Articles in 2011

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  • Erosion in the Washington Cascades Mountains was dominated by glacier activity until the end of the Last Glacial Maximum, when fluvial incision and mass wasting became the dominant drivers. An analysis of millennial-scale rates of denudation in the range suggest erosion is sensitive both to spatial variations in precipitation and inherited topography.

    • Seulgi Moon
    • C. Page Chamberlain
    • George E. Hilley
    Article
  • Slow slip of the down-going plate at subduction zones can generate seismic tremor. Analysis of recent large tremor and slip episodes along the Cascadia subduction zone reveals tremor signals that reverse and rapidly migrate back along the previously ruptured fault, implying that the initial fault slip weakened the plate interface.

    • Heidi Houston
    • Brent G. Delbridge
    • Kenneth C. Creager
    Article
  • Estimates for sea level three million years ago, a period with similar atmospheric CO2 levels to today, vary from 10 to 40 m above present. Glacial isostatic adjustment modelling suggests that variations in the height of palaeoshorelines result from the residual adjustment of continental flexure following recent glaciations.

    • Maureen E. Raymo
    • Jerry X. Mitrovica
    • Paul J. Hearty
    Article
  • Two types of mountain-forming systems exist on Earth — external orogens form during oceanic–continental plate collisions and internal orogens form where continental plates collide. Hafnium isotope data from orogens worldwide show that each has produced a distinctive signature over the past 550 Myr, reflecting the contrasting subduction geometry in each setting.

    • William J. Collins
    • Elena A. Belousova
    • J. Brendan Murphy
    Article
  • Individual rock units are predicted by tectonic models to undergo numerous, complex cycles of subduction. Analysis of high-pressure rocks exposed in the Sesia zone, Italian Western Alps, suggest that slices of the crust underwent two distinct episodes of subduction to mantle depths in fewer than 20 million years.

    • Daniela Rubatto
    • Daniele Regis
    • Sarlae R. B. McAlpine
    Article
  • The Pacific sector of Antarctica has experienced substantial warming in the past 30 years. Observations of global surface temperatures and atmospheric circulation data show that the warming in continental West Antarctica is linked to sea surface temperature changes in the tropical Pacific Ocean.

    • Qinghua Ding
    • Eric J. Steig
    • Marcel Küttel
    Article
  • Submarine melting has been suggested as a trigger for the widespread acceleration of tidewater glaciers in Greenland. An analysis of oceanographic data from the fjord off Helheim Glacier, Greenland, suggests the presence of light Arctic and dense Atlantic waters in the fjord and that the melting circulation is more complex than thought.

    • Fiammetta Straneo
    • Ruth G. Curry
    • Leigh A. Stearns
    Article
  • Continental lithosphere can undergo pervasive internal deformation, but patterns of flow within the lithosphere are difficult to observe. Determination of seismic Rayleigh-wave anisotropy in the crust and mantle of the Aegean region reveal matching orientations of regional-scale anisotropic fabric and the directions of extension during the last significant episodes of deformation.

    • Brigitte Endrun
    • Sergei Lebedev
    • Wolfgang Friederich
    Article
  • During the Eocene, profuse magmatism and hydrothermal activity in the Great Basin of western North America produced Earth’s second largest concentration of gold in Nevada. An integration of mineral analyses, experimental data and age and isotope data suggests a magmatic source for these deposits.

    • John L. Muntean
    • Jean S. Cline
    • Anthony A. Longo
    Article
  • Atmospheric deposition of mercury to remote areas has increased threefold since pre-industrial times. Reductions in sea-ice cover accelerate the photodegradation of biologically accessible mercury in Arctic waters, according to an analysis of the isotopic composition of bird eggs in northern latitudes.

    • D. Point
    • J. E. Sonke
    • P. R. Becker
    Article
  • The East Antarctic ice sheet retreated at the end of the last glacial period. Terrestrial and marine data suggest that the retreat began 14,000 years ago, indicating that the East Antarctic ice sheet probably did not contribute to meltwater pulse 1a 14,700 years ago.

    • Andrew Mackintosh
    • Nicholas Golledge
    • Caroline Lavoie
    Article