Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Earth's Getting 'Soft' In The Middle, Geologists Note


ScienceDaily (Jan. 28, 2008) — A new study suggests that material in part of the lower mantle has unusual electronic characteristics that make sound propagate more slowly, suggesting that the material there is softer than previously thought. The results call into question the traditional techniques for understanding this region of the planet.


Since we can't sample the deepest regions of the Earth, scientists watch the velocity of seismic waves as they travel through the planet to determine the composition and density of that material. Now a new study suggests that material in part of the lower mantle has unusual electronic characteristics that make sound propagate more slowly, suggesting that the material there is softer than previously thought. The results call into question the traditional techniques for understanding this region of the planet.
The lower mantle extends from about 400 miles to 1800 miles (660-2900 kilometers) into Earth and sits atop the outer core. Pressures and temperatures are so brutal there that materials are changed into forms that don't exist in rocks at the planet's surface and must be studied under carefully controlled conditions in the laboratory. The pressures range from 230,000 times the atmospheric pressure at sea level (23 GPa), to 1.35 million times sea-level pressure (135 GPa). And the heat is equally extreme--from about 2,800 to 6,700 degrees Fahrenheit (1800K--4000K).
Iron is abundant in the Earth, and is a major component of the minerals ferropericlase and the silicate perovskite in the lower mantle. In previous work, researchers found that the outermost electrons of iron in ferropericlase are forced to pair up under the extreme pressures creating a so-called spin-transition zone within the lower mantle.
"What happens when unpaired electrons--called a high-spin state--are forced to pair up is that they transition to what is called a low-spin state. And when that happens, the conductivity, density, and chemical properties change," explained Goncharov. "What's most important for seismology is the acoustic properties--the propagation of sound. We determined the elasticity of ferropericlase through the pressure-induced high-spin to low-spin transition. We did this by measuring the velocity of acoustic waves propagating in different directions in a single crystal of the material and found that over an extended pressure range (from about 395,000 to 590,000 atmospheres) the material became 'softer'--that is, the waves slowed down more than expected from previous work. Thus, at high temperature corresponding distributions will become very broad, which will result in a wide range of depth having subtly anomalous properties that perhaps extend through most of the lower mantle."
The results suggest that scientists may have to go back to the drawing board to model this region of the Earth.
The authors, including Alexander Goncharov from the Carnegie Institution's Geophysical Laboratory, present their results in the January 25, 2008, issue of Science.
This research was partly funded by Carnegie Institution of Washington, the National Science Foundation and the U.S. Department of Energy/National Nuclear Security Agency through the Carnegie/DOE Alliance Center' and the W. M. Keck Foundation.
Adapted from materials provided by Carnegie Institution.


Wednesday, January 23, 2008

First Evidence Of Under-ice Volcanic Eruption In Antarctica

ScienceDaily (Jan. 22, 2008) — The first evidence of a volcanic eruption from beneath Antarctica's most rapidly changing ice sheet has been reported. The volcano on the West Antarctic Ice Sheet erupted 2000 years ago (325BC) and remains active.

