2/28/2019

General report of the UTokyo/ANU field trip/国際研修Iレポート Days 1 (2. Feb. 2019)

Lake George
The water level of Lake George depends on the balance between precipitation and evaporation. Lake George had a record of flood till the 1980s, but now it has dried up. In past studies, water flowed from the surrounding river, but now the uplift had occurred, and river water hasn't come into the lake.
A lake was formed with elevation change due to a normal fault.
Lake Biwa is still active as it is still deeper, but Lake George is not active, so it is shallow due to sedimentation. The amount of sediment is about 300 m.
When dating with paleomagnetic, it can go back to about 5 million years ago.
In the last glacial period (20 ka), it is generally known that the sea level was as low as 150 m, but Lake George was wet. The bed rock was formed 450 million years ago, and the formation of 350 million years ago is visible.


Mt. Ainsile
 Canberra was designed by Burley Griffin at the international competition. There are three mountains around Canberra, Red Hill to the south, Black Mountain to the west, Mt. Ainslie to the north. All three were formed by the volcanic activity of the early Silurian. Black Mountain is the oldest, Red Hill is the youngest of the three mountains. Canberra is made in lowlands surrounded by these mountains, and Lake Burley Griffin is located in the center. Lake Burley Griffin is made by damming. There are old parliament building and new parliament building, new parliament building was made by cutting out hill. The Roads in Canberra extend radially around the new parliament building.
 We observed the outcrop of dacite. The crack direction is west, the portion that is 420 million years ago corresponds to the subduction zone of the end of the Gondwana continent. Trace of welding was seen in dacite, and it is thought that it remained as a mountain because it is harder than the surroundings.



State Circle Unconfirmity
Here are sediments of 425 million years ago. We observed the inconsistency between shale and sandstone.Lower shale has many folds, slump and pseudo-tachylyte. There was a part where the boundary between the shale and the sandstone was clear or not. The clear boundary was at a higher position then, and the sediments which were scraped did not remain on the spot. It is thought that the part which is not clear was the place where the sediments was settled down. In the upper sandstone layers, there are gravels with large particle size. It may indicate the sea level lowered or uplifted. Compared to the lower shale, the fold is weak, and the deformation received is weaker than the lower layer. We interested in the formation mechanism, because both normal fault and reverse fault were observed.
Pseudo-tachylyte: Part of the rock melted due to the frictional heat generated by the fault and reconsolidated as a glass dike.

2/25/2019

New Papers 2019 February 18 -24 (AGU, EGU, GSA)


Geophysical Research Letters
1.         Radiative effects of secondary ice enhancement in coastal Antarctic clouds
G. Young  T. LachlanCope  S. J. O'Shea C. Dearden  C. Listowski  K. N. Bower T. W. Choularton M. W. Gallagher

2.         Intensification of El Niño rainfall variability over the tropical Pacific in the slow oceanic response to global warming
Yang Zhang  Tao Zou  Yongkang Xue

3.         The Dominant Role of Extreme Precipitation Events in Antarctic Snowfall Variability
John Turner  Tony Phillips  Meloth Thamban  Waliur Rahaman  Gareth J. Marshall  Jonathan D. Wille Vincent Favier  Holly Winton Elizabeth Thomas  Zaomin Wang  Michiel van den Broeke  J. Scott Hosking Tom LachlanCope

4.         Influence of Arctic Sea Ice Loss in Autumn Compared to That in Winter on the Atmospheric Circulation
Russell Blackport  James A. Screen

5.         Atmospheric Circulation Response to Anomalous Siberian Forcing in October 2016 and its LongRange Predictability
Nicholas L. Tyrrell  Alexey Yu Karpechko  Petteri Uotila  Timo Vihma

Climate of the Past
6.         The 4.2 ka BP Event in northeastern China: a geospatial perspective
Louis A. Scuderi, Xiaoping Yang, Samantha E. Ascoli, and Hongwei Li

Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems
7.         Reefscaledependent response of massive Porites corals from the central Indian Ocean to prolonged thermal stress – evidence from coral Sr/Ca measurements
Maike Leupold  Miriam Pfeiffer  Dieter Garbe
Schönberg  Charles Sheppard

New Papers(Elsevier) 2019/2/18–2/24

Quaternary International
1.       Using palaeoecological techniques to understand the impacts of past volcanic eruptions
Richard J. Payne, Joanne Egan

2.       A Bronze Age palaeoenvironmental reconstruction from the Fondi basin, southern Lazio, central Italy
Marieke Doorenbosch, Michael H. Field

3.       Signatures of global climatic events and forcing factors for the last two millennia on the active mudflats of Rohisa, southern Saurashtra, Gujarat, western India
Upasana S. Banerji Ravi Bhushan, A.J.T. Jull

