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

July 2011 in GSA Today: Clinker geochronology

2011-06-28
(Press-News.org) Boulder, Colorado, USA - July GSA Today science article authors Peter W. Reiners of the University of Arizona and colleagues have developed and successfully carried out a novel, extraordinary technique for learning how efficiently river channels cut and increase local topographic relief: They have used the exposure of "clinker" deposits in combination with highly refined dating techniques. Clinkers are baked coals; baking naturally occurs in shallow depths (tens of meters) and when the clinkers are exhumed during erosion and the development of topographic relief, they are resistant and the rate of exposure can be timed using the U-Th/He isotopic system found in zircons within the clinkers.

In this application, the Reiners and colleagues determined aspects of the pace of recent evolution of Powder River Basin in northern Wyoming and southern Montana. Ages of in-situ clinkers range from as old as 1.1 million years to as young as 10,000 years, but most formed in one of the last three interglacial periods, reflecting either changes in fluvial downcutting caused by glacial-interglacial cycles or other climatic effects on rates of natural coal burning. Clinker deposits atop a broad terrace in the northern part of the Powder River Basin provide a maximum age of 2.6 plus or minus 0.2 million years for terrace formation. This corresponds to the onset of major Northern Hemisphere glaciation interpreted from marine records, suggesting that the terrace formed by lateral erosion of the landscape as rivers were overwhelmed with sediment during the earliest Plio-Pleistocene glacial episode. The overall correlation of clinker ages with elevation above local base level suggests generally increasing incision and topographic relief in the Basin over at least the last one million years, at rates of ~0.1-0.3 km/million years.

###

Clinker geochronology, the first glacial maximum, and landscape evolution in the northern Rockies Peter W. Reiners et al., Dept. of Geosciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721, USA; doi: 10.1130/G107A.1, pages 4-9.

The July GSA TODAY science article is now online at http://www.geosociety.org/gsatoday/archive/21/7/.

GSA Today is The Geological Society of America's science and news magazine for members and other earth scientists. Refereed lead science articles present exciting new research or synthesize important issues in a format understandable to all in the earth science community. GSA Today often features a refereed "Groundwork" article – tightly focused papers on issues of import to earth science policy, planning, funding, or education. All GSA Today articles are open access at www.geosociety.org/pubs/.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Tiny ring laser accurately detects and counts nanoparticles

Tiny ring laser accurately detects and counts nanoparticles
2011-06-28
A tiny doughnut-shaped laser is the latest marvel of silicon microminiaturization, but instead of manipulating bits it detects very small particles. Small particles play a big — and largely unnoticed — role in our everyday lives. Virus particles make us sick, salt particles trigger cloud formation, and soot particles sift deep into our lungs and make it harder to breathe. The sensor belongs to a category called whispering gallery resonators, which work like the famous whispering gallery in St. Paul's Cathedral in London, where someone on the one side of the dome can hear ...

New Research from Ventana Research Identifies Importance of Analytics for Small and Midsized Businesses

2011-06-28
To maintain and improve their market competitiveness, small and midsized businesses are turning to focused analytics that help them manage today's vastly greater information flows, operate more efficiently and make better decisions, new benchmark research from Ventana Research finds. For these businesses the most important categories of metrics are financial (identified by 64% of participants), cost (62%) and operational (53%). However, the research indicates that despite viewing them as valuable and important, small and midsize businesses are maturing only slowly in ...

Baseball cheaters can't hide from the laws of physics

2011-06-28
PULLMAN, Wash.—Some baseball superstitions are accepted as cold, hard truth. But in the world of physics, the most accepted verities are subject to experimentation. A corked bat hits the ball further? Not in Lloyd Smith's lab. Baseballs today are livelier than in the past? See above. Storing balls in a humidor can curb home run production? We'll grant you that one, but only because Smith has fired the balls through a cannon and measured their bounciness as they hit a bat. Smith, an associate professor of in Washington State University's School of Mechanical and Materials ...

Cedars-Sinai surgeon shows simple cotton swab slashes

2011-06-28
LOS ANGELES (June 27, 2011) – A simple item found in almost every medicine cabinet – a cotton swab -- may be a key tool in the fight against post-surgical wound infections. In a sentinel trial, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center surgeon Shirin Towfigh, MD, showed that painless and gentle probing of a wound with a dry cotton swab after surgery dramatically reduced infections in post-operative incision sites: only 3 percent of patients who had the daily probings contracted infections compared to 19 percent of those who didn't -- a rate more than six times higher than that of ...

Vinia & Walter Casuga Start Internet Home Based Business & Join Carbon Copy Pro

Vinia & Walter Casuga Start Internet Home Based Business & Join Carbon Copy Pro
2011-06-28
Exciting news announced today that Vinia & Walter Casuga, established home based business owners & entrepreneurs, launched their Internet Home Based Business & partnered with Carbon Copy PRO, the world's top Internet marketing educational system & online community. When asked why they joined Carbon Copy PRO, they replied, "Having previously come from a traditional network marketing company, we were looking for something that enabled us to truly work from home without having to build a list of friends, family, & co-workers. Also, having three ...

