Browse Articles
Filters
-
Article Type
- All (3531)
- Article (736)
- Author Correction (28)
- Backstory (78)
- Books & Arts (48)
- Comment (14)
- Commentary (107)
- Correction (17)
- Correspondence (122)
- Corrigendum (33)
- Editorial (175)
- Erratum (22)
- Feature (23)
- In the press (32)
- Letter (965)
- News & Views (743)
- Perspective (41)
- Progress Article (32)
- Publisher Correction (20)
- Research Highlights (226)
- Review Article (69)
-
Year
-
-
Publisher Correction |
Publisher Correction: The state of rock debris covering Earth’s glaciers
- Sam Herreid
- & Francesca Pellicciotti
-
Article |
Post-impact cryo-hydrologic formation of small mounds and hills in Ceres’s Occator crater
Mounds within Ceres’s Occator crater may have formed by freezing of water-rich impact-induced melt, by a process analogous to that of pingo formation on Earth, according to an analysis of data from NASA’s Dawn mission.
- B. E. Schmidt
- , H. G. Sizemore
- , K. H. G. Hughson
- , K. D. Duarte
- , V. N. Romero
- , J. E. C. Scully
- , P. M. Schenk
- , D. L. Buczkowski
- , D. A. Williams
- , A. Nathues
- , K. Udell
- , J. C. Castillo-Rogez
- , C. A. Raymond
- & C. T. Russell
-
Article |
Back-propagating supershear rupture in the 2016 Mw 7.1 Romanche transform fault earthquake
In one earthquake, an oceanic transform fault ruptured in one direction and then backwards at a speed exceeding that of shear-wave propagation, according to an analysis of data recorded by nearby seafloor and global seismometers.
- Stephen P. Hicks
- , Ryo Okuwaki
- , Andreas Steinberg
- , Catherine A. Rychert
- , Nicholas Harmon
- , Rachel E. Abercrombie
- , Petros Bogiatzis
- , David Schlaphorst
- , Jiri Zahradnik
- , J-Michael Kendall
- , Yuji Yagi
- , Kousuke Shimizu
- & Henriette Sudhaus
-
Perspective |
A shift in sulfur-cycle manipulation from atmospheric emissions to agricultural additions
Deliberate application of sulfur onto croplands as fertilizer and pesticide probably causes environmental damage similar to historical acid rain events, according to a literature review and four case studies from the United States.
- Eve-Lyn S. Hinckley
- , John T. Crawford
- , Habibollah Fakhraei
- & Charles T. Driscoll
-
Article |
Interannual variations in meltwater input to the Southern Ocean from Antarctic ice shelves
Meltwater entering the Southern Ocean from Antarctic ice shelves varies substantially from year to year, with consequences for Southern Ocean circulation and climate, according to remote sensing estimates of ice-shelf basal melting rates.
- Susheel Adusumilli
- , Helen Amanda Fricker
- , Brooke Medley
- , Laurie Padman
- & Matthew R. Siegfried
-
Article |
The state of rock debris covering Earth’s glaciers
A global map of rock-debris cover on mountain glaciers shows its spatial distribution and evolution.
- Sam Herreid
- & Francesca Pellicciotti
-
Article |
Heavy iron isotope composition of iron meteorites explained by core crystallization
Experiments show that the iron isotopic composition of iron meteorites can be explained by core crystallization, and suggest the presence of sulfur-rich core material that remains unsampled by meteorite collections.
- Peng Ni
- , Nancy L. Chabot
- , Caillin J. Ryan
- & Anat Shahar
-
Article |
Valley formation on early Mars by subglacial and fluvial erosion
Some valleys in the southern highlands of Mars may have formed by subglacial erosion, consistent with a cold and icy early Mars, according to a statistical analysis of valley morphometry.
- Anna Grau Galofre
- , A. Mark Jellinek
- & Gordon R. Osinski
-
Editorial |
Soil carbon unearthed
Soils store vast quantities of carbon and have the potential to help mitigate or exacerbate climate change. We need to better understand the interplay of chemical, physical and biological processes that govern soil carbon cycling and stability.
