Feature Channels: Geology

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Newswise: Scientists utilize lunar soils to sustainably supply oxygen and fuels on moon in an unmanned manner
Released: 28-Oct-2022 1:20 PM EDT
Scientists utilize lunar soils to sustainably supply oxygen and fuels on moon in an unmanned manner
Science China Press

Building up the lunar settlement is the ultimate aim of lunar exploitation since human's first step on the moon. Yet, limited fuel and oxygen supplies restrict human survival on the moon.

Newswise: Aluminous Silica: A Major Water Carrier in the Lower Mantle
Released: 27-Oct-2022 3:05 PM EDT
Aluminous Silica: A Major Water Carrier in the Lower Mantle
Center for High Pressure Science and Technology Advanced Research (HPSTAR)

Water is transported by oceanic plates into the Earth's deep interior and changes the properties of minerals and rocks, affecting the Earth's internal material cycle and environmental evolution since the formation of the Earth.

Released: 25-Oct-2022 3:05 PM EDT
Scientists discover a potential ‘diamond factory’ near the center of the Earth
Argonne National Laboratory

Scientists working at the Advanced Photon Source (APS) discover that under the conditions present at Earth’s core-mantle boundary, water and metal combine to form diamonds.

Newswise: Lithium Extraction and Geothermal Energy, a Dynamic Duo
Released: 20-Oct-2022 2:20 PM EDT
Lithium Extraction and Geothermal Energy, a Dynamic Duo
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Research shows that coupling geothermal power plants with lithium extraction from geothermal brine would make geothermal energy more economically viable, providing renewable energy and valuable raw materials.

Newswise: Deeper understanding of the icy depths
Released: 20-Oct-2022 12:05 AM EDT
Deeper understanding of the icy depths
Hokkaido University

Scientists have uncovered new details of how ice forming below the ocean surface in Antarctica provides cold dense water that sinks to the seabed in an important aspect of global water circulation.

Released: 17-Oct-2022 2:25 PM EDT
Thawing ‘country of permafrost’ likely to emit as much greenhouse gas as a large industrial nation
University of Alberta

Thawing permafrost soils in the rapidly warming Arctic will emit as much greenhouse gas as large industrial nations by the end of this century, according to a University of Alberta researcher involved in an international study that stresses to policy makers that it’s not too late to act to stabilize the climate and avoid exceeding temperature targets.

Newswise: Future emissions from ‘country of permafrost’ significant, must be factored into global climate targets
Released: 17-Oct-2022 2:25 PM EDT
Future emissions from ‘country of permafrost’ significant, must be factored into global climate targets
Northern Arizona University

By the end of this century, permafrost in the rapidly warming Arctic will likely emit as much carbon dioxide and methane into the atmosphere as a large industrial nation, and potentially more than the U.S. has emitted since the start of the industrial revolution. 

Released: 13-Oct-2022 3:05 PM EDT
Seismic sensing reveals flood damage potential
University of Göttingen

Rapidly evolving floods are a major and growing hazard worldwide. Currently, their onset and evolution is hard to identify using existing systems.

Released: 13-Oct-2022 12:05 PM EDT
FSU assistant professor earns early career award from Geological Society of America
Florida State University

For his work helping to arrange that many-pieced, time-shifting puzzle, the Geological Society of America has named Florida State University Assistant Professor Richard Bono as the 2022 recipient of the Seth and Carol Stein Early Career Award in Geophysics and Geodynamics. Bono is the first person to receive the award.

Released: 13-Oct-2022 5:05 AM EDT
Depths of the ocean told about climate changes during last half a million years
Scientific Project Lomonosov

Scientists from the Immanuel Kant Baltic Federal University and Shirshov Institute of Oceanology of Russian Academy of Sciences described changes in conditions of bottom waters of the Atlantic during last 500 thousand years. As oceans plays an important role in formation of global climate, this information can help to understand contemporary changes and predict future variations in temperature and risks connected with them.

