Articles in 2010

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  • Mining could provide a steady stream of income for Afghanistan. But the mere promise of a stable economy does not justify all sacrifices.

    Editorial
  • Andesite magmas were once thought to be simple melts derived from a subducting oceanic slab or the mantle. Analysis of lavas at Mount Hood shows that instead andesites are a complex mixture of magmas formed in the continental crust just before eruption.

    • John Eichelberger
    News & Views
  • The question of how soil moisture deficits affect runoff efficiency has flummoxed river forecasters for decades. Simulations with four land surface models reveal that soil moisture can have an influence that is on a par with early season snowpack.

    • Thomas C. Pagano
    News & Views
  • Peat bogs release large quantities of methane to the atmosphere. A global survey of peat mosses reveals a ubiquitous symbiotic relationship with methane-oxidizing bacteria.

    • Yin Chen
    • J. Colin Murrell
    News & Views
  • Nardy Kip, Julia F. van Winden, Huub J. M. Op den Camp and an array of colleagues braved hostile acidic peat bogs around the world in a feat of truly collaborative research.

    Backstory
  • The photosynthetic production of oxygen in the ocean is thought to have begun at least 2.7 billion years ago. The geochemistry of marine sediments deposited 2.6 billion years ago suggests that ocean margins were oxygenated at least 100 million years before the first significant increase in atmospheric oxygen concentrations.

    • Brian Kendall
    • Christopher T. Reinhard
    • Ariel D. Anbar
    Article
  • In the American west, operational forecasts for spring–summer streamflow rely heavily on snow-water storage. Simulations with a suite of land-modelling systems suggest that snow-water storage generally contributes most to forecasting skill, but that the contribution of soil moisture is often significant, too.

    • Randal D. Koster
    • Sarith P. P. Mahanama
    • Rolf H. Reichle
    Letter
  • Ocean eddies generated through instability of the mean flow are a vital component of the energy budget of the global ocean. Modelling combined with satellite altimetry data suggests that the energy from westward-propagating eddies is scattered and eventually dispersed when they reach the western boundary of an ocean basin.

    • Xiaoming Zhai
    • Helen L. Johnson
    • David P. Marshall
    Letter
  • Evidence from biomarkers and molecular clocks points to the existence of sponges tens of millions of years before their earliest fossil remains. Fossils from South Australia may narrow that gap.

    • Marc Laflamme
    News & Views
  • The Trezona Formation of South Australia pre-dates the 635-million-year-old Marinoan glaciation. Fossils found at this location are up to several millimetres in size, and share morphological characteristics with sponge-grade animals.

    • Adam C. Maloof
    • Catherine V. Rose
    • Frederik J. Simons
    Article
  • Gravity measurements of the ice-mass loss in Greenland and Antarctica are complicated by glacial isostatic adjustment. Simultaneous estimates of both signals confirm the negative trends in ice-sheet mass balance, but not their magnitude.

    • David H. Bromwich
    • Julien P. Nicolas
    News & Views
  • Present-day changes in the thickness of ice sheets and glacial isostatic adjustment both affect space geodetic measurements. A combination of gravity measurements and geodetic data of surface movement with a data-assimilating model of ocean bottom pressure allows the simultaneous estimation of present-day water transport and glacial isostatic adjustment.

    • Xiaoping Wu
    • Michael B. Heflin
    • Susan E. Owen
    Article
  • Reconstructions of land and ocean temperatures over the past 18,000 years in the high southern latitudes have shown conflicting trends. Analyses of temperatures on Campbell Island, south of New Zealand, confirm this behaviour, and lead to the suggestion that it reflects changes in the position and intensity of the westerly winds.

    • Matt S. McGlone
    • Chris S. M. Turney
    • Katharina Pahnke
    Letter
  • The 2009 L'Aquila earthquake illustrates catastrophic shortcomings in the flow of information between scientists and the public.

    Editorial
  • Climate science at the University of East Anglia is sound but lacking in transparency, according to the three official reports. But making data accessible will not be sufficient to guard against future attacks.

    Editorial