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Preprints

There are 6976 Preprints listed.

Forecasting Marine Heatwaves using Machine Learning

Ayush Prasad, Sanxchep Sharma, Harshvardhan Agarwal

Published: 2022-02-05
Subjects: Computer Sciences, Earth Sciences, Oceanography and Atmospheric Sciences and Meteorology

Recently, severe warm-water episodes have occurred frequently against a background trend of global ocean warming. Sea Surface Temperature anomalies have an impact on the integrity of marine ecosystems which is an important part of the Earth’s climate system. The drastic effects of Marine Heatwaves on aquatic life have been on a steady incline in the recent years, damaging aquatic ecosystems [...]

Trench migration and slab buckling control the formation of the Central Andes

Michaël Pons, Stephan V. Sobolev, Sibiao Liu, et al.

Published: 2022-02-03
Subjects: Geophysics and Seismology, Other Earth Sciences, Tectonics and Structure

The formation of the Central Andes dates back to ~50 Ma, but its most pronounced phase, including the growth of the Altiplano-Puna Plateau and pulsatile tectonic shortening phases, occurred within the last 25 Ma. The reason for this evolution remains unexplained. Using geodynamic numerical modeling we infer that the primary cause of the pulses of tectonic shortening and growth of Central Andes is [...]

2021 North American Heatwave Amplified by Climate-Change-Driven Nonlinear Interactions

Samuel Bartusek, Kai Kornhuber, Mingfang Ting

Published: 2022-02-03
Subjects: Atmospheric Sciences, Climate, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Heat conditions in North America in summer 2021 exceeded prior heatwaves by margins many would have considered impossible under current climate conditions. Associated severe impacts highlight the need for understanding the heatwave’s physical drivers and relations to climate change, to improve the projection and prediction of future extreme heat risks. Here, we find that slow- and fast-moving [...]

The rise of preprints in Earth Sciences

Olivier Pourret, Daniel Enrique Ibarra

Published: 2023-03-21
Subjects: Earth Sciences

Short communication highlighting the rise of preprints in Earth Sciences.

The PATCH Lab: A database and workspace for Cenozoic terrestrial paleoclimate and environment reconstruction

Tyler Kukla, Jeremy K. C. Rugenstein, Elizabeth Driscoll, et al.

Published: 2022-02-03
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geochemistry, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

In the last two decades, analytical advances and a growing interest in relevant research questions has brought a rapid increase in the amount of stable isotope data used for reconstructing terrestrial paleoclimates and environments. As the spatial and temporal resolution of proxy data continues to improve, the quantitative interpretation of these data is becoming increasingly common. These [...]

Timing of the last deglaciation phases in the southern Baltic area inferred from Bayesian age modeling

Karol Tylmann, Szymon Uścinowicz

Published: 2022-02-03
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geology, Geomorphology

A new chronology of the last Scandinavian Ice Sheet retreat in the southern Baltic basin is proposed. Based on Bayesian age modeling, we show that the most likely ages of particular deglaciation phases are 16.5 ± 0.5 ka for the Gardno Phase, 15.6 ± 0.6 ka for the Słupsk Bank Phase, and 13.9 ± 0.5 ka for the Southern Middle Bank Phase. The Gardno moraines are correlated with the Halland Coastal [...]

Tsunami effects on the Coast of Mexico by the Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai volcano eruption, Tonga

Maria Teresa Ramirez Herrera, Oswaldo Coca, Victor Vargas-Espinosa

Published: 2022-02-05
Subjects: Physical Sciences and Mathematics

The massive explosion by the January 14, 2022 Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai volcano in Tonga triggered a trans-oceanic tsunami generated by coupled ocean and atmospheric shock waves during the explosion. The tsunami reached first the coast of Tonga, and later many coasts around the world. The shock wave went around the globe, causing sea perturbations as far as the Caribbean and the Mediterranean [...]

The revolutionary impact of the Deep Time concept: Geology’s modernity and societal implications

Andrea Fildani

Published: 2022-02-05
Subjects: Education, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

I propose throughout this short op-ed that Geology, as one of the most recently established core sciences, is the one most at risk of societal misinterpretation precisely because of its innovativeness. The discovery of ‘deep time’ and the revelation of temporal change were triggered by the advance of geological methodology, which pushed the boundary of the scientific establishment of the time [...]

