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

Australian volcanic mystery explained: ANU media release

Australian volcanic mystery explained: ANU media release
2014-10-17
(Press-News.org) Scientists have solved a long-standing mystery surrounding Australia's only active volcanic area, in the country's southeast.

The research explains a volcanic region that has seen more than 400 volcanic events in the last four million years. The 500 kilometre long region stretches from Melbourne to the South Australian town of Mount Gambier, which surrounds a dormant volcano that last erupted only 5,000 years ago.

"Volcanoes in this region of Australia are generated by a very different process to most of Earth's volcanoes, which occur on the edges of tectonic plates, such as the Pacific Rim of Fire", says lead researcher Dr Rhodri Davies, from the Research School of Earth Sciences.

"We have determined that the volcanism arises from a unique interaction between local variations in the continent's thickness, which we were able to map for the first time, and its movement, at seven centimetres a year northwards towards New Guinea and Indonesia.

The volcanic area is comparatively shallow, less than 200 kilometres deep, in an area where a 2.5 billion year-old part of the continent meets a thinner, younger section, formed in the past 500 million years or so.

These variations in thickness drive currents within the underlying mantle, which draw heat from deeper up to the surface.

The researchers used state-of-the-art techniques to model these currents on the NCI Supercomputer, Raijin, using more than one million CPU hours.

"This boundary runs the length of eastern Australia, but our computer model demonstrates, for the first time, how Australia's northward drift results in an isolated hotspot in this region," Dr Davies said.

Dr Davies will now apply his research technique to other volcanic mysteries around the globe.

"There are around 50 other similarly isolated volcanic regions around the world, several of which we may now be able to explain," he said.

It is difficult to predict where or when future eruptions might occur, Dr Davies said.

"There hasn't been an eruption in 5,000 years, so there is no need to panic. However, the region is still active and we can't rule out any eruptions in the future."

INFORMATION:


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Australian volcanic mystery explained: ANU media release

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Study finds inconsistent achievement of guidelines for acute asthma care in hospital EDs

2014-10-17
A study comparing the care delivered to patients coming to hospital emergency departments (EDs) for acute asthma attacks in recent years with data gathered more than 15 years earlier finds inconsistencies in how well hospitals are meeting nationally established treatment guidelines. A team led by Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) investigators found that, while the achievement of most guidelines defining appropriate pharmacologic treatments for particular patients improved over the study period, hospitals did less well in meeting several other guidelines. The study that ...

Image guided radiation therapy is commonly used to ensure accuracy in treating pediatric tumors

2014-10-17
Fairfax, Va., October 17, 2014—Image guided radiation therapy (IGRT) is a commonly used modality to ensure treatment accuracy in the management of pediatric tumors; however, consensus recommendations are needed in order to guide clinical decisions on the use of IGRT in treating pediatric patients, according to a study published in the September-October 2014 issue of Practical Radiation Oncology (PRO), the official clinical practice journal of the American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO). IGRT is the process of using frequent imaging, typically performed in ...

Ebola special issue includes clinician primer

2014-10-17
Rockville, MD – Accurate knowledge regarding Ebola is critical and pertinent for practicing physicians and clinicians given the current risk of hazardous global outbreak and epidemic. The Journal, Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness has launched a special issue, Ebola Virus and Public Health, to surround the public, medical professionals and media with necessary knowledge in this critical societal moment. On October 17, the journal published A Primer on Ebola for Clinicians. The primer was prepared by Dr. Eric Toner, internist and emergency physician, ...

Biological clock disruptions increase breast cancer risk, UGA study finds

Biological clock disruptions increase breast cancer risk, UGA study finds
2014-10-17
Athens, Ga. – The disruption of a person's circadian rhythm—their 24-hour biological clock—has been linked to an increased risk of breast cancer, according to new University of Georgia research. The culprit, in this study in particular, is artificial light. "Exposure to artificial light leads to a significantly higher risk for developing breast cancer," said Chunla He, a biostatistics graduate student in the UGA College of Public Health. "To decrease the use of artificial light, people should avoid working at night and implement earlier bed times." Her ...

'Red effect' sparks interest in female monkeys

2014-10-17
Recent studies showed that the color red tends increase our attraction toward others, feelings of jealousy, and even reaction times. Now, new research shows that female monkeys also respond to the color red, suggesting that biology, rather than our culture, may play the fundamental role in our "red" reactions. "Previous research shows that the color red in a mating context makes people more attractive, and in the fighting context makes people seem more threatening and angry," explained Benjamin Y. Hayden, a coauthor of the study and professor in brain and cognitive sciences ...

Superconducting circuits, simplified

2014-10-17
Images/release: http://newsoffice.mit.edu/2014/cheaper-superconducting-computer-chips-1017 Computer chips with superconducting circuits — circuits with zero electrical resistance — would be 50 to 100 times as energy-efficient as today's chips, an attractive trait given the increasing power consumption of the massive data centers that power the Internet's most popular sites. Superconducting chips also promise greater processing power: Superconducting circuits that use so-called Josephson junctions have been clocked at 770 gigahertz, or 500 times the speed ...