Ladybirds -- wolves in sheep's clothing

2011-06-28
CSIRO research has revealed that the tremendous diversity of ladybird beetle species is linked to their ability to produce larvae which, with impunity, poach members of 'herds' of tiny, soft-bodied scale insects from under the noses of the aggressive ants that tend them.Reconstructing the evolutionary history of ladybird beetles (family Coccinellidae), the researchers found that the ladybirds' first major evolutionary shift was from feeding on hard-bodied ("armoured") scale insects to soft-bodied scale insects. "Soft-bodied scales are easier to eat, but present a whole ...

Metal particle generates new hope for H2 energy

2011-06-28
Tiny metallic particles produced by University of Adelaide chemistry researchers are bringing new hope for the production of cheap, efficient and clean hydrogen energy. Led by Associate Professor Greg Metha, Head of Chemistry, the researchers are exploring how the metal nanoparticles act as highly efficient catalysts in using solar radiation to split water into hydrogen and oxygen. "Efficient and direct production of hydrogen from solar radiation provides a renewable energy source that is the pinnacle of clean energy," said Associate Professor Greg Metha. "We believe ...

CT angiography improves detection of heart disease in African-Americans

2011-06-28
OAK BROOK, Ill. – Researchers may have discovered one reason that African Americans are at increased risk for heart attacks and other cardiovascular events. According to a new study published online in the journal Radiology, African Americans have increased levels of non-calcified plaque, which consists of buildups of soft deposits deep in the walls of the arteries that are not detected by some cardiac tests. Non-calcified plaque is more vulnerable to rupturing and causing a blood clot, which could lead to a heart attack or other cardiovascular event. According to ...

Study finds mammography screening reduces breast cancer mortality

2011-06-28
OAK BROOK, Ill. – Breast cancer screening with mammography results in a significant reduction in breast cancer mortality, according to long-term follow-up results of a large-scale Swedish trial. The results are published online in the journal Radiology. "Mammographic screening confers a substantial relative and absolute reduction in breast cancer mortality risk in the long-term," said Stephen W. Duffy, M.Sc., professor of cancer screening at Queen Mary, University of London. "For every 1,000 to 1,500 mammograms, one breast cancer death is prevented." The Swedish Two-County ...

Patients treated with sunitinib and sorafenib respond to flu vaccine

2011-06-28
PHILADELPHIA — Patients treated with sunitinib and sorafenib responded to the flu vaccine, which suggests the agents do not damage the immune system as much as previously feared, according to a study in Clinical Cancer Research, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research. Keith Flaherty, M.D., director of developmental therapeutics at the Massachusetts General Hospital and a senior editor of Clinical Cancer Research, said the findings have broad implications beyond questions of patient management. "The damage that chemotherapy does to normal, healthy ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Global analysis reveals overlooked hotspots at risk for long COVID due to early disability burdens

Metabolomic characteristics and clinical implications in pathological subtypes of lung cancer

Faster biological aging linked to cognitive decline in older adults

American College of Cardiology issues vaccine guidance for adults with heart disease

World Heart Federation honors American Heart Association CEO for lifetime of impact

SwRI scientist leads science team contributions to a new NASA heliophysics AI foundation model

Could routine eye exams reveal early signs of Alzheimer’s?

Parental liver disease death more than doubles risk of alcohol-associated hepatitis in next generation

Shared gene signatures and key mechanisms in the progression from liver cirrhosis to acute-on-chronic liver failure

Rural Health Care Outcomes Accelerator extended to 2028

Feeling good about yourself

People with schizophrenia have higher risk of COPD

Sibling-specific aggression in women and girls

Study raises red flags about BPA replacements

The irresistibility of extrapolating from past performance

Predicting nationality from beliefs and values

Mindset shift about catastrophes linked to decreased depression, inflammation

Astronomers make unexpected discovery of planet in formation around a young star

EBMT partners in a new consortium to decentralise CAR-T cell therapy and improve hospital workflow

Primate thumbs and brains evolved hand-in-hand

Sneaky swirls: scientists confirm ‘hidden’ vortices could influence how soil and snow move

Tropical volcanic eruptions push rainfall across the equator

UCLA scientists map primate ovarian reserve development, offering key insights into women’s health

BU study finds type 2 diabetes blood factors drive breast cancer aggression

AI chatbots inconsistent in answering questions about suicide

More efficient and reliable SiC devices for a greener future

Two thirds of reproductive-aged women have at least one modifiable risk factor for birth defects, study reveals

Boosting the neuroglia as a therapeutic strategy for brain disorders

Computational neurogenomics revolution unlocks personalized treatments for brain disorders worldwide

Psychedelics researcher reveals how MDMA and LSD transform human connectedness

[Press-News.org] July 2011 in GSA Today: Clinker geochronology