-
Correspondence |
One hundred years of Milanković cycles
- Ivana Cvijanovic
- , Jelena Lukovic
- & James D. Begg
-
Perspective |
Persistence of soil organic carbon caused by functional complexity
Dynamic interactions between chemical and biological controls govern the stability of soil organic carbon and drive complex, emergent patterns in soil carbon persistence.
- Johannes Lehmann
- , Colleen M. Hansel
- , Christina Kaiser
- , Markus Kleber
- , Kate Maher
- , Stefano Manzoni
- , Naoise Nunan
- , Markus Reichstein
- , Joshua P. Schimel
- , Margaret S. Torn
- , William R. Wieder
- & Ingrid Kögel-Knabner
-
Review Article |
Materials and pathways of the organic carbon cycle through time
A review of the organic carbon cycle explores the interactions between the Earth’s surface and deeper reservoirs, the expanding inorganic controls on the organic carbon cycle, and how these links have strengthened through geological time.
- Matthieu E. Galvez
- , Woodward W. Fischer
- , Samuel L. Jaccard
- & Timothy I. Eglinton
-
Publisher Correction |
Publisher Correction: Impacts of hydrothermal plume processes on oceanic metal cycles and transport
- Amy Gartman
- & Alyssa J. Findlay
-
Article |
Last glacial atmospheric CO2 decline due to widespread Pacific deep-water expansion
Carbon-rich Pacific deep water extended into the South Atlantic some 38,000 to 28,000 years ago, potentially contributing to a reduction in atmospheric carbon dioxide and the onset of the Last Glacial Maximum, according to deep-water carbonate chemistry reconstructions.
- J. Yu
- , L. Menviel
- , Z. D. Jin
- , R. F. Anderson
- , Z. Jian
- , A. M. Piotrowski
- , X. Ma
- , E. J. Rohling
- , F. Zhang
- , G. Marino
- & J. F. McManus
-
News & Views |
Redrawing the early sulfur cycle
The Archaean atmosphere may have been well oxygenated, according to a reconsideration of sulfur cycling at that time. This challenges the view that sedimentary sulfur records oxygen-poor conditions during Earth’s first two billion years.
- Desiree Roerdink
-
Article |
Late Cenozoic climate change paces landscape adjustments to Yukon River capture
Increased river incision and landscape erosion can be attributed to late Cenozoic cooling/changes in hydroclimate, according to cosmogenic isotope and luminescence ages of a sequence of bedrock terraces in the Yukon River basin.
- Adrian M. Bender
- , Richard O. Lease
- , Lee B. Corbett
- , Paul R. Bierman
- , Marc W. Caffee
- & Tammy M. Rittenour
-
Article |
Corona structures driven by plume–lithosphere interactions and evidence for ongoing plume activity on Venus
Thermomechanical modelling shows that the formation and diverse morphologies of coronae on Venus can be explained by interactions between the lithosphere and impinging mantle plumes. Some corona structures are consistent with ongoing plume activity.
- Anna J. P. Gülcher
- , Taras V. Gerya
- , Laurent G. J. Montési
- & Jessica Munch
-
Article |
A seawater-sulfate origin for early Earth’s volcanic sulfur
Formation of mass-independent isotope fractionation of sulfur signatures recorded in Archaean sedimentary rocks could have occurred in an oxygen-rich atmosphere, according to thermodynamic and kinetic calculations and analysis of Earth’s early sulfur cycle.
- Hiroshi Ohmoto
-
Article |
Preferential localized thinning of lithospheric mantle in the melt-poor Malawi Rift
The mantle lithosphere has thinned more than the crust beneath the Malawi Rift despite being melt-poor, according to seismic wave imaging; this suggests early melting of fusible mantle material.
- Emily Hopper
- , James B. Gaherty
- , Donna J. Shillington
- , Natalie J. Accardo
- , Andrew A. Nyblade
- , Benjamin K. Holtzman
- , Christopher Havlin
- , Christopher A. Scholz
- , Patrick R. N. Chindandali
- , Richard W. Ferdinand
- , Gabriel D. Mulibo
- & Gabriel Mbogoni
-
Article |
Carbon loss from northern circumpolar permafrost soils amplified by rhizosphere priming
Plant roots in thawing permafrost soils act to enhance microbial decomposition and the loss of soil organic carbon, according to an analysis of observational data and a rhizosphere priming model.
