Articles in 2012

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  • Ocean acidification may seriously impair marine calcifying organisms. Emiliania huxleyi, the world’s single most important calcifying organism, may be able to evolve in response to ocean acidification conditions, according to laboratory selection experiments.

    • Kai T. Lohbeck
    • Ulf Riebesell
    • Thorsten B. H. Reusch
    Article
  • The supply of magma to Kīlauea Volcano, Hawai‘i, was thought to have been steady over the past decades. Measurements of deformation, gas emissions, seismicity and lava composition and temperatures show that instead magma supply from the mantle doubled in 2003–2007, implying that hotspots can provide varying amounts of magma over just a few years.

    • Michael P. Poland
    • Asta Miklius
    • Carl R. Thornber
    Article
  • Rifting of the eastern part of the East African Rift System was thought to have begun several million years before its western counterpart. Reconstructions of drainage development, combined with dating of rift-related volcanic activity, suggest that rifting in the western branch may instead have begun at the same time as in the eastern branch.

    • E. M. Roberts
    • N. J. Stevens
    • S. Hemming
    Article
  • Before the rise of oxygen, the atmosphere of the early Earth may have consisted of an organic haze. Geochemical data and modelling suggest that from 2.65 to 2.5 Gyr ago, several transitions between hazy and haze-free atmospheric conditions occurred, potentially linked to variations in biogenic methane production.

    • Aubrey L. Zerkle
    • Mark W. Claire
    • Simon W. Poulton
    Article