The subglacial volcano has a 'volcanic explosion index' of around 3-4. Heat from the volcano creates melt-water that lubricates the base of the ice sheet and increases the flow towards the sea. Pine Island Glacier on the West Antarctic Ice Sheet is showing rapid change and BAS scientists are part of an international research effort to understand this change.
Using airborne ice-sounding radar, scientists from British Antarctic Survey (BAS) discovered a layer of ash produced by a 'subglacial' volcano. It extends across an area larger than Wales.
Lead author* Hugh Corr of the BAS says, "The discovery of a 'subglacial' volcanic eruption from beneath the Antarctic ice sheet is unique in itself. But our techniques also allow us to put a date on the eruption, determine how powerful it was and map out the area where ash fell. We believe this was the biggest eruption in Antarctica during the last 10,000 years. It blew a substantial hole in the ice sheet, and generated a plume of ash and gas that rose around 12 km into air."
The discovery is another vital piece of evidence that will help determine the future of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet and refine predictions of future sea-level rise. Glaciers are like massive rivers of ice that flow towards the coast and discharge icebergs into the sea.
Co-author Professor David Vaughan (BAS) says,"This eruption occurred close to Pine Island Glacier on the West Antarctic Ice Sheet. The flow of this glacier towards the coast has speeded up in recent decades and it may be possible that heat from the volcano has caused some of that acceleration. However, it cannot explain the more widespread thinning of West Antarctic glaciers that together are contributing nearly 0.2mm per year to sea-level rise. This wider change most probably has its origin in warming ocean waters."
About the volcano
The volcano is located beneath the West Antarctic ice sheet in the Hudson Mountains at latitude 74.6°South, longitude 97°West. Volcanoes are an important component of the Antarctic region. They formed in diverse tectonic settings, mainly as a result of mantle plumes acting on the stationary Antarctic plate. The region also includes amongst the world's best examples of a long-lived continental margin arc (Antarctic Peninsula), a very young marginal basin (Bransfield Strait) and an oceanic island arc (South Sandwich Islands). Many extinct volcanoes are very well preserved and others are still active (e.g. Deception Island, Mount Erebus, and the South Sandwich Islands).
Volcanic eruptions were common during the past 25 million years, and coincided with the great period of climatic deterioration that resulted in the formation of the Antarctic ice sheet. Many of the volcanoes show the effects of interaction with ice. BAS has played a major role in describing these effects and modelling their influences on the resulting volcanic sequences. It is important to describe and understand these interactions in geologically recent times in order to predict future configurations of the ice sheet and its role in the global system.
*The paper 'A recent volcanic eruption beneath the West Antarctic ice sheet' by Hugh F Corr and David G Vaughan is published in the February edition of Nature Geosciences (online).
Adapted from materials provided by British Antarctic Survey.

Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/01/080120160720.htm

Thursday, January 3, 2008

Earth Quakes in 2000 to 2007

* Up to Jan 2008 (till Date)