Antecedent conditions control thresholds of tile-runoff generation and nitrogen export in intensively managed landscapes

Adam Scott Ward, Molly Cain, Praveen Kumar, et al.

Published: 2022-02-05
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Hydrology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Threshold changes in rainfall-runoff generation commonly represent shifts in runoff mechanisms and hydrologic connectivity controlling water and solute transport and transformation. In watersheds with limited human influence, threshold runoff responses reflect interaction between precipitation event and antecedent soil moisture. Similar analyses are lacking in intensively managed landscapes where [...]

High Inter- and Intra-lake Variation in Sediment Phosphorus Pools in Shallow Lakes

Ellen Amara Albright, Rachel Fleck King, Quin Shingai, et al.

Published: 2022-02-05
Subjects: Life Sciences, Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecology

Phosphorus (P) release from lakebed sediments may fuel phytoplankton blooms, especially in shallow waterbodies. A primary mechanism that controls internal P loading is the size and chemical composition of the sediment P pool. However, variation in sediment P within and among shallow lakes remains poorly quantified. We measured the degree of spatial heterogeneity in the size and composition of [...]

Sediment phosphorus composition controls hot spots and hot moments of internal loading in a temperate reservoir

Ellen Amara Albright, Grace Marie Wilkinson

Published: 2022-02-05
Subjects: Life Sciences, Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecology

Phosphorus (P) flux across the sediment-water interface in lakes and reservoirs responds to external perturbations within the context of sediment characteristics. Lentic ecosystems experience profound spatiotemporal heterogeneity in the mechanisms that control sediment P fluxes, likely producing hot spots and hot moments of internal loading. However, spatiotemporal variation in P fluxes remains [...]

Indian Plate paleogeography, subduction, and horizontal underthrusting below Tibet: paradoxes, controvercies, and opportunities

Douwe J.J. van Hinsbergen

Published: 2022-02-06
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geology, Geophysics and Seismology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics, Sedimentology, Tectonics and Structure, Volcanology

The India-Asia collision zone is the archetype to calibrate geological responses of continent-continent collision, but hosts a paradox: there is no orogen-wide geological record of oceanic subduction after initial collision around 60-55 Ma, yet thousands of kilometers of post-collisional subduction occurred before arrival of unsubductable continental lithosphere that currently horizontally [...]

Estimating a social cost of carbon for global energy consumption

Ashwin Rode

Published: 2022-02-09
Subjects: Oil, Gas, and Energy, Social and Behavioral Sciences

Estimates of global economic damage caused by carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions can inform climate policy. The social cost of carbon (SCC) quantifies these damages by characterizing how additional CO2 emissions today impact future economic outcomes through altering the climate. Previous estimates suggest that large, warming-driven increases in energy expenditures could dominate the SCC, but they [...]

The western Andes at ~20–22°S: A contribution to the quantification of crustal shortening and kinematics of deformation

Tania Habel, Martine Simoes, Robin Lacassin, et al.

Published: 2022-02-09
Subjects: Physical Sciences and Mathematics

The Andes are an emblematic active Cordilleran orogen. It is admitted that mountain-building in the Central Andes at ~20°S started by Late Cretaceous to Early Cenozoic along the subduction margin, and propagated eastward. In general, the structures sustaining the uplift of the West Andean flank are dismissed, and their contribution to mountain-building remains poorly solved. Here, we focus on two [...]

Analyzing the uncertainty of the CORINE Land Cover time series (1990-2018) for Spain

David García-Álvarez, María Teresa Camacho Olmedo

Published: 2022-02-10
Subjects: Environmental Studies, Geographic Information Sciences, Geography, Human Geography, Nature and Society Relations, Other Geography, Physical and Environmental Geography, Remote Sensing, Spatial Science

CORINE Land Cover is one of the most relevant Land Use Cover (LUC) databases in Europe because of its degree of detail and long time series. Although some studies have assessed the uncertainty of the database for specific years and periods, no work has been found that analyses all the available CORINE time series (1990-2018). In this study, we analyze the uncertainties of the CORINE time series [...]

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