Newswise: Can critical metals for renewable energy products be found in existing mines? New research says yes
Released: 12-Oct-2022 2:15 AM EDT
Can critical metals for renewable energy products be found in existing mines? New research says yes
Geological Society of America (GSA)

Ramping up renewable energy products will require a range of critical metals. One of these elements, tellurium, is gaining in popularity for use in photovoltaics, or solar panels. As global demand for solar panels continues to increase, so is the need for critical metals like tellurium.

Newswise: AI predicts physics of future fault-slip in laboratory earthquakes
Released: 10-Oct-2022 11:25 AM EDT
AI predicts physics of future fault-slip in laboratory earthquakes
Los Alamos National Laboratory

An artificial-intelligence approach borrowed from natural-language processing — much like language translation and autofill for text on your smart phone — can predict future fault friction and the next failure time with high resolution in laboratory earthquakes,. The technique, applying AI to the fault’s acoustic signals, advances previous work and goes beyond by predicting aspects of the future state of the fault’s physical system.

Newswise: Study Shows Gravitational Forces Deep Within the Earth Have Great Impact on Landscape Evolution
Released: 6-Oct-2022 11:15 AM EDT
Study Shows Gravitational Forces Deep Within the Earth Have Great Impact on Landscape Evolution
Stony Brook University

Scientists seeking the connection between gravitational forces deep in the Earth and landscape evolution discovered that deep roots under mountain belts trigger dramatic movements along faults that result in collapse of the mountain belt and exposure of rocks that were once below the surface.

Newswise: Seasonal change in Antarctic ice sheet movement observed for first time
Released: 6-Oct-2022 9:40 AM EDT
Seasonal change in Antarctic ice sheet movement observed for first time
University of Cambridge

Some estimates of Antarctica’s total contribution to sea-level rise may be over- or underestimated, after researchers detected a previously unknown source of ice loss variability.

Newswise: Ancient ice age valleys offer clues to future ice sheet change
Released: 5-Oct-2022 2:30 PM EDT
Ancient ice age valleys offer clues to future ice sheet change
British Antarctic Survey

Deep valleys buried under the seafloor of the North Sea record how the ancient ice sheets that used to cover the UK and Europe expelled water to stop themselves from collapsing.

Released: 4-Oct-2022 4:25 PM EDT
Scientists identify potential source of 'shock-darkened' meteorites, with implications for hazardous asteroid deflection
University of Arizona

When the Chelyabinsk fireball exploded across Russian skies in 2013, it littered Earth with a relatively uncommon type of meteorite. What makes the Chelyabinsk meteorites and others like them special is their dark veins, created by a process called shock darkening.

Newswise: Taylor Geospatial Institute Receives $1 Million NSF Grant to Create Regional AI Learning System
Released: 4-Oct-2022 10:35 AM EDT
Taylor Geospatial Institute Receives $1 Million NSF Grant to Create Regional AI Learning System
Saint Louis University

ST. LOUIS – A $1 million grant from the National Science Foundation will create the Taylor Geospatial Institute Regional AI Learning System. Launched in April 2022 and led by Saint Louis University, the Taylor Geospatial Institute brings together eight Midwestern universities and research centers to harness innovation in geospatial science.

Newswise: First probable impact crater discovered in Spain
Released: 29-Sep-2022 3:55 PM EDT
First probable impact crater discovered in Spain
Europlanet

The first probable impact crater in Spain has been identified in the southern province of Almeria. The discovery was presented last week at the Europlanet Science Congress (EPSC) 2022 by Juan Antonio Sánchez Garrido of the University of Almeria.

Newswise: Harvard researchers detect the first definitive proof of elusive sea level fingerprints
Released: 29-Sep-2022 3:05 PM EDT
Harvard researchers detect the first definitive proof of elusive sea level fingerprints
Harvard University

When ice sheets melt, something strange and highly counterintuitive happens to sea levels.

