Articles in 2010

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  • The 2010 Haiti earthquake showed that building codes must be adopted and strictly enforced. Furthermore, timely disaster recovery requires these codes to be supplemented by comprehensive hazard-insurance programmes.

    • Michael K. Lindell
    Commentary
  • The Enriquillo–Plantain Garden strike-slip fault accommodates the relative motion between the North American and Caribbean plates and was thought to have ruptured during the 2010 Haiti earthquake. Satellite data instead indicate that a blind thrust fault, possibly related to the Haitian fold–thrust belt, was responsible and caused some contractional deformation.

    • Eric Calais
    • Andrew Freed
    • Roberte Momplaisir
    Letter
  • Susan E. Hough and colleagues faced logistical challenges when attempting to deploy portable seismometers in post-earthquake Port-au-Prince.

    Backstory
  • Wetlands are home to microorganisms that produce and emit methane. Very small wetlands, tucked into unexpected places, might be making a larger contribution to the global methane budget than previously thought.

    • Joseph B. Yavitt
    News & Views
  • Microzonation maps use local geological conditions to characterize seismic hazard, but do not generally consider topography. Ground motions during the Haiti earthquake are found to have been significantly amplified along a high topographic ridge, which caused substantial structural damage, indicating that topography can play an important role in seismic hazard.

    • Susan E. Hough
    • Jean Robert Altidor
    • Alan Yong
    Letter
  • Methane concentrations above tropical forests in the neotropics are high, according to space-borne observations. Flux measurements in the field suggest that tank bromeliads, herbaceous plants common throughout tropical forests, emit methane and may contribute to the tropical source.

    • Guntars O. Martinson
    • Florian A. Werner
    • Edzo Veldkamp
    Letter
  • Decadal fluctuations in the North Pacific Ocean and overlying atmosphere significantly affect the weather and climate of North America and Eurasia. An ensemble of simulations with a coupled ocean–atmosphere model reveals a link between these decadal oscillations and central Pacific El Niño events.

    • E. Di Lorenzo
    • K. M. Cobb
    • D. J. Vimont
    Letter
  • Mars may have once had a CO2-rich atmosphere, but carbonate rocks that could provide evidence for such conditions are sparse. Spectral analyses of rocks exposed from deep within an impact crater reveal that carbonate deposits may be extensive on Mars, but are buried under layers of younger volcanic rocks.

    • Joseph R. Michalski
    • Paul B. Niles
    Letter
  • The 12 January 2010 Mw 7.0 Haiti earthquake exhibited primarily strike-slip motion but unusually generated a tsunami. An extensive field survey reveals that coastal strike-slip fault systems produce relief conducive to rapid sedimentation, erosion and slope failure, so that even modest predominantly strike-slip earthquakes can cause potentially catastrophic slide-generated tsunamis.

    • Matthew J. Hornbach
    • Nicole Braudy
    • John Templeton
    Letter
  • Initially, the devastating 12 January 2010 Haiti earthquake seemed to involve straightforward accommodation of the motion between the Caribbean and North American plates. A combination of seismological observations, geologic field data and space geodetic measurements shows that the rupture process may have involved slip on multiple faults, but lacked significant surface deformation.

    • G. P. Hayes
    • R. W. Briggs
    • M. Simons
    Article
  • The deep ocean is largely uncharted territory. The aftermath of the BP oil spill has been a poignant reminder that its relative inaccessibility hinders exploration, but does not extend much protection from human interference.

    Editorial
  • The gradual expansion of Northern Hemisphere glaciation about 3.6 million years ago followed a period of prolonged warmth. An analysis of ancient sea surface temperatures fuels the debate surrounding the roles of atmospheric carbon dioxide and global circulation in the cooling.

    • Ana Christina Ravelo
    News & Views
  • The Census of Marine Life has succeeded in raising awareness about marine biodiversity, and contributed much to our understanding of what lives where. But the project has fallen short of its goal to estimate species abundance.

    • Daniel Pauly
    • Rainer Froese
    Commentary