- Frida Keuper
- , Birgit Wild
- , Matti Kummu
- , Christian Beer
- , Gesche Blume-Werry
- , Sébastien Fontaine
- , Konstantin Gavazov
- , Norman Gentsch
- , Georg Guggenberger
- , Gustaf Hugelius
- , Mika Jalava
- , Charles Koven
- , Eveline J. Krab
- , Peter Kuhry
- , Sylvain Monteux
- , Andreas Richter
- , Tanvir Shahzad
- , James T. Weedon
- & Ellen Dorrepaal
-
News & Views |
Earth’s soil harbours ancient carbon
Organic carbon in the top metre of Earth’s soils is far older than previously thought, averaging 4,800 years old. These radiocarbon-derived age estimates require us to recalibrate our expectations of ecosystem gains and losses of carbon.
- Sharon A. Billings
- & Lígia F. T. de Souza
-
Article |
Mud in rivers transported as flocculated and suspended bed material
Fast settling rates of suspended silt and clay particles suggest that mud in rivers is largely flocculated and part of suspended bed-material load.
- Michael P. Lamb
- , Jan de Leeuw
- , Woodward W. Fischer
- , Andrew J. Moodie
- , Jeremy G. Venditti
- , Jeffrey A. Nittrouer
- , Daniel Haught
- & Gary Parker
-
Matters Arising |
Multiple drivers of Miocene C4 ecosystem expansions
- Enno Schefuß
- & Lydie M. Dupont
-
Editorial |
Papers that matter
Nature Geoscience aims to publish important science, but the journal also strives to offer a platform to voices driving change within the geoscience community. We welcome submissions on community issues that encourage reader engagement and inspire action.
-
Matters Arising |
Reply to: Multiple drivers of Miocene C4 ecosystem expansions
- Pratigya J. Polissar
- , Cassaundra Rose
- , Kevin T. Uno
- , Samuel R. Phelps
- & Peter deMenocal
-
Article |
Geomorphological evidence for a dry dust avalanche origin of slope streaks on Mars
Patterns of erosion and deposition by some slope streaks on Mars are consistent with a dry dust avalanche origin, according to an analysis of orbital images before and after new streaks formed.
- Colin M. Dundas
-
News & Views |
Plate tectonics from crust to core
Compositional signatures of subducted crust in the deep-mantle sources of ocean island volcanoes in the Atlantic Ocean but not the Pacific reveal that plate motions on Earth’s surface influence the characteristics of Earth’s deepest interior.
- Richard W. Carlson
-
Article |
Deep-sea eruptions boosted by induced fuel–coolant explosions
Interactions between magma and water can drive explosive fragmentation eruptions of the type seen in the Havre volcanic eruption, New Zealand, in 2012, even under submarine conditions, according to laboratory fragmentation experiments.
- T. Dürig
- , J. D. L. White
- , A. P. Murch
- , B. Zimanowski
- , R. Büttner
- , D. Mele
- , P. Dellino
- , R. J. Carey
- , L. S. Schmidt
- & N. Spitznagel
-
Article |
Global distribution of sediment-hosted metals controlled by craton edge stability
Major sediment-hosted base metal deposits are located within 200 km of the border between thick and thin lithosphere, according to statistical comparisons between global lithospheric thickness and known deposit locations.
- Mark J. Hoggard
- , Karol Czarnota
- , Fred D. Richards
- , David L. Huston
- , A. Lynton Jaques
- & Sia Ghelichkhan
-
Article |
Distinct formation history for deep-mantle domains reflected in geochemical differences
Earth’s deep-mantle domains are geochemically distinct. The African domain is enriched in subducted material, which suggests a different history from the Pacific domain and a dynamic relationship between plate tectonics and deep-mantle structures.
- Luc S. Doucet
- , Zheng-Xiang Li
- , Hamed Gamal El Dien
- , Amaury Pourteau
- , J. Brendan Murphy
- , William J. Collins
- , Nadine Mattielli
- , Hugo K. H. Olierook
- , Christopher J. Spencer
- & Ross N. Mitchell
-
Article |
Weak magnetic field changes over the Pacific due to high conductance in lowermost mantle
High conductance in the lowermost mantle beneath the Pacific deflects the planetary gyre, which results in limited variation in the magnetic field in the region, according to numerical modelling of Earth’s core dynamics.