University of Toronto study finds that action video games bolster sensorimotor skills

2014-10-17
University of Toronto study finds that action video games bolster sensorimotor skills A study led by University of Toronto psychology researchers has found that people who play action video games such as Call of Duty or Assassin's Creed seem to learn a new sensorimotor skill more quickly than non-gamers do. A new sensorimotor skill, such as learning to ride a bike or typing, often requires a new pattern of coordination between vision and motor movement. With such skills, an individual generally moves from novice performance, characterized by a low degree of coordination, ...

Sperm wars

Sperm wars
2014-10-17
This news release is available in German. Why do male animals need millions of sperms every day in order to reproduce? And why are there two sexes anyway? These and related questions are the topic of the latest issue of the research journal Molecular Human Reproduction published today (Oct. 16th, 2014). The evolutionary biologist Steven Ramm from Bielefeld University Bielefeld has compiled this special issue on sperm competition. In nature, it is not unusual for a female to copulate with several males in quick succession – chimpanzees are one good example. 'The ...

Presence of enzyme may worsen effects of spinal cord injury and impair long-term recovery

2014-10-17
Philadelphia, PA, October 16, 2014 – Traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) is a devastating condition with few treatment options. Studies show that damage to the barrier separating blood from the spinal cord can contribute to the neurologic deficits that arise secondary to the initial trauma. Through a series of sophisticated experiments, researchers reporting in The American Journal of Pathology suggest that matrix metalloproteinase-3 (MMP-3) plays a pivotal role in disruption of the brain/spinal cord barrier (BSCB), cell death, and functional deficits after SCI. This ...

Scientists opens black box on bacterial growth in cystic fibrosis lung infection

2014-10-17
Researchers from the University of Copenhagen have shown for the first time how bacteria can grow directly in the lungs of Cystic fibrosis patients, giving them the opportunity to get tremendous insights into bacteria behavior and growth in chronic infections. The study also discovered the bacterial growth in chronic lung infections among cystic fibrosis (CF) patients was halted or slowed down by the immune cells. The researchers discovered the immune cells consumed all the oxygen and helped "suffocate" the bacteria, forcing the bacteria to switch to a much slower growth. The ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Study reports on global trends in acute kidney injury– related mortality

Study reveals a potentially better way to optimize the timing for kidney transplant waitlisting

Transitional dialysis program in Texas decreased the use of emergency dialysis

Quality improvement intervention may help prevent deaths from metformin-associated lactic acid

Conservative care versus dialysis: model indicates which is best for individual patients with advanced chronic kidney disease

Coronary artery calcium may be a predictor for all-cause mortality, including medical conditions not related to heart health

Minimally invasive coronary calcium CT scans used to determine heart disease risk are effective at finding other potential health problems

High-impact clinical trials generate promising results for improving kidney health - part 3

Mass General Brigham researchers find PCSK9 inhibitor reduced risk of first heart attack, stroke

Triglyceride-lowering drug significantly reduced rate of acute pancreatitis in high-risk patients

Steatotic liver disease and cancer: From pathogenesis to therapeutic frontiers

SGLT2 inhibitors and kidney outcomes by glomerular filtration rate and albuminuria

Comprehensive analysis supports routine use of metabolic drug for people with all levels of kidney function

Temporary benefit for immune system in early HIV treatment, but dysregulation returns

Chronic kidney disease is now the ninth leading cause of death

Chronic kidney disease has more than doubled since 1990, now affecting nearly 800 million people worldwide

Participant experiences in a kidney failure care intervention in the navigate-kidney study

Community health worker support for Hispanic and Latino individuals receiving hemodialysis

Scientists unveil new strategies to balance farming and ecological protection in Northeast China

UT Health San Antonio scientist helps shape new traumatic brain injury guidelines

Rising nitrogen and rainfall could supercharge greenhouse gas emissions from the world’s largest grasslands

Study uncovers glomerular disease outcomes across the lifespan

Sotagliflozin outperforms dapagliflozin for reducing salt- sensitive hypertension and kidney injury in rats

Trial analysis reveals almost all adults with hypertensive chronic kidney disease would benefit from intensive blood pressure lowering

A husband’s self-esteem may protect against preterm births, study finds

Michigan State University's James Madison College receives over $1 million to launch civic education academy

White paper on recovering from burnout through mentoring released by University of Phoenix College of Doctoral Studies

Defunct Pennsylvania oil and gas wells may leak methane, metals into water

Kessler Foundation’s John DeLuca, PhD, honored with Reitan Clinical Excellence Award from National Academy of Neuropsychology

Discordance in creatinine- and cystatin C–based eGFR and clinical outcomes

[Press-News.org] Australian volcanic mystery explained: ANU media release