Major Disasters in 2007


Indonesia: Floods and landslides - Dec 2007
Sri Lanka: Floods - Dec 2007
Zimbabwe: Floods - Dec 2007
Caribbean: Tropical Storm Olga - Dec 2007
Malaysia: Floods - Dec 2007
Fiji: Cyclone Daman - Dec 2007
Rep. of Korea: Hebei Spirit Oil Spill - Dec 2007
Montenegro: Floods - Nov 2007
Uganda: Ebola outbreak - Nov 2007
Caribbean: Earthquake - Nov 2007
Serbia: Floods - Nov 2007
Indonesia: Sumbawa Earthquake - Nov 2007
Philippines: Floods and Landslides - Nov 2007
Papua New Guinea: Cyclone Guba - Nov 2007
Congo: Floods and Landslides - Nov 2007
Cyclone Sidr - Nov 2007
Chile: Earthquake - Nov 2007
Hurricane Noel - Oct 2007
Mexico: Tabasco and Chiapas Floods - Oct 2007
DR Congo: Floods - Oct 2007
Nicaragua: Floods - Oct 2007
Indonesia: Mt. Kelud Volcano - Oct 2007
Haiti: Floods - Oct 2007
Tunisia: Flash Floods - Oct 2007
Typhoon Lekima - Sep 2007
Costa Rica: Floods - Sep 2007
Central African Republic: Floods - Sep 2007
Sierra Leone: Floods - Sep 2007
Rwanda: Floods - Sep 2007
Mexico: Floods - Sep 2007
Togo: Floods - Sep 2007
Indonesia: Earthquake - Sep 2007
Paraguay: Forest Fires - Sep 2007
Ghana: Floods - Sept 2007
Chad: Floods - Aug 2007
Hurricane Felix - Sep 2007
Cameroon: Floods - Aug 2007
Niger: Floods - Aug 2007
Ethiopia: Floods - Aug 2007
Liberia: Floods - Aug 2007
Greece: Forest Fires - Aug 2007
Typhoon Sepat - Aug 2007
Uganda: Floods - Aug 2007
Kenya: Floods - Aug 2007
Hurricane Dean - Aug 2007
Peru: Earthquake - Aug 2007
Côte d'Ivoire: Floods - Aug 2007
Senegal: Floods - Aug 2007
DPR Korea: Floods - Aug 2007
East Africa: Floods - Aug 2007
Mauritania: Floods - Aug 2007
Philippines: Floods and Landslides - Aug 2007
Viet Nam: Floods - Aug 2007
Nigeria: Floods - Aug 2007
Burkina Faso: Floods - Aug 2007
Swaziland: Fires - Aug 2007
Russian Federation: Earthquake on Sakhalin Island - Aug 2007
The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia: Forest Fires - Jul 2007
Gambia: Floods and Landslide - Jul 2007
Timor-Leste: Floods and Landslides - Jul 2007
United Kingdom: Floods - Jul 2007
Ukraine: Storm - Jul 2007
Indonesia: Floods and Landslides - Jul 2007
Tajikistan: Earthquake and Floods - Jul 2007
Central/Eastern Europe: Heat Wave - Jul 2007
West Africa: Floods - Jul 2007
Mali: Floods - Jul 2007
Nepal: Landslide in Baglung - Jul 2007
Indonesia: Volcanic Eruption Mt. Gamkonora - Jul 2007
Sudan: Floods - Jul 2007
Peru: Cold Wave - Jun 2007
Afghanistan: Flash Floods and Landslide - Jun 2007
South Asia: Floods - Jun 2007
India: Flash Floods/Floods - Jun 2007
Pakistan: Floods/Cyclone - Jun 2007
Nepal: Flash Floods/Floods - Jun 2007
China: Floods - Jun 2007
Bangladesh/Myanmar: Floods and Landslides - Jun 2007
Oman/Iran: Cyclone Gonu - Jun 2007
China: Earthquake in Yunnan Province - Jun 2007
Colombia: Floods and Landslides - May 2007
Bangladesh: Cyclone - May 2007
Maldives: Coastal Flooding - May 2007
Uruguay: Floods - May 2007
Sri Lanka: Floods - May 2007
North Africa: Floods - Apr 2007
Afghanistan: Floods - May 2007
Colombia: Nevado del Huila Volcano Avalanches - Apr 2007
Tajikistan: Floods - Apr 2007
Solomon Islands: Earthquake and Tsunami - Apr 2007
Argentina: Floods - Mar 2007
OPT: Waste Water Treatment Plant Floods - Mar 2007
Haiti: Floods - Mar 2007
South Asia: Floods and landslides - Mar 2007
Afghanistan: Floods and avalanche - Mar 2007
Madagascar: Cyclone Indlala - Mar 2007
Indonesia: Earthquake - Mar 2007
Indonesia: Landslides - Mar 2007
Paraguay: Dengue Outbreak - Feb 2007
Swaziland: Heavy Hail Storm - Feb 2007
Southern Africa: Cyclone Favio - Feb 2007
Fiji: Floods - Feb 2007
Indonesia: Floods - Feb 2007
Argentina: Floods - Feb 2007
USA: Florida Storm and Tornado - Feb 2007
Bolivia: Floods - Jan 2007
Southern Africa: Floods - Jan 2007
Comoros: Karthala Volcano - Jan 2007
Peru: Floods - Jan 2007
Sri Lanka: Flash Floods - Jan 2007
Montserrat: Volcanic Eruption - Jan 2007
Brazil: Mud Slide - Jan 2007
Madagascar: Cyclone Clovis - Jan 2007
South Asia: Cold wave - Jan 2007