the Antarctic Peninsula over the past few thousand years have been debated. Analyses of diatom geochemistry and assemblage ecology from Palmer Deep off the western margin of the Antarctic Peninsula reveal that atmospheric processes have dominated glacial ice discharge during the late Holocene.

    • Jennifer Pike
    • George E. A. Swann
    • Andrea M. Snelling
    Letter
  • Deposits of highly vesicular pumice that blanket submarine volcanoes are often attributed to explosive eruptions. Density and textural analysis of clasts dredged from the submarine Macauley Volcano, southwest Pacific Ocean, however, reveal an eruptive style that is neither explosive nor effusive, with clasts instead forming from buoyant detachment of a magma foam.

    • Melissa D. Rotella
    • Colin J. N. Wilson
    • Ian C. Wright
    Letter
  • Naturally occurring bromine- and iodine-containing compounds substantially reduce regional, and possibly global, tropospheric ozone levels. Experimental and model results suggest that the reaction of ozone with iodide could account for around 75% of observed iodine oxide levels over the tropical Atlantic Ocean.

    • Lucy J. Carpenter
    • Samantha M. MacDonald
    • John M. C. Plane
    Letter
  • Advances in seasonal forecasting have brought widespread socio-economic benefits. A modelling study suggests that tropospheric forecast skill is enhanced when the forecast model is initialized at the onset of a stratospheric sudden warming event.

    • M. Sigmond
    • J. F. Scinocca
    • T. G. Shepherd
    Letter