Released: 27-Sep-2022 10:05 AM EDT
Synthetic lava in the lab aids exoplanet exploration
Cornell University

A multidisciplinary group of Cornell researchers has modeled and synthesized lava in the laboratory as the kinds of rock that may form on far-away exoplanets. They developed 16 types of surface compositions as a starter catalog for finding volcanic worlds that feature fiery landscapes and oceans of magma.

Newswise: The Geologic Secrets of Lake Mead
Released: 26-Sep-2022 6:05 PM EDT
The Geologic Secrets of Lake Mead
University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV)

Record of past volcanic eruptions — and potential hazards to health — revealed by low water levels at dwindling local tap source.

Newswise: Asteroid that formed Vredefort crater bigger than previously believed
Released: 26-Sep-2022 5:05 PM EDT
Asteroid that formed Vredefort crater bigger than previously believed
University of Rochester

About two billion years ago, an impactor hurtled toward Earth, crashing into the planet in an area near present-day Johannesburg, South Africa. The impactor—most likely an asteroid—formed what is today the biggest crater on our planet.

Newswise: The neighbors of the caliph: Archaeologists uncover ancient mosaics on the shore of the Sea of Galilee
Released: 26-Sep-2022 4:35 PM EDT
The neighbors of the caliph: Archaeologists uncover ancient mosaics on the shore of the Sea of Galilee
Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz

With the help of geomagnetic surface surveys and subsequent hands-on digging, an excavation team from Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz (JGU) has revealed new insights into the area in which the caliph's palace of Khirbat al-Minya was built on the shores of the Sea of Galilee.

Released: 26-Sep-2022 12:05 PM EDT
Layering, not liquid: Astronomers explain Mars’ watery reflections
Cornell University

Cornell astronomers believe bright reflections beneath the surface of Mars’ South Pole are not necessarily evidence of liquid water, but instead geological layers.

Newswise: Deepest Scientific Ocean Drilling Sheds Light on Japan’s Next Great Earthquake
Released: 23-Sep-2022 12:30 PM EDT
Deepest Scientific Ocean Drilling Sheds Light on Japan’s Next Great Earthquake
University of Texas at Austin, Jackson School of Geosciences

Scientists who drilled deeper into an undersea earthquake fault than ever before have found that the tectonic stress in Japan’s Nankai subduction zone is less than expected, according to a study from researchers at The University of Texas at Austin.

Newswise: Researchers have used beams of muons to analyze the elemental composition of Asteroid Ryugu samples
Released: 22-Sep-2022 3:55 PM EDT
Researchers have used beams of muons to analyze the elemental composition of Asteroid Ryugu samples
Kavli Institute for the Physics and Mathematics of the Universe

Stone samples brought back to Earth from asteroid Ryugu have had their elemental composition analyzed using an artificially generated muon beam from the particle accelerator in J-PARC.

Newswise: Secrets from space: Advanced Photon Source helps illuminate the journey of a 4 billion-year-old asteroid
Released: 22-Sep-2022 3:50 PM EDT
Secrets from space: Advanced Photon Source helps illuminate the journey of a 4 billion-year-old asteroid
Argonne National Laboratory

An international collaboration of scientists has published results of their studies into the makeup and history of asteroid 163173 Ryugu. These results tell us more about the formation of our solar system and the history of this nearby neighbor.

Released: 22-Sep-2022 11:35 AM EDT
An integrated modeling framework to assess surface and groundwater resources
International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA)

In a new study, researchers applied a large-scale model linking surface water to groundwater, which can be used for estimating water resources at a high spatial resolution.

Newswise: Newly formed craters located on mars by UMD geologist and NASA InSight team
Released: 21-Sep-2022 5:05 PM EDT
Newly formed craters located on mars by UMD geologist and NASA InSight team
University of Maryland, College Park

An international team of researchers with NASA’s InSight mission located four new craters created by impacts on the surface of Mars.