- Mathieu Dumberry
- & Colin More
-
Article |
The age distribution of global soil carbon inferred from radiocarbon measurements
Soils may accumulate less carbon and with a slower turnover than Earth system models predict, according to analysis of the age distribution of global soil carbon, which finds that the mean age of soil carbon is older than that in simulated in models.
- Zheng Shi
- , Steven D. Allison
- , Yujie He
- , Paul A. Levine
- , Alison M. Hoyt
- , Jeffrey Beem-Miller
- , Qing Zhu
- , William R. Wieder
- , Susan Trumbore
- & James T. Randerson
-
Article |
Observed changes in dry-season water availability attributed to human-induced climate change
Regional changes in dry-season water availability over recent decades can be attributed to human-induced climate change, according to analyses of global reconstructions.
- Ryan S. Padrón
- , Lukas Gudmundsson
- , Bertrand Decharme
- , Agnès Ducharne
- , David M. Lawrence
- , Jiafu Mao
- , Daniele Peano
- , Gerhard Krinner
- , Hyungjun Kim
- & Sonia I. Seneviratne
-
Article |
Evidence for a hot start and early ocean formation on Pluto
Pluto’s subsurface ocean may have formed early due to accretionary heating, a comparison of thermal evolution modelling with observed tectonic structures suggests.
- Carver J. Bierson
- , Francis Nimmo
- & S. Alan Stern
-
News & Views |
Tropical forests lost to land grabbing
Large-scale land acquisitions accelerate tropical deforestation, suggests an analysis of two decades of land-deal and forest-cover data. Such exploitation will threaten the future of these globally crucial carbon sinks and biodiversity hotspots.
- Andreas Neef
-
Article |
Southern Ocean carbon sink enhanced by sea-ice feedbacks at the Antarctic Cold Reversal
Increased Southern Ocean productivity driven by sea-ice feedbacks contributed to a slowdown in rising CO2 levels during the last deglaciation, according to analyses of marine-derived aerosols from an Antarctic ice core.
- C. J. Fogwill
- , C. S. M. Turney
- , L. Menviel
- , A. Baker
- , M. E. Weber
- , B. Ellis
- , Z. A. Thomas
- , N. R. Golledge
- , D. Etheridge
- , M. Rubino
- , D. P. Thornton
- , T. D. van Ommen
- , A. D. Moy
- , M. A. J. Curran
- , S. Davies
- , M. I. Bird
- , N. C. Munksgaard
- , C. M. Rootes
- , H. Millman
- , J. Vohra
- , A. Rivera
- , A. Mackintosh
- , J. Pike
- , I. R. Hall
- , E. A. Bagshaw
- , E. Rainsley
- , C. Bronk-Ramsey
- , M. Montenari
- , A. G. Cage
- , M. R. P. Harris
- , R. Jones
- , A. Power
- , J. Love
- , J. Young
- , L. S. Weyrich
- & A. Cooper
-
Article |
Tropical forest loss enhanced by large-scale land acquisitions
Tropical deforestation rates are linked to large-scale land investments, according to georeferenced land deal records and remote sensing of forest loss over the past two decades.
- Kyle Frankel Davis
- , Heejin Irene Koo
- , Jampel Dell’Angelo
- , Paolo D’Odorico
- , Lyndon Estes
- , Laura J. Kehoe
- , Milad Kharratzadeh
- , Tobias Kuemmerle
- , Domingos Machava
- , Aurélio de Jesus Rodrigues Pais
- , Natasha Ribeiro
- , Maria Cristina Rulli
- & Mokganedi Tatlhego
-
Editorial |
The rise of ocean robots
As the COVID-19 pandemic halts many research cruise activities, exploration of the oceans by autonomous vehicles continues, highlighting the strengths of robotic research, but also the limitations.
-
Article |
Widespread subsidence and carbon emissions across Southeast Asian peatlands
Subsidence and carbon emissions in tropical peatlands are primarily linked to drainage history, not land-use type, according to large-scale high-resolution remote sensing in Southeast Asia.