4.       Impacts of climate change on hydrological droughts at basin scale: A case study of the Weihe River Basin, China
Panpan Zhao, Haishen Lü, Huicai Yang, Wenchuan Wang, Guobin Fu

5.       Late Holocene paleoenvironmental changes inferred from Manasbal Lake sediments, Kashmir Valley, India
C. Babeesh, Hema Achyuthan, M.R. Resmi, Chandra Mohan Nautiyal, Rayees Ahmad Shah

6.       Vegetation, climate and culture in Central Ganga plain, India: A multi-proxy record for Last Glacial Maximum
Anjali Trivedi, Anju Saxena, M.S. Chauhan, Anupam Sharma, Anjum Farooqui, C.M. Nautiyal Yi-Feng Yao, Yu-Fei Wang, Cheng-Sen Li D.P. Tiwari

Quaternary Science Reviews
7.       Sand drift events and surface winds in south-central Sweden: From the deglaciation to the present
Martin Bernhardson, Helena Alexanderson Svante Björck, Florian Adolphi

8.       Solar controls of fire events during the past 600,000 years
Arne Kappenberg, Eva Lehndorff, Nadine Pickarski,  Thomas Litt, Wulf Amelung

Palaeogeography, Paleoclimatology, Paleoecology

9.       Paleoenvironmental changes during the late Albian oceanic anoxic event 1d: An example from the Capacho Formation, southwestern Venezuela
María-Emilia Rodríguez-Cuicas, Jean-Carlos Montero-Serrano, Grony Garbán

10.   Late Holocene development of Lake Rangkul (Eastern Pamir, Tajikistan) and its response to regional climatic changes
Monika Mętrak, Piotr Szwarczewski, Krzysztof Bińka, Elżbieta Rojan, Jakub Karasiński, Grzegorz Górecki, Małgorzata Suska-Malawska

11.   The influence of seawater chemistry on carbonate-associated sulfate derived from coral skeletons
Sharmila J. Giri and Peter K. Swart

Marine Geology
12.   Coral reef carbonate record of the Pliocene-Pleistocene climate transition from an atoll in the South China Sea
Wei Jiang, Kefu Yu, Tianlai Fan, Shendong Xu, Rui Wang, Yu Zhang, Yuanfu Yue, Jian-xin Zhao, Yue-xing Feng,  Chaoshuai Wei, Shaopeng Wang, Yinghui Wang

Earth and Planetary Science Letters
13.   Clumped isotope signatures of methane-derived authigenic carbonate presenting equilibrium values of their formation temperatures
Naizhong Zhang, Mang Lin, Glen T. Snyder, Yoshihiro Kakizaki, Keita Yamada, Naohiro Yoshida, Ryo Matsumoto

Chemical Geology

Earth Science Reviews

Quaternary Geochronology
Quaternary Research
Biogeosciences
Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
Global and Planetary Change


No relevant

New Papers 2019 February 4 -10 (AGU, EGU, GSA)


Geophysical Research Letters
1.         Nonlinearity in the North Pacific atmospheric response to a linear ENSO forcing
B. Jiménez‐Esteve, D. I.V. Domeisen

2.         Intensification of El Niño rainfall variability over the tropical Pacific in the slow oceanic response to global warming
Xiao‐Tong Zheng, Chang Hui, Shang‐Ping Xie, Wenju Cai, Shang‐Min Long

JGR Oceans
3.         Key Dynamical Factors Driving the Kuroshio Subsurface Water to Reach the Zhejiang Coastal Area
Lingjing Xu, Dezhou Yang, Jessica A. Benthuysen, Baoshu Yin

4.         The Role of Ocean Heat Transport in Rapid Sea Ice Declines in the Community Earth System Model Large Ensemble
Gabriel Auclair, L. Bruno Tremblay

Climate of the Past
5.         The 4.2 ka event in the vegetation record of the central Mediterranean
Federico Di Rita and Donatella Magri

6.         Diatom-oxygen isotope record from high-altitude Lake Petit (2200 m a.s.l.) in the Mediterranean Alps: shedding light on a climatic pulse at 4.2 ka
Rosine Cartier, Florence Sylvestre, Christine Paillès, Corinne Sonzogni, Martine Couapel, Anne Alexandre, Jean-Charles Mazur, Elodie Brisset, Cécile Miramont, and Frédéric Guiter

New Papers 2019 February 18-24 (Nature, Science, etc.)


