PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Dec. 2013 Lithosphere now available online

2013-12-13
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Kea Giles
kgiles@geosociety.org
Geological Society of America
Dec. 2013 Lithosphere now available online Boulder, Colo., USA - In the latest issue of The Geological Society of America journal Lithosphere: Learn more about the Great Slave Lake shear zone in northwest Canada (open access article); the tectonic development of the Tibetan Plateau; and two flysch belts. Also in this issue: an open-access review article on crustal melting, ductile flow, and deformation in mountain belts.

Abstracts are online at http://lithosphere.gsapubs.org/content/early/recent. Representatives of the media may obtain complimentary copies of LITHOSPHERE articles by contacting Kea Giles at the address above.

Please discuss articles of interest with the authors before publishing stories on their work, and please make reference to LITHOSPHERE in articles published. Contact Kea Giles for additional information or assistance.

Non-media requests for articles may be directed to GSA Sales and Service, gsaservice@geosociety.org.

Mantle roots of major Precambrian shear zones inferred from structure of the Great Slave Lake shear zone, northwest Canada D.B. Snyder, Geological Survey of Canada, david.snyder@nrcan.gc.ca; and B.A. Kjarsgaard. Lithosphere, v. 5, p. 539-546, http://lithosphere.gsapubs.org/cgi/content/abstract/5/6/539. Open Access.

Mountain belt structure from the early Earth rarely survives. New seismic and geochemical data from Northwest Canada have provided insight into the deep structure of the 2 billion year old Thelon mountains that formed, similar to the Himalaya, when the 4.0-2.8 billion year old Slave and 3.2-2.1 billion year old Rae subcontinents collided. The new observations are interpreted to indicate that no ocean separated these sub-continents as they converged, and final structural geometries suggest that these blocks wedged apart one another at multiple levels to depths of 250 km. Analogous to the modern San Andreas fault zone, the new observations suggest that hundreds of inferred strike-slip offset along the Macdonald Fault strand of the Great Slave Lake shear zone penetrates on vertical faults only a few tens of kilometers into the Earth; fault dips are shallow below that depth and inherited from early stages of convergence. The composite geometry of the wedges and shallow fault dips imply that known economic diamond kimberlite deposits and the associated diamond source reservoirs at 150-220 km depths associated with the Slave sub-continent today underlie the entire former mountain belt and the East Arm of Great Slave Lake.

Tectonic development of the northeastern Tibetan Plateau as constrained by high-resolution deep seismic-reflection data Rui Gao, UCLA, Earth & Space Sciences, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1567, USA; Haiyan Wang, An Yin (corresponding author: yin@ess.ucla.edu, ayin54@gmail.com), Shuwen Dong, Zhaoyang Kuang, Andrew V. Zuza, Wenhui Li, and Xiaosong Xiong. Lithosphere, v. 5, p. 555-574, http://lithosphere.gsapubs.org/cgi/content/abstract/5/6/555.

The Tibetan plateau rises about 5 km on average above the sea level. However, what makes up its crust that leads to the formation this high altitude plateau on Earth is not clear. This paper uses a high-resolution seismic image to elucidate this problem. A key discovery is that the faults responsible for the plateau formation are restricted within the crust and does not cut into the mantle.

Two flysch belts having distinctly different provenance suggest no stratigraphic link between the Wrangellia composite terrane and the paleo-Alaskan margin Chad P. Hults, U.S. Geological Survey, 4200 University Dr., Anchorage, Alaska 99508, USA, chults@usgs.gov; and Frederic H. Wilson, Raymond A. Donelick, and Paul B. O'Sullivan. Lithosphere, v. 5, p. 575-594, http://lithosphere.gsapubs.org/cgi/content/abstract/5/6/575.

Jurassic to Cretaceous flysch lying between the Wrangellia composite terrane and the paleo-Alaskan margin obscures the northern boundary of the terrane, but the provenance of the flysch may hold the key to unraveling the timing and location of accretion of the terrane, which has been a controversy for many decades. Combining traditional provenance techniques and detrital zircon geochronology, Chad Hults and colleagues compile previously published provenance data and contribute new targeted provenance data to test contradictory models of accretion. The authors present a compelling argument that there is no unambiguous provenance link between the paleo-Alaskan margin and the Wrangellia composite terrane. This new interpretation, combined with geophysical models and structural evidence, constrains the location of the northern boundary of the Wrangellia composite terrane and supports Late Cretaceous accretion of the terrane.

RESEARCH FOCUS Crustal melting, ductile flow, and deformation in mountain belts: Cause and effect relationships Mike Searle, Dept. Earth Sciences, Oxford University, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3AN, UK. Lithosphere, v. 5, p. 547-554, http://lithosphere.gsapubs.org/cgi/content/abstract/5/6/547. Open Access.

From the abstract: "Exhumed sections of migmatites are beautifully exposed in the middle crust of old orogens such as the Proterozoic Wet Mountains of Colorado and young Tertiary–active orogens such as the Himalaya and Karakoram. Migmatites and leucogranites occur both on a regional scale (e.g., Greater Himalayan Sequence) and along more restricted shear zones and strike-slip faults (e.g., Karakoram, Jiale, and Red River faults). Melting and deformation are clearly diachronous across orogenic belts over space and time, yet in general, deformation must precede regional metamorphism and melting in order to thicken the crust and increase pressure and temperature."

