(Press-News.org) In 1991, it was a disaster for the villages nearby the erupting Philippine volcano Pinatubo. But the effects were felt even as far away as Europe. The volcano threw up many tons of ash and other particles into the atmosphere causing less sunlight than usual to reach the Earth's surface. For the first few years after the eruption, global temperatures dropped by half a degree. In general, volcanic eruptions can have a strong short-term impact on climate. Conversely, the idea that climate may also affect volcanic eruptions on a global scale and over long periods of time is completely new. Researchers at GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel (Germany) and Harvard University in Massachusetts (USA) have now found strong evidence for this relationship from major volcanic eruptions around the Pacific Ocean over the past 1 million years. They have presented their results in the latest issue of the international journal "Geology".
The basic evidence for the discovery came from the work of the Collaborative Research Centre "Fluids and Volatiles in Subduction Zones (SFB 574). For more than ten years the project has been extensively exploring volcanoes of Central America. "Among others pieces of evidence, we have observations of ash layers in the seabed and have reconstructed the history of volcanic eruptions for the past 460,000 years," says GEOMAR volcanologist Dr Steffen Kutterolf, who has been with SFB 574 since its founding. Particular patterns started to appear. "There were periods when we found significantly more large eruptions than in others" says Kutterolf, the lead author of the Geology article.
After comparing these patterns with the climate history, there was an amazing match. The periods of high volcanic activity followed fast, global temperature increases and associated rapid ice melting. To expand the scope of the discoveries, Dr Kutterolf and his colleagues studied other cores from the entire Pacific region. These cores had been collected as part of the International Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) and its predecessor programmes. They record more than a million years of the Earth's history. "In fact, we found the same pattern from these cores as in Central America" says geophysicist Dr Marion Jegen from GEOMAR, who also participated in the recent study.
Together with colleagues at Harvard University, the geologists and geophysicists searched for a possible explanation. They found it with the help of geological computer models. "In times of global warming, the glaciers are melting on the continents relatively quickly. At the same time the sea level rises. The weight on the continents decreases, while the weight on the oceanic tectonic plates increases. Thus, the stress changes within in the earth to open more routes for ascending magma" says Dr Jegen.
The rate of global cooling at the end of the warm phases is much slower, so there are less dramatic stress changes during these times. "If you follow the natural climate cycles, we are currently at the end of a really warm phase. Therefore, things are volcanically quieter now. The impact from man-made warming is still unclear based on our current understanding" says Dr Kutterolf. The next step is to investigate shorter-term historical variations to better understand implications for the present day.
### END
When the ice melts, the Earth spews fire
GEOMAR researchers discover a link between climate and volcanic eruptions
2012-12-19
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Paper waste used to make bricks
2012-12-19
Researchers at the University of Jaen (Spain) have mixed waste from the paper industry with ceramic material used in the construction industry. The result is a brick that has low thermal conductivity meaning it acts as a good insulator. However, its mechanical resistance still requires improvement.
"The use of paper industry waste could bring about economic and environmental benefits as it means that material considered as waste can be reused as raw material." – This is one of the conclusions of the study developed by researchers at the Upper Polytechnic School of Linares ...
New dynamic dual-core optical fiber enhances data routes on information superhighway
2012-12-19
Optical fibers –the backbone of the Internet–carry movies, messages, and music at the speed of light. But for all their efficiency, these ultrathin strands of pristine glass must connect to sluggish signal switches, routers, and buffers in order to transmit data. Hoping to do away with these information speed bumps, researchers have developed a new, dual-core optical fiber that can perform the same functions just by applying a miniscule amount of mechanical pressure.
These new nanomechanical fibers, which have their light-carrying cores suspended less than 1 micrometer ...
Cholesterol helps regulate key signaling proteins in the cell
2012-12-19
Cholesterol plays a key role in regulating proteins involved in cell signaling and may be important to many other cell processes, an international team of researchers has found.
The results of their study are reported in the journal Nature Communications.
Cholesterol's role in heart disease has given it a bad reputation. But inside the thin membrane of a cell, the tight regulation of cholesterol at high levels (30 to 40 percent) suggests that it plays an important role in cellular processes, says Wonhwa Cho, professor of chemistry at the University of Illinois at Chicago ...
Synthetic and biological nanoparticles combined to produce new metamaterials
2012-12-19
Scientists from Aalto University, Finland, have succeeded in organising virus particles, protein cages and nanoparticles into crystalline materials. These nanomaterials studied by the Finnish research group are important for applications in sensing, optics, electronics and drug delivery.
Layer structures, or superlattices, of crystalline nanoparticles have been extensively studied in recent years. The research develops hierarchically structured nanomaterials with tuneable optical, magnetic, electronic and catalytic properties.
Such biohybrid superlattices of nanoparticles ...
Community togetherness plays vital role in coping with tragedies
2012-12-19
Community solidarity and support have remarkable benefits for people coping with traumatic mass shootings, according to an American-Finnish research study recently published by the University of Turku.
James Hawdon and John Ryan, both professors of sociology at Virginia Tech, with Finnish researchers Atte Oksanen and Pekka Räsänen, investigated the responses of four communities that suffered from similar tragedies in the United States and Finland.
