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EPA Proposes Removal of Carbon Dioxide Limits on Power Plants

EOS - Thu, 06/12/2025 - 13:04
body {background-color: #D2D1D5;} Research & Developments is a blog for brief updates that provide context for the flurry of news regarding law and policy changes that impact science and scientists today.

On 11 June, the Environmental Protection Agency announced a proposal to repeal federal limits on power plant carbon emissions, including a Biden-era rule requiring power plants to control 90% of their carbon pollution and a 2015 standard limiting carbon dioxide emissions from new fossil fuel-fired power plants.

If made final, the plans mean that coal, oil, and gas-powered plants in the United States will no longer need to comply with federal limits on carbon dioxide emissions. 

In the announcement, the agency argued that carbon emissions “are global in nature,” so any of their potential public health harms are not able to be accurately attributed to emissions from the United States. However, the U.S. power sector ranks among the world’s largest sources of carbon pollution, and emissions from the U.S. power sector already contribute to billions of dollars in global health damages, according to a report from the Institute for Policy Integrity.

The carbon pollution standards that the EPA aims to erase “have been criticized as being designed to regulate coal, oil and gas out of existence,” EPA administrator Lee Zeldin said in a statement. “According to many, the primary purpose of these Biden-Harris administration regulations was to destroy industries that didn’t align with their narrow-minded climate change zealotry.”

The Associated Press estimates that the Biden-era carbon pollution limits could prevent up to 30,000 premature deaths each year

“By giving a green light to more pollution, [Zeldin’s] legacy will forever be someone who does the bidding of the fossil fuel industry at the expense of our health,” Gina McCarthy, a former EPA administrator, told the New York Times

The announcement comes a day after Jarrod Agen, an energy advisor to President Trump and executive director of the White House’s National Energy Dominance Council, reaffirmed the administration’s intention to re-focus U.S. energy production on coal and natural gas.

“The president’s priorities are around turning around fossil fuels,” Agen said, adding that President Trump “is not focused on wind and solar.”

 
Related

The EPA is also “hopeful” it will be able to reverse a 2009 declaration that greenhouse gases threaten the public health and welfare of current and future generations, according to POLITICO. The agency has already exempted at least 66 coal-fired power plants from federal limits on air pollution.

In the same announcement, the EPA also proposed the removal of a rule known as the Mercury and Air Toxics Standards, which tightened emissions of mercury and other toxic metals from power plants. Documents outlining Zeldin’s plans for the mercury rule, reviewed by the New York Times, said the Biden administration “improperly targeted coal-fired power plants” when it created the original rule. 

—Grace van Deelen (@gvd.bsky.social), Staff Writer

These updates are made possible through information from the scientific community. Do you have a story about how changes in law or policy are affecting scientists or research? Send us a tip at eos@agu.org. Text © 2025. AGU. CC BY-NC-ND 3.0
Except where otherwise noted, images are subject to copyright. Any reuse without express permission from the copyright owner is prohibited.

Early Apes Evolved in Tropical Forests Disturbed by Fires and Volcanoes

EOS - Thu, 06/12/2025 - 12:00
Source: Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology

Great apes began to diverge from other primates around 25 million years ago, according to eastern African fossil records. Though it would take another 20 million or so years for upright-walking hominins to appear, understanding the habitats of early apes helps clarify how environments drove the evolution of our distant ancestors.

Munyaka et al. excavated and analyzed fossils from an approximately 20-million-year-old early Miocene site in western Kenya called Koru 16. The now-extinct Tinderet Volcano repeatedly blanketed the area in ash, preserving it for millions of years, and today, the site hosts fossils from an array of plants and animals.

Many prior studies focused on the area around Koru 16: The first primate fossils from the site were discovered in 1927, and famed anthropologist Louis Leakey led multiple digs there.

As part of the new research, scientists uncovered fossils of approximately 1,000 leaves and many vertebrates at two subsites between 2013 and 2023. The specimens included those of a new type of large-bodied ape and two other previously known ape species, bringing the total number of vertebrate species discovered at the site to 25.

By examining the shapes of fossilized leaves, the geochemistry of fossilized soils (paleosols), and the distribution and density of fossil tree stumps, the researchers determined that the Koru 16 site was likely located within a warm, wet forest, with rainfall amounts similar to those of modern-day tropical and seasonal African forests. However, the ancient ecosystem likely hosted more deciduous plants than do modern tropical forests. The vertebrate fossils the researchers analyzed were consistent with apes, pythons, and rodents that might have lived in such an environment.

The researchers suggest that this ancient forest environment—which was interspersed with open areas and frequently disturbed by fires, floods, or volcanic eruptions—played a role in shaping the course of evolution for early apes. (Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology, https://doi.org/10.1029/2025PA005152, 2025)

—Madeline Reinsel, Science Writer

Citation: Reinsel, M. (2025), Early apes evolved in tropical forests disturbed by fires and volcanoes, Eos, 106, https://doi.org/10.1029/2025EO250221. Published on 12 June 2025. Text © 2025. AGU. CC BY-NC-ND 3.0
Except where otherwise noted, images are subject to copyright. Any reuse without express permission from the copyright owner is prohibited.