### http://www.geosociety.org


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Helping cancer researchers make sense of the deluge of genetic data

2013-12-13
Helping cancer researchers make sense of the deluge of genetic data Gene Expression Barcode 3.0 sifts genetic data from 100,000 patients, 50,000 mice MAYWOOD, IL. – A newly improved internet research tool is helping cancer researchers and physicians make sense ...

Bioethics Commission on incidental findings: Anticipate and communicate

2013-12-13
Bioethics Commission on incidental findings: Anticipate and communicate Bioethics Commission releases ethical analysis and recommendations for clinicians, researchers, and direct-to-consumer testing companies on how ...

Bonefish spawning behavior in the Bahamas surprises researchers, should aid conservation

2013-12-13
Bonefish spawning behavior in the Bahamas surprises researchers, should aid conservation A report to the Bahamas Ministry of Environment this week documents rarely seen pre-spawning behavior in bonefish, which should aid future conservation efforts AMHERST, ...

Keeping the lights on

2013-12-13
Keeping the lights on UCSB mechanical engineer Igor Mezic finds a way to predict cascading power outages (Santa Barbara, Calif.) — A method of assessing the stability of large-scale power grids in real time could bring the world closer ...

Low-power tunneling transistor for high-performance devices at low voltage

2013-12-13
Low-power tunneling transistor for high-performance devices at low voltage A new type of transistor that could make possible fast and low-power computing devices for energy-constrained applications such as smart sensor networks, implantable medical electronics and ultra-mobile ...

Wayne State discovers potential treatment for skin and corneal wound healing in diabetics

2013-12-13
Wayne State discovers potential treatment for skin and corneal wound healing in diabetics DETROIT — Diabetes Mellitus (DM), a metabolic disorder that affects nearly 170 million people worldwide, is characterized by ...

Study shows symptoms linked to poor quality of life in long-term childhood

2013-12-13
Study shows symptoms linked to poor quality of life in long-term childhood GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Due to improved treatments and technologies, more children than ever are surviving cancer. Unfortunately, about 70 percent of these children experience late effects from their ...

Civilians trained by American mental health professionals bring healing to traumatized victims of Libya's civil war, Baylor study finds

2013-12-13
Civilians trained by American mental health professionals bring healing to traumatized victims of Libya's civil war, Baylor study finds Civilians traumatized by Libya's civil war in 2011 — which left many homeless, poor and grieving — have virtually no access ...

Medical mystery solved

2013-12-13
Medical mystery solved A variant of NKH is uncovered AURORA, Colorado (December 12, 13) – People from around the country and the world turn to Johan Van Hove, MD, PhD, for advice on a rare metabolic disease known as NKH, which can disrupt the body in devastating and ...

Programming smart molecules

2013-12-13
Programming smart molecules Harvard machine-learning algorithms could make chemical reactions intelligent Cambridge, Mass. – December 12, 2013 – Computer scientists at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) and the Wyss Institute for Biologically ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Freeze-framing the cellular world to capture a fleeting moment of cellular activity

Computer hardware advance solves complex optimization problems

SOX2: a key player in prostate cancer progression and treatment resistance

Unlocking the potential of the non-coding genome for precision medicine

Chitinase-3-like protein 1: a novel biomarker for liver disease diagnosis and management

The Journal of Nuclear Medicine Ahead-of-Print Tip Sheet: August 22, 2025

Charisma Virtual Social Coaching named a finalist for Global Innovation Award

From the atmosphere to the abyss: Iron's role in Earth's climate history

US oil and gas air pollution causes unequal health impacts

Scientists reveal how microbes collaborate to consume potent greenhouse gas

UMass Amherst kinesiologist receives $2 million ‘outstanding researcher’ award from NIH

Wildfire peer review report for land Brandenburg, Germany, is now online

Wired by nature: Precision molecules for tomorrow's electronics

New study finds hidden body fat is linked to faster heart ageing

How a gift card could help speed up Alzheimer’s clinical research

Depression and anxiety symptoms in adults displaced by natural disasters

Cardiovascular health at the intersection of race and gender in Medicare fee for service

World’s first observation of the transverse Thomson effect

Powerful nodes for quantum networks

Mapping fat: How microfluidics and mass spectrometry reveal lipid landscapes in tiny worms

ATOX1 promotes hepatocellular carcinoma carcinogenesis via activation of the c-Myb/PI3K/AKT signaling pathway

Colibactin-producing E. coli linked to higher colorectal cancer risk in FAP patients

Animal protein not linked to higher mortality risk, study finds

Satellite insights into eutrophication trends on the Qinghai–Tibet plateau

Researchers develop an innovative method for large-scale analysis of metabolites in biological samples

Asteroid Bennu is a time capsule of materials bearing witness to its origin and transformation over billions of years

New AI model can help extend life and increase safety of electric vehicle batteries

Wildfires can raise local death rate by 67%, shows study on 2023 Hawaiʻi fires

Yogurt and hot spring bathing show a promising combination for gut health

Study explains how lymphoma rewires human genome

[Press-News.org] Dec. 2013 Lithosphere now available online