- Alison M. Hoyt
- , Estelle Chaussard
- , Sandra S. Seppalainen
- & Charles F. Harvey
-
Publisher Correction |
Publisher Correction: Global fire emissions buffered by the production of pyrogenic carbon
- Matthew W. Jones
- , Cristina Santín
- , Guido R. van der Werf
- & Stefan H. Doerr
-
-
Perspective |
Impacts of hydrothermal plume processes on oceanic metal cycles and transport
Characterization of hydrothermal plumes in terms of redox, rather than distance from the vent, illuminates the dominant transport processes and fate of metals, focusing on iron and manganese.
- Amy Gartman
- & Alyssa J. Findlay
-
Article |
Widespread biomass burning smoke throughout the remote troposphere
Aerosol particles produced by biomass burning are ubiquitous in the remote troposphere, according to global airborne measurements over remote ocean regions.
- G. P. Schill
- , K. D. Froyd
- , H. Bian
- , A. Kupc
- , C. Williamson
- , C. A. Brock
- , E. Ray
- , R. S. Hornbrook
- , A. J. Hills
- , E. C. Apel
- , M. Chin
- , P. R. Colarco
- & D. M. Murphy
-
Article |
Chesapeake Bay acidification buffered by spatially decoupled carbonate mineral cycling
Calcium carbonate formed in seagrass beds that is transported and dissolved in deeper waters offshore helps buffer coastal acidification in the Chesapeake Bay, according to geochemical modelling of a transect of carbonate chemistry measurements.
- Jianzhong Su
- , Wei-Jun Cai
- , Jean Brodeur
- , Baoshan Chen
- , Najid Hussain
- , Yichen Yao
- , Chaoying Ni
- , Jeremy M. Testa
- , Ming Li
- , Xiaohui Xie
- , Wenfei Ni
- , K. Michael Scaboo
- , Yuan-yuan Xu
- , Jeffrey Cornwell
- , Cassie Gurbisz
- , Michael S. Owens
- , George G. Waldbusser
- , Minhan Dai
- & W. Michael Kemp
-
Article |
Artificial intelligence reconstructs missing climate information
An artificial intelligence-based method may infill gaps in historical temperature data more effectively than conventional techniques. Application of this method reveals a stronger global warming trend between 1850 and 2018 than estimated previously.
- Christopher Kadow
- , David Matthew Hall
- & Uwe Ulbrich
-
Article |
Steady erosion rates in the Himalayas through late Cenozoic climatic changes
Long-term Himalayan erosion rates remained stable through the global climatic changes of the past six million years, according to the cosmogenic nuclide composition of terrestrial sediments recovered from the Bay of Bengal.
- Sebastien J. P. Lenard
- , Jérôme Lavé
- , Christian France-Lanord
- , Georges Aumaître
- , Didier L. Bourlès
- & Karim Keddadouche
-
Article |
Amplified transboundary transport of haze by aerosol–boundary layer interaction in China
Secondary air pollution events are enhanced in the Yangtze River delta, China, due to the interaction of long-range transport and aerosol–boundary layer feedback, according to a combination of observations and simulations of haze events from 2013 to 2018.
- Xin Huang
- , Aijun Ding
- , Zilin Wang
- , Ke Ding
- , Jian Gao
- , Fahe Chai
- & Congbin Fu
-
Article |
Changes in Northern Hemisphere temperature variability shaped by regional warming patterns
Regional warming patterns control temperature variance and skewness changes in the Northern Hemisphere, suggests analysis of tracked temperature anomalies.
- Talia Tamarin-Brodsky
- , Kevin Hodges
- , Brian J. Hoskins
- & Theodore G. Shepherd
-
Article |
Experimental evidence for lava-like mud flows under Martian surface conditions
Experimental mudflows under Martian surface conditions propagate similarly to terrestrial pahoehoe lava flows, suggesting mud (rather than igneous) volcanism can explain some flow morphologies on Mars.
- Petr Brož
- , Ondřej Krýza
- , Lionel Wilson
- , Susan J. Conway
- , Ernst Hauber
- , Adriano Mazzini
- , Jan Raack
- , Matthew R. Balme
- , Matthew E. Sylvest
- & Manish R. Patel