Bukit Mantri: a mine waste facility failure in Malaysia

EOS - Thu, 06/12/2025 - 06:13

On 17 May 2025, a failure occurred in a mine waste facility at the Tawau gold mine in Malaysia. Images suggest that this might have been an overtopping event in a contaminated water storage pond.

On 17 May 2025, there was a failure of a mine waste storage facility at Bukit Mantri in Malaysia. The precise circumstances of this event, and its consequences, are not entirely clear to me. However, it appears that a substantial amount of cyanide has escaped, possibly reaching the Kalumpang River.

The event occurred at a gold mine at Bukit Mantri, which is located at [4.5095, 118.1094]. Reports suggest that a tailings dam or water retention dam failed on 17 May 2025. There is reportedly a video that captured the event, although I have been unable to track this down. The still below, posted in a report by Tuhua Bambangan, reportedly shows the event:-

Image reportedly showing the failure of a mine waste storage facility at the Tawau gold mine in Bukit Mantri, Malaysia. Image from a video, originally posted by Tuhau Bambangan.

If this is indeed the reported failure then it appears to have been an overtopping event. A report in Sabah News Today has an image of the aftermath, which is consistent with the above image, showing a major break in the dam.

The Planet Labs satellite image below shows the mine site at Bukit Mantri, captured two days before the failure on 15 May 2025. I have circled the most likely location of the failure:-

Satellite image of the Bukit Mantri mine site before the mine waste storage facility failure. Image copyright Planet Labs, used with permission. Image dated 15 May 2025.

The image below was captured on 25 May 2025, eight days after the failure:-

Satellite image of the Bukit Mantri mine site after the mine waste storage facility failure. Image copyright Planet Labs, used with permission. Image dated 25 May 2025.

And here is a slider to compare the two images:-

Before and after Planet Labs images of the possible location of the Bukit Mantri wine waste failure.

I think the break in the dam is probably just visible, with some sediment deposited on the downstream side, although a higher resolution is needed for certainty.

The operators of the mine have been ordered to cease operations, and there are calls for a proper investigation. Concerns had been raised about this site for a while – for example, Sabah News Today published an article two months ago in which they claimed that:

“A subsidiary of Alumas Resource Berhad has been identified as currently conducting illegal gold mineral mining operations in Bukit Mantri, Balung Tawau.”

I have repeatedly written about mine waste failures over the years. It is depressing that 2025 has, to date, been a bumper year for such events.

Acknowledgements

Thanks to loyal reader Steven for spotting this event, and to Planet Labs for their amazing images.

Planet Team. 2024. Planet Application Program Interface: In Space for Life on Earth. San Francisco, CA. https://www.planet.com/

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Simulations reveal Mongolian Plateau warming fueled North China's record 2023 rainfall

Phys.org: Earth science - Wed, 06/11/2025 - 20:01
At the end of July 2023, extreme, heavy rainfall suddenly struck North China (23.7 event), causing severe flood disasters in Beijing, Hebei, and other places, resulting in significant casualties and property losses. How did this record-breaking rainstorm form? Is it only the combined effect of the Typhoon Doksuri and the terrain?

Global mercury levels in rivers have doubled since Industrial Revolution, research reveals

Phys.org: Earth science - Wed, 06/11/2025 - 18:00
Mercury levels in the world's rivers have more than doubled since the pre-industrial era, according to new research from Tulane University that establishes the first known global baseline for riverine mercury pollution.

How trace elements are recycled in the deep sea

Phys.org: Earth science - Wed, 06/11/2025 - 16:54
Trace metals such as iron or zinc that are stored in deep-sea sediments are lost forever to phytoplankton on the ocean surface. This is what geochemists believed for a long time about the cycle of micronutrients in seawater. Now, researchers at ETH Zurich have discovered that this is not the case.

Scientists unlock recipe for Kryptonite-like mineral that could power a greener future

Phys.org: Earth science - Wed, 06/11/2025 - 16:34
Scientists from the Natural History Museum have unraveled the geological mysteries behind jadarite, a rare lithium-bearing mineral with the potential to power Europe's green energy transition which, so far, has only been found in one place on Earth, Serbia's Jadar Basin.

NOAA’s Climate Website May Soon Shut Down

EOS - Wed, 06/11/2025 - 13:36
body {background-color: #D2D1D5;} Research & Developments is a blog for brief updates that provide context for the flurry of news regarding law and policy changes that impact science and scientists today.

Climate.gov, NOAA’s portal to the work of their Climate Program Office, will likely soon shut down as most of the staff charged with maintaining it were fired on 31 May, according to The Guardian. The site is funded through a large NOAA contract that also includes other programs. A NOAA manager told now-former employees of a directive “from above” demanding that the contract remove funding for the 10-person climate.gov team.

“It was a very deliberate, targeted attack,” Rebecca Lindsey, the former program manager for climate.gov, told The Guardian. Lindