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Top 2 university of southampton News Today

#1
How the ocean locks away carbon for millions of years
#1 out of 2
15h ago

How the ocean locks away carbon for millions of years

  • New analysis of 60-million-year-old South Atlantic lava reveals porous breccia stores carbon in minerals for geologic timescales.
  • Breccia acts as a geological sponge, with seawater percolating through rubble to cement minerals and trap carbon.
  • Breccia contains two to 40 times more carbon than previously sampled lavas, signaling high sequestration potential.
  • The study links deep Earth carbon storage to the deep carbon cycle, affecting climate modeling over long timescales.
  • Lava breccia forms where submarine volcanoes erode, creating extensive internal surfaces for seawater to react with rock.
  • The research situates breccia as a potentially overlooked term in Earth’s long-term carbon budget.
  • Findings enhance understanding of how oceans and crust regulate carbon inputs and outputs over millions of years.
  • The work stresses that this is not a quick fix for current emissions, due to geological timescales.
  • Nature Geoscience published the study, with implications for reconstructing ancient climates and climate models.
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#2
Scientists Explain That This Region Of Africa Has A Heartbeat, And What That Means For Its Future
#2 out of 2100.00%
science7h ago

Scientists Explain That This Region Of Africa Has A Heartbeat, And What That Means For Its Future

  • Scientists report heartbeat-like pulses in the Afar mantle, linked to the region's tectonic Rift activity.
  • Researchers say pulses are channeled by rifting plates, affecting how surface features evolve over time.
  • Faster-spreading regions like the Red Sea show more regular pulse transmission in the mantle.
  • The study suggests mantle pulses may foreshadow the development of a future ocean basin in the Afar region.
  • Lead author Emma Watts notes the mantle's nonuniformity and its chemical signature in pulses.
  • The research examined 130 volcanic rock samples to detect chemical striping from mantle pulses.
  • University of Southampton researchers collaborated with Swansea University on mantle pulse studies.
  • The Afar region sits at the junction of three major tectonic rifts: Main Ethiopian Rift, Red Sea Rift, and Gulf of Aden Rift.
  • The findings offer new insight into how interior processes shape surface geology in a biodiverse and fossil-rich region.
  • The team published their conclusions in a Nature Geoscience paper detailing mantle pulse behavior.
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