07-04-08, 12:19 PM
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#26 (permalink)
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| Sage
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Current Mood: | Re: This summer may see first ice-free North Pole Quote:
Originally Posted by Gladiator American Thinker, 7-4-08 American Thinker Blog: Arctic ice melt may be due to undersea volcanoes
Reported in Nature, 26, June 08 Access : : Nature
Abstract:
Roughly 60% of the Earth's outer surface is composed of oceanic crust formed by volcanic processes at mid-ocean ridges. Although only a small fraction of this vast volcanic terrain has been visually surveyed or sampled, the available evidence suggests that explosive eruptions are rare on mid-ocean ridges, particularly at depths below the critical point for seawater (3,000 m)1. A pyroclastic deposit has never been observed on the sea floor below 3,000 m, presumably because the volatile content of mid-ocean-ridge basalts is generally too low to produce the gas fractions required for fragmenting a magma at such high hydrostatic pressure. We employed new deep submergence technologies during an International Polar Year expedition to the Gakkel ridge in the Arctic Basin at 85° E, to acquire photographic and video images of 'zero-age' volcanic terrain on this remote, ice-covered ridge. Here we present images revealing that the axial valley at 4,000 m water depth is blanketed with unconsolidated pyroclastic deposits, including bubble wall fragments (limu o Pele)2, covering a large (>10 km2) area. At least 13.5 wt% CO2 is necessary to fragment magma at these depths3, which is about tenfold the highest values previously measured in a mid-ocean-ridge basalt4. These observations raise important questions about the accumulation and discharge of magmatic volatiles at ultraslow spreading rates on the Gakkel ridge5 and demonstrate that large-scale pyroclastic activity is possible along even the deepest portions of the global mid-ocean ridge volcanic system.
Other Arctic Volcano Comentary: Knight Science Journalism Tracker Blog Archive AFP, Science News, New Scientist, etc: Deep under the Arctic, volcanoes explode
.. | The Nature article says absolutly nothing whatsoever of the volcano that "exploded" back in 1999 has anything to do with the melting in 2008. Neither does the Science journalism tracker. The only one to make such a connection has been Gill and the blog you posted. |
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