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Volume 4 Issue 8, August 2011

Blooms of the nitrogen-fixing cyanobacterium Trichodesmium, which fuel primary production in tropical and subtropical waters, require large quantities of iron. Laboratory incubations suggest that Trichodesmium accelerates the dissolution of iron oxides and dust, increasing the rate of iron uptake. The image shows a puff-shaped Trichodesmium colony, originally from the Red Sea, as it captures desert dust and shuttles it to the centre of the colony in an experimental lab setting.

Letter p529

IMAGE: MAXIM RUBIN

COVER DESIGN: DAVID SHAND

Editorial

  • A substantial amount of the Earth's surface water moves between ice sheets and oceans as the climate oscillates on geological timescales. Ocean warming, as well as atmospheric temperature rise, affects the current redistribution in response to climate change.

    Editorial

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Correspondence

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In the press

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Books & Arts

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Research Highlights

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News & Views

  • Dynamic motions in Earth's mantle can be expressed at the surface. Rocks and landscapes beneath the North Atlantic Ocean record surface uplift driven by pulses of hot material upwelling in a mantle plume beneath Iceland.

    • Philip A. Allen
    News & Views
  • Volcanic deposits on the Moon are almost entirely composed of basaltic lava flows that make up the dark and extensive mare plains. High-resolution images and compositional data now reveal rare, non-mare volcanism on the Moon's farside.

    • Noah Petro
    News & Views
  • Whether interannual variability in the Pacific Ocean was a feature of the warm Pliocene climate is debated. Variance in reconstructed eastern tropical Pacific surface temperatures provides strong support for persistent El Niño activity at this time.

    • Anna S. von der Heydt
    • Henk A. Dijkstra
    News & Views
  • Forests affect climate not only by taking up carbon, but also by absorbing solar radiation and enhancing evaporation. In the tropics, the climate benefit of afforestation may be nearly double that expected from carbon budgets alone.

    • Richard A. Betts
    News & Views
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Review Article

  • Ice sheets, and in particular the West Antarctic ice sheet, are expected to shrink in size as the world warms, which in turn will raise sea level. A Review of the literature suggests that much of this ice sheet will survive beyond this century, but confident estimates of the likelihood of future collapse require further work.

    • Ian Joughin
    • Richard B. Alley
    Review Article
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Letter

  • Afforestation, the conversion of croplands or marginal lands into forests, is considered one of the key climate-change mitigation strategies available to governments. Model simulations suggest that the temperature benefits of realistic afforestation efforts are marginal.

    • Vivek K. Arora
    • Alvaro Montenegro
    Letter
  • Accurate projections of global sea-level rise require information of future ocean warming in the vicinity of the large ice sheets. An analysis of 19 climate model projections suggests that subsurface ocean warming near both polar ice sheets will be substantial, with the potential to lead to significant increases in ice-mass loss.

    • Jianjun Yin
    • Jonathan T. Overpeck
    • Ronald J. Stouffer
    Letter
  • Blooms of the nitrogen-fixing cyanobacterium Trichodesmium, which fuel primary production in tropical and subtropical waters, require large quantities of iron. Laboratory incubations suggest that Trichodesmium accelerates the dissolution of iron oxides and dust, increasing the rate of iron uptake.

    • Maxim Rubin
    • Ilana Berman-Frank
    • Yeala Shaked
    Letter
  • The Australian–Indonesian monsoon is an important component of the climate system in the tropical Indo-Pacific region. High-resolution records of monsoon-controlled austral winter upwelling during the past 22,000 years reveal that glacial–interglacial variations in the Australian–Indonesian winter monsoon have been in phase with the Indian summer monsoon system.

    • Mahyar Mohtadi
    • Delia W. Oppo
    • Andreas Lückge
    Letter
  • Earth’s largest earthquakes occur at the boundary between subducting oceanic crust and the overriding plate, yet the position of the plate boundaries remains uncertain. Analysis of zones of low seismic wave velocities beneath the northern Cascadia subduction zone implies that the plate boundary here may be deeper than previously thought.

    • Andrew J. Calvert
    • Leiph A. Preston
    • Amir M. Farahbod
    Letter
  • During continental breakup, the onset of seafloor spreading is thought to be marked by the first occurrence of a magnetic anomaly. Analysis of seismic and magnetic data from the Iberia–Newfoundland continental-rift system suggests that the first magnetic anomaly observed here instead represents a magmatic event that pre-dates seafloor spreading.

    • Adrien Bronner
    • Daniel Sauter
    • Marc Munschy
    Letter
  • Fragments of ancient continental lithosphere, entrained in the shallow oceanic mantle, have been found in a number of locations in the Southern Hemisphere. Isotopic analyses of material from Quaternary volcanic centres in Hispaniola indicate that the lavas are derived from an ancient lithospheric fragment with affinities to the supercontinent Gondwana.

    • George D. Kamenov
    • Michael R. Perfit
    • Robert D. Shuster
    Letter
  • Hot mantle upwelling in the Icelandic plume has caused episodic uplift of sedimentary basins located off the northwest coast of Europe. Reconstruction of river profiles on an ancient buried landscape constrains the history of surface uplift and suggests that pulses of hot plume material spread out at velocities of 35 cm yr−1.

    • Ross A. Hartley
    • Gareth G. Roberts
    • Chris Richardson
    Letter
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Article

  • Non-basaltic volcanism is rare on the Moon and has been found predominantly on the lunar nearside. Analysis of Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera images and spectral data reveal the presence of compositionally evolved, non-basaltic volcanism on the lunar farside.

    • Bradley L. Jolliff
    • Sandra A. Wiseman
    • David A. Paige
    Article
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Focus

  • Future sea-level rise is uncertain, not least because it is unclear how, and how fast, the ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica are going to respond to ocean and atmosphere warming. This collection of research papers, overview articles and opinion pieces highlights current understanding of the sensitivity of the planet's cryosphere to temperature rise, including a view back into the past and far into the future.

    Focus
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