Released: 21-Sep-2022 10:05 AM EDT
Greek volcano mystery: Archaeologist narrows on date of Thera eruption
Cornell University

Cornell University archaeologist Sturt Manning hopes to settle one of modern archaeology’s longstanding disputes: the date of a volcanic eruption on the Greek island of Santorini, traditionally known as Thera.

Released: 19-Sep-2022 5:10 PM EDT
Pitt geologists mapped how metal pollutants have traveled across the city
University of Pittsburgh

Pittsburgh’s steel industry may be largely in the past, but its legacy lives on in city soils. New research led by Pitt geologists shows how historical coking and smelting dropped toxic metals in Pittsburgh’s soil, particularly in the eastern half of the city. With samples from 56 parks, cemeteries and other sites around the city collected by Carnegie Mellon University students and Jonathan Burgess from the Allegheny County Conservation District, the team was able to pinpoint some of those polluting factors. They recently published their results in the journal Environmental Research Communications.

Released: 19-Sep-2022 4:05 PM EDT
FSU geologist available to discuss earthquake that hit Mexico’s Pacific coast
Florida State University

By: Kathleen Haughney | Published: September 19, 2022 | 4:01 pm | SHARE: Mexico is dealing with the fallout of a powerful 7.6 magnitude earthquake that occurred near the Pacific coast on the anniversary of two previous tremors. Earthquakes occurred on Sept. 19 in both 1985 and 2017 in Mexico, killing thousands of people.Florida State University Professor of Geology James Tull is available to speak with reporters about the effects of the earthquake and the geology behind this catastrophic event.

Released: 15-Sep-2022 2:05 PM EDT
Global warming doubled the risk for Copenhagen’s historic 2011 cloudburst
University of Copenhagen

Researchers at the University of Copenhagen, in collaboration with the Danish Meteorological Institute (DMI), have used detailed weather models to clearly tie increased temperatures to the historic cloudburst over Copenhagen in July of 2011.

Newswise: Progress in the formation and early evolution of the Yangtze craton: Significance for newly discovered Neoarchean granites in Dabie Orogen
Released: 15-Sep-2022 12:45 PM EDT
Progress in the formation and early evolution of the Yangtze craton: Significance for newly discovered Neoarchean granites in Dabie Orogen
Science China Press

The Archean basement rocks are suitable candidates for modeling the generation and evolution of the early continental crust as they archive the early earth processes in their rock record.

Released: 12-Sep-2022 3:00 PM EDT
Surprising discovery shows a slowing of continental plate movement controlled the timing of Earth’s largest volcanic events
Trinity College Dublin

Scientists have shed new light on the timing and likely cause of major volcanic events that occurred millions of years ago and caused such climatic and biological upheaval that they drove some of the most devastating extinction events in Earth’s history.

Released: 8-Sep-2022 12:05 PM EDT
Study unearths ancient reef structure high and dry on the Nullarbor Plain
Curtin University

Curtin researchers and international collaborators using advanced satellite imagery have discovered an ancient reef-like landform ‘hidden’ in plain view on the Nullarbor Plain, which has been preserved for millions of years since it first formed when the Plain was underwater.

Released: 7-Sep-2022 5:05 PM EDT
Magma and ice
University of California, Santa Barbara

Let’s pretend it’s the Late Cretaceous, roughly 66 to 100 million years ago.

Released: 6-Sep-2022 3:00 PM EDT
Martian rock-metal composite shows potential of 3D printing on Mars
Washington State University

A little Martian dust appears to go a long way. A small amount of simulated crushed Martian rock mixed with a titanium alloy made a stronger, high-performance material in a 3D-printing process that could one day be used on Mars to make tools or rocket parts.

Newswise: Crime-scene technique identifies asteroid sites
Released: 2-Sep-2022 12:45 PM EDT
Crime-scene technique identifies asteroid sites
ESTONIAN RESEARCH COUNCIL

Tens of tons of extraterrestrial solid material collide with Earth daily. Most of this material is small enough that it burns up in the atmosphere, but some fragments are large enough to cause quite a predicament.

Released: 1-Sep-2022 4:25 PM EDT
Death from space
Geological Society of America (GSA)

Tens of tons of extraterrestrial solid material collide with Earth daily.

Newswise: Rensselaer Researcher To Uncover Deep Sea Mysteries
Released: 1-Sep-2022 10:05 AM EDT
Rensselaer Researcher To Uncover Deep Sea Mysteries
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI)

A few years ago, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute’s Sasha Wagner, assistant professor of earth and environmental sciences, proved false what scientists had thought for years. Soot-like molecules that formed an ancient carbon pool deep in the Pacific Ocean did not, in fact, originate from wildfires on land.“We discovered that there was an isotopic mismatch,” Wagner said.

   
Released: 30-Aug-2022 11:05 AM EDT
Deriving the magnetopause position from wide field-of-view soft x-ray imager simulation
Science China Press

Imaging techniques provide essential information in astronomical and space physics studies. The Soft X-ray imager (SXI) will obtain images of the Earth’s magnetosphere from solar wind charge exchange emission in a global view.

Newswise: Ancient landslide destroyed area size of Cincinnati
Released: 29-Aug-2022 3:45 PM EDT
Ancient landslide destroyed area size of Cincinnati
University of Cincinnati

University of Cincinnati geologists reconstructed a massive landslide in Nevada that wiped out an area the size of a small city more than 5 million years ago.

Released: 26-Aug-2022 3:05 PM EDT
Hidden microearthquakes illuminate large earthquake-hosting faults in Oklahoma and Kansas
Seismological Society of America (SSA)

Using machine learning to sift through a decade’s worth of seismic data, researchers have identified hundreds of thousands of microearthquakes along some previously unknown fault structures in Oklahoma and Kansas.

Released: 26-Aug-2022 2:40 PM EDT
Researchers find crucial evidence to explain anomalously fast convergence between India and Asia in Mesozoic
Chinese Academy of Sciences

Closure of the Neo-Tethys Ocean and the subsequent formation of the Tibetan Plateau is one of the most significant tectonic events on Earth.

Released: 26-Aug-2022 11:40 AM EDT
The sands of Mars are green as well as red, rover Perseverance discovers
Purdue University

The accepted view of Mars is red rocks and craters as far as the eye can see.

Newswise: Perseverance rover retrieves key rocky clues to Mars’ geologic and water history
Released: 25-Aug-2022 3:25 PM EDT
Perseverance rover retrieves key rocky clues to Mars’ geologic and water history
University of California, Berkeley

In its first year exploring Jezero Crater on Mars, the Perseverance rover collected rock samples that scientists anticipate will provide a long-awaited timeline for the planet’s geologic and water history.

Newswise: New research sheds light on when Mars may have had water
Released: 25-Aug-2022 2:20 PM EDT
New research sheds light on when Mars may have had water
Los Alamos National Laboratory

Scientists on NASA’s Perseverance mission made a surprising discovery about the composition of rock in Jezero Crater, one that will help them get a better idea of when water existed on Mars, and ultimately, help them understand if the red planet was ever habitable to microbial life.

Newswise: Movement of the solar system through the Milky Way’s galactic spiral arms helped form Earth’s first continents
Released: 24-Aug-2022 2:05 PM EDT
Movement of the solar system through the Milky Way’s galactic spiral arms helped form Earth’s first continents
Geological Society of America (GSA)

A new study of zircon crystals from two of Earth’s oldest continents indicates that the formation of Earth’s continental crust goes through cycles, with periods of increased crust production roughly every 200 million years, corresponding to the solar system’s transit through the four primary spiral arms of the Milky Way galaxy.



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