People in all four communities expressed their need for belonging after the shootings, and this solidarity appeared to ...
Johns Hopkins malpractice study: Surgical 'never events' occur at least 4,000 times per year
2012-12-19
After a cautious and rigorous analysis of national malpractice claims, Johns Hopkins patient safety researchers estimate that a surgeon in the United States leaves a foreign object such as a sponge or a towel inside a patient's body after an operation 39 times a week, performs the wrong procedure on a patient 20 times a week and operates on the wrong body site 20 times a week.
The researchers, reporting online in the journal Surgery, say they estimate that 80,000 of these so-called "never events" occurred in American hospitals between 1990 and 2010 — and believe their ...
Helping the nose know
2012-12-19
More than a century after it was first identified, Harvard scientists are shedding new light on a little-understood neural feedback mechanism that may play a key role in how the olfactory system works in the brain.
As described in a December 19 paper in Neuron by Venkatesh Murthy, Professor of Molecular and Cellular Biology, researchers have, for the first time, described how that feedback mechanism works by identifying where the signals go, and which type of neurons receive them. Three scientists from the Murthy lab were involved in the work: Foivos Markopoulos, Dan ...
Men with fibromyalgia often go undiagnosed, Mayo Clinic study suggests
2012-12-19
ROCHESTER, Minn. -- Fibromyalgia is a complex illness to diagnose and to treat. There is not yet a diagnostic test to establish that someone has it, there is no cure and many fibromyalgia symptoms -- pain, fatigue, problems sleeping and memory and mood issues -- can overlap with or get mistaken for other conditions. A new Mayo Clinic study suggests that many people who have fibromyalgia, especially men, are going undiagnosed. The findings appear in the online edition of the journal Arthritis Care & Research.
More research is needed, particularly on why men who reported ...
High-throughput sequencing shows potentially hundreds of gene mutations related to autism
2012-12-19
Genomic technology has revolutionized gene discovery and disease understanding in autism, according to an article published in the December 20 issue of the journal Neuron.
The paper highlights the impact of a genomic technology called high-throughput sequencing (HTS) in discovering numerous new genes that are associated with autism spectrum disorder (ASD).
"These new discoveries using HTS confirm that the genetic origins of autism are far more complex than previously believed," said Joseph D. Buxbaum, PhD, Director of the Seaver Autism Center at the Icahn School of ...
Auto-immune disease: The viral route is confirmed
2012-12-19
Why would our immune system turn against our own cells? This is the question that the combined Inserm/CNRS/ Pierre and Marie Curie University/Association Institut de Myologie have strived to answer in their "Therapies for diseases of striated muscle", concentrating in particular on the auto-immune disease known as myasthenia gravis. Through the project known as FIGHT-MG (Fight Myasthenia Gravis), financed by the European Commission and coordinated by Inserm, Sonia Berrih-Aknin and Rozen Le Panse have contributed proof of the concept that a molecule imitating a virus may ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Reducing sodium in everyday foods may yield heart-health benefits across populations
Einstein Foundation Award 2026: Apply now for a €350,000 prize advancing research integrity and quality
First-of-its-kind probe monitors fetal health in utero during surgery
Major open access publisher appoints new office head in Korea
How does lifetime alcohol consumption affect colorectal cancer risk?
To reach net-zero, reverse current policy and protect largest trees in Amazon, urge scientists
Double trouble: Tobacco use and Long COVID
Eating a plant-forward diet is good for your kidneys
Elucidating liquid-liquid phase separation under non-equilibrium conditions
Fecal microbiome and bile acid profiles differ in preterm infants with parenteral nutrition-associated cholestasis
The Institute of Science and Technology Austria (ISTA) receives €5 million donation for AI research
Study finds link between colorblindness and death from bladder cancer
Tailored treatment approach shows promise for reducing suicide and self-harm risk in teens and young adults
Call for papers: AI in biochar research for sustainable land ecosystems
Methane eating microbes turn a powerful greenhouse gas into green plastics, feed, and fuel
Hidden nitrogen in China’s rice paddies could cut fertilizer use
Texas A&M researchers expose hidden risks of firefighter gear in an effort to improve safety and performance
Wood burning in homes drives dangerous air pollution in winter
The Journal of Nuclear Medicine Ahead-of-Print Tip Sheet: January 23, 2026
ISSCR statement in response to new NIH policy on research using human fetal tissue (Notice NOT-OD-26-028)
Biologists and engineers follow goopy clues to plant-wilting bacteria
What do rats remember? IU research pushes the boundaries on what animal models can tell us about human memory
Frontiers Science House: did you miss it? Fresh stories from Davos – end of week wrap
Watching forests grow from space
New grounded theory reveals why hybrid delivery systems work the way they do
CDI scientist joins NIH group to improve post-stem cell transplant patient evaluation
Uncovering cancer's hidden oncRNA signatures: From discovery to liquid biopsy
Multiple maternal chronic conditions and risk of severe neonatal morbidity and mortality
Interactive virtual assistant for health promotion among older adults with type 2 diabetes
Ion accumulation in liquid–liquid phase separation regulates biomolecule localization
[Press-News.org] When the ice melts, the Earth spews fireGEOMAR researchers discover a link between climate and volcanic eruptions


