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Preprints

There are 6976 Preprints listed.

Plate tectonics drive deep biosphere microbial community structure

Katherine M. Fullerton, Matthew O Schrenk, Mustafa Yücel, et al.

Published: 2019-10-13
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Environmental Microbiology and Microbial Ecology Life Sciences, Life Sciences, Microbiology, Other Earth Sciences, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

The deep subsurface is one of Earth’s largest biomes. Here, microorganisms modify volatiles moving between the deep and surface Earth. However, it is unknown whether large-scale tectonic processes affect the distribution of microorganisms across this subterranean landscape. We sampled subsurface microbial ecosystems in deeply-sourced springs across the Costa Rican convergent margin. Noble gases, [...]

Making mountains on Earth and beyond

Nigel Harris

Published: 2019-10-13
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geophysics and Seismology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics, Tectonics and Structure

Many of Earth’s mountains are formed in orogenic belts aligned along plate margins. Their altitudes (reaching >8,000 m above sea level in the Himalayas) are the result of the balance between tectonic forces causing their uplift and erosive processes causing their destruction. The tectonic forces result, in part, from isostacy which is determined by the plasticity of the asthenosphere, but [...]

River inflow dominates methane emissions in an Arctic coastal system

Cara C M Manning, Victoria Preston, Samantha Jones, et al.

Published: 2019-10-13
Subjects: Biogeochemistry, Earth Sciences, Environmental Monitoring, Environmental Sciences, Fresh Water Studies, Geochemistry, Oceanography, Oceanography and Atmospheric Sciences and Meteorology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Measurements of greenhouse gases in Arctic waters are strongly biased toward low-ice summer conditions, with few observations during periods of seasonal ice retreat. We present a year-round time series of dissolved methane (CH4) and nitrous oxide (N2O), along with targeted observations during ice melt of CH4 and carbon dioxide (CO2) in a river and estuary adjacent to Cambridge Bay, Nunavut, [...]

“Conjugate margins” – An oversimplification of the complex southern North Atlantic rift and spreading system?

Alexander Lewis Peace, J. K. Welford

Published: 2019-10-13
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics, Tectonics and Structure

The prevalence of conjugate margin terminology and studies in the scientific literature is testimony to the contribution that this concept and approach has made to the study of passive margins, and more broadly extensional tectonics. However, when applied to the complex rift, transform and spreading system of the southern North Atlantic (i.e. the passive margins of Newfoundland, Labrador, [...]

Rock strength and structural controls on fluvial erodibility: implications for drainage divide mobility in a collisional mountain belt

Jesse Ruben Zondervan, Martin Stokes, Sarah J Boulton, et al.

Published: 2019-10-13
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geomorphology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics, Tectonics and Structure

Numerical model simulations and experiments have suggested that when migration of the main drainage divide occurs in a mountain belt, it can lead to the rearrangement of river catchments, rejuvenation of topography, and changes in erosion rates and sediment flux. We assess the progressive mobility of the drainage divide in three lithologically and structurally distinct groups of bedrock in the [...]

Redshift of Earthquakes via Focused Blind Deconvolution of Teleseisms

Pawan Bharadwaj, Chunfang Meng, Aimé Fournier, et al.

Published: 2019-10-13
Subjects: Applied Mathematics, Earth Sciences, Electrical and Computer Engineering, Engineering, Geophysics and Seismology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics, Signal Processing

We present a robust factorization of the teleseismic waveforms resulting from an earthquake source into signals that originate from the source and signals that characterize the path effects. The extracted source signals represent the earthquake spectrum and its variation with azimuth. Unlike most prior work on source extraction, our method is data-driven, and it does not depend on any [...]

The sensitivity of estimates of multiphase fluid and solid properties of porous rocks to image processing

Gaetano Garfi, Cédric M. John, Steffen Berg, et al.

Published: 2019-10-10
Subjects: Chemical Engineering, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Earth Sciences, Engineering, Hydrology, Petroleum Engineering, Physical Sciences and Mathematics, Transport Phenomena

X-ray microcomputed tomography X-ray microCT) is a rapidly advancing technology that has been successfully employed to study flow phenomena in porous media. It offers an alternative approach to core scale experiments for the estimation of traditional petrophysical properties such as porosity and single-phase flow permeability. It can also be used to investigate properties that control multiphase [...]

Magnetotelluric multiscale 3-D inversion reveals crustal and upper mantle structure beneath the Hangai and Gobi-Altai region in Mongolia

Johannes Sebastian Käufl, Alexander Grayver, Matthew J. Comeau, et al.

