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  • Andrew Moy and colleagues studied foraminifera in sediments, and made their own contributions to the sea, in their attempt to understand calcification in the Southern Ocean.

    Backstory
  • Emily Sekula-Wood and colleagues held their breath as they waited for results to rise up from the depths of the coastal ocean off California.

    Backstory
  • Colloids, such as submicrometre mineral particles or bacterial cells, can act as carriers enhancing the mobility of poorly soluble contaminants in subsurface environments. Spectroscopic and microscopic analysis of flooded soils suggests that copper colloids and metal sulphide colloids increase the concentration of contaminants in waterlogged soils.

    • Frank-Andreas Weber
    • Andreas Voegelin
    • Ruben Kretzschmar
    Letter
  • The mineralogy of the dwarf planet Ceres has long remained uncertain. The infrared spectral features of this planetary body are indicative of minerals derived from the aqueous alteration of olivine-rich materials, suggesting that Ceres is not represented by any known meteorite.

    • Ralph E. Milliken
    • Andrew S. Rivkin
    Letter
  • Since 42 million years ago, the northwestern Pacific Izu Bonin arc magmas have incorporated lead from subducted Indian-type oceanic crust. This crust probably formed at a now-extinct spreading centre in the Pacific basin that tapped Indian-type upper mantle, suggesting a greater extent for this mantle domain than accepted at present.

    • Susanne M. Straub
    • Steven L. Goldstein
    • Angelika Schmidt
    Letter
  • The relative importance of the various factors that lead to intraplate deformation has been difficult to establish. Modelling results show that compressional deformation of a thick sedimentary basin in southeastern Ukraine was facilitated by strain localization resulting from the contrast in thermal conductivity between the basin and the surrounding crystalline crust.

    • Randell Stephenson
    • David L. Egholm
    • Sergiy M. Stovba
    Letter
  • Dust deposition over Antarctica was much higher during the last glacial period, but the causes of this flux remain unclear. An analysis of the composition and age of glacial outwash sediments indicates that growth and decay of glaciers in Patagonia may have influenced dust transport to Antarctica at that time.

    • David E. Sugden
    • Robert D. McCulloch
    • Andrew S. Hein
    Letter
  • The diatom Pseudo-nitzschia produces the neurotoxin domoic acid, known to cause illness and death in marine mammals and humans. Measurements of surface- and deep-water domoic acid concentrations off the coast of California suggest that this toxin is rapidly transported to depth following diatom blooms.

    • Emily Sekula-Wood
    • Astrid Schnetzer
    • Robert Thunell
    Letter
  • The relative importance of regional and global changes in atmospheric greenhouse gas and aerosol concentrations for regional changes in climate is not well known. A climate model analysis of tropical, mid-latitude and polar regions shows that the extratropics and, in particular, the Arctic region are sensitive to local changes in radiative forcing.

    • Drew Shindell
    • Greg Faluvegi
    Article
  • Arctic sea-ice cover is changing rapidly. An analysis of 18 state-of-the-art climate models and observed trends in Arctic sea-ice cover over the past three decades indicates that under a scenario of medium future greenhouse-gas emissions, the Arctic Ocean will probably be ice-free in September before the end of the twenty-first century.

    • Julien Boé
    • Alex Hall
    • Xin Qu
    Letter
  • Human-induced climate change is expected to cause sea-level rise globally as well as regionally. An analysis of state-of-the-art climate models indicates that the northeastern US coast is particularly likely to experience substantial rises in regional sea level as a result of the projected slowdown of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation.

    • Jianjun Yin
    • Michael E. Schlesinger
    • Ronald J. Stouffer
    Letter
  • The timing of the origin of photosynthesis remains controversial. The discovery of ancient haematite crystals that formed in a jasper formation in Australia, which was created in a marine setting, suggests that oxygen was being produced, at least locally, by photosynthesis as early as 3.46 billion years ago.

    • Masamichi Hoashi
    • David C. Bevacqua
    • Hiroshi Ohmoto
    Article
  • Cordilleran orogenic systems are long belts of deformation and magmatism that form when oceanic plates subduct beneath continental ones. Links between processes in the upper continental plate explain key features of Cordilleran systems, such as cyclical trends in the flux and composition of magma supplied to the upper plate.

    • Peter G. DeCelles
    • Mihai N. Ducea
    • George Zandt
    Review Article
  • The oceans are becoming more acidic as they absorb anthropogenic carbon dioxide—this may limit the ability of marine organisms to secrete carbonate. A sediment-trap study shows that in the Southern Ocean the shell weights of a surface-dwelling single-celled organism with a calcite shell are lower than pre-industrial values, probably as a result of increasing ocean acidity.

    • Andrew D. Moy
    • William R. Howard
    • Thomas W. Trull
    Letter
    • Domenico Giardini
    • Conrad Lindholm
    • Jochen Zschau
    Correspondence
    • Ninad Bondre
    News & Views
  • NASA's Opportunity rover found enigmatic sulphate deposits at Meridiani Planum on Mars. A proposal that the deposits are sublimation leftovers of large ice-fields, similar in scale to those at the present-day polar caps, adds to the existing hypotheses.

    • Brian Hynek
    News & Views