Science
U-Pb constraints on pulsed eruption of the Deccan Traps across the end-Cretaceous mass extinction
Blair Schoene, Michael P. Eddy, Kyle M. Samperton, C. Brenhin Keller, Gerta Keller, Thierry Adatte, Syed F. R. Khadri

Nature Communications
Earth system models underestimate carbon fixation by plants in the high latitudes
Alexander J. Winkler, Ranga B. Myneni, Georgii A. Alexandrov, Victor Brovkin

2/22/2019

1/8, 2019 Associate Professor Jody Webster and Matthew Farewell Party

Associate Professor Jody Webster and Matthew comes our Lab between December, 2018 and January 2019.

この1ヶ月半ほど横山研究室で過ごされた Jody Webster 先生とインターン生のMatthew がオーストラリアに帰られる日、ラボメンバーでFarewell Patryをしました!

Jody 先生にはセミナーで講演していただき、また日々の研究室生活でもお世話になりました。ありがとうございました。


Matthew はインターン生としてラボに来ていただき、実験や研究室生活をとても盛り上げてくれました。就職先でも頑張って下さい!
Matthew のブログが届きました。ぜひご覧ください。https://science.anu.edu.au/news-events/student-blog/how-did-you-spend-your-summer

2/20/2019

New papers 2019/2/11–2/17 (Elsevier)

New papers 2019/2/11–2/17 (Elsevier)

Earth and Planetary Science Letters

1.     Timing and structure of Termination II in north China constrained by a precisely dated stalagmite record
Wuhui Duan, Hai Cheng, Ming Tan, Xianglei Li, R. Lawrence Edwards


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta

2.     Reconstructing carbonate alteration histories in orogenic sedimentary basins: Xigaze forearc, southern Tibet
Miquela Ingalls


Global and Planetary Change

3.     Large-scale transgressive coastal dune behaviour in Europe during the Little Ice Age
Derek W.T. Jackson, Susana Costas, Emilia Guisado-Pintado

4.     Dating the Anthropocene in deep-sea sediments: How much carbon is buried in the Irminger Basin?
Marcos Fontela, Guillermo Francés, Begoña Quintana, María J. Álvarez-Fernández, Miguel A. Nombela, Irene Alejo, María C. Pedrosa, Fiz F. Pérez

5.     A palaeoecological approach to understanding the past and present of Sierra Nevada, a Southwestern European biodiversity hotspot
Saúl Manzano, José S. Carrión, Lourdes López-Merino, Gonzalo Jiménez-Moreno, Jaime L. Toney, Hollie Amstrong, R. Scott Anderson, Antonio García-Alix, José Luis Guerrero Pérez, Daniel Sánchez-Mata


Marine Geology

6.     The origin and dynamics of coastal boulders in a semi-enclosed shallow basin: A northern Adriatic case study
Sara Biolchi, Stefano Furlani, Stefano Devoto, Giovanni Scicchitano, Tvrtko Korbar, Ivica Vilibić, Jadranka Šepić
7.     Relative sea-level records preserved in Holocene beach-ridge strandplains – An example from tropical northeastern Australia
Brendan P. Brooke, Zhi Huang, William A. Nicholas, Thomas S.N. Oliver, Toru Tamura, Colin D. Woodroffe, Scott L. Nichol


Quaternary International

8.     Geological and geotechnical characteristics of N2 laterite in northwestern China
Qiqing Wang, Wenping Li, Yinghai Guo, Yuru Yang, Kaifang Fan

9.     Precipitation pattern during warm and cold periods in the Bronze Age (around 4.5-3.8 ka BP) in the desert steppes of Russia: Soil-microbiological approach for palaeoenvironmental reconstruction
Tatiana E. Khomutova, Natalia N. Kashirskaya, Tatiana S. Demkina, Tatiana V. Kuznetsova, Flavio Fornasier, Natalia I. Shishlina, Alexander V. Borisov

10.  Settlement, space organization and land-use of a small Middle Bronze Age community of central Italy. The case study of Gorgo del Ciliegio (Arezzo-Tuscany)
Adriana Moroni, Vincenzo Spagnolo, Jacopo Crezzini, Francesco Boschin, Marco Benvenuti, Samuele Gardin, Silvia Cipriani, Simona Arrighi

11.  North Atlantic influences on climate conditions in East-Central Europe in the late Holocene reflected by flowstone compositions
Attila Demény, Zoltán Kern, Alexandra Németh, Silvia Frisia, István Gábor Hatvani, György Czuppon, Szabolcs Leél-Őssy, Mihály Molnár, Mihály Óvári, Gergely Surányi, Adrian Gilli, Chung-Che Wu, Chuan-Chou Shen

12.  Is the past key to the present? Observations of cultural continuity and resilience reconstructed from geoarchaeological records
Kathleen Nicoll, Andrea Zerboni


Chemical Geology
Palaeogeography, Paleoclimatology, Paleoecology
Quaternary Geochronology
Quaternary Research
Quaternary Science Reviews


No relevant