Published: 2019-10-11
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geophysics and Seismology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Central Mongolia is a prominent region of intracontinental surface deformation and intraplate volcanism. To study these processes, which are poorly understood, we collected magnetotelluric data in the Hangai and Gobi-Altai region in central Mongolia and derived the first three-dimensional (3-D) resistivity model of the crustal and upper mantle structure in this region. The geological and tectonic [...]

Evolution of the melt source during protracted crustal anatexis; an example from the Bhutan Himalaya

Thomas Hopkinson, Nigel Harris, Nick Roberts, et al.

Published: 2019-10-10
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geochemistry, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

The chemical compositions of growth zones of magmatic zircon provide powerful insight into evolving magma compositions due to their ability to record both time and the local chemical environment. In situ U-Pb and Hf isotope analyses of zircon rims from Tertiary leucogranites of the Bhutan Himalaya reveal, for the first time, an evolution in melt composition between 32-12 Ma. The data indicate a [...]

Noise-derived broadband full Green functions for a radially layered Earth

Lei Li

Published: 2019-10-10
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geophysics and Seismology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

The emerging noise correlation technique provides a way to approximate the Green function of medium with the correlation function between ambient noise wavefields. It has been recognized that not only the regularly observable seismic phase, but also spurious phases that have no correspondence in real seismograms, are constructed from noise correlations. In this study, we synthesize global noise [...]

Skillful multiyear predictions of ocean acidification in the California Current System

Riley X. Brady, Nicole S. Lovenduski, Stephen G. Yeager, et al.

Published: 2019-10-10
Subjects: Biogeochemistry, Climate, Earth Sciences, Oceanography, Oceanography and Atmospheric Sciences and Meteorology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

The California Current System (CCS) sustains economically valuable fisheries and is particularly vulnerable to ocean acidification, due to the natural upwelling of corrosive waters that affect ecosystem function. Marine resource managers in the CCS could benefit from advanced knowledge of ocean acidity on multiyear timescales. We use a novel suite of retrospective forecasts with an initialized [...]

Lower threshold for marsh drowning suggests loss of microtidal marshes regardless of sediment supply

Orencio Duran Vinent, Ellen Herbert, Matthew L Kirwan

Published: 2019-10-10
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Environmental Sciences, Geomorphology, Natural Resources and Conservation, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Salt marshes are simultaneously among the most valuable and vulnerable ecosystems in the world. We use a simplified formulation for sediment transport across marshes to explain why marshes are most vulnerable to sea level rise (SLR) in microtidal environments. We find inorganic sediment decay length scales with tidal range so that inorganic deposition is very low in the interior of microtidal [...]

Relative Dispersion in the Antarctic Circumpolar Current

Dhruv Balwada, Joseph H. LaCasce, Kevin Speer, et al.

Published: 2019-10-08
Subjects: Oceanography, Oceanography and Atmospheric Sciences and Meteorology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

We present an analysis of relative dispersion and associated metrics from the RAFOS float observations collected during the Diapycnal and Isopycnal Mixing Experiment in the Southern Ocean (DIMES) along with a set of particles from an eddy-resolving numerical model that simulated the flow in the DIMES region. Both RAFOS floats and numerical particles show correlated motions and isotropic pair [...]

Metastable olivine wedge beneath the Japan Sea imaged by seismic interferometry

Zhichao Shen, Zhongwen Zhan

Published: 2019-10-08
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geophysics and Seismology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

The metastable olivine wedge (MOW) within subducted slabs has long been hypothesized to host deep-focus earthquakes (>300 km). Its presence would also rule out hydrous slabs being subducted into the mantle transition zone. However, the existence and dimensions of MOW remain controversial. Here, we apply inter-source interferometry, which converts deep earthquakes into virtual seismometers, to [...]

Deep and rapid thermo-mechanical erosion by a small-volume lava flow

Elisabeth Gallant, Fanghui Deng, Surui Xie, et al.

Published: 2019-10-08
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Physical Sciences and Mathematics, Volcanology

We document remarkably efficient thermo-mechanical erosion by a small-volume lava flow. Downcutting by a basaltic-andesite lava flow on the steep-sided Momotombo volcano, Nicaragua, occurred at 100 times the rate commonly reported for thermal erosion in lava flow fields, even though this flow was small-volume (0.02 km^3) and effused at a low rate for <1 week. The erosion depth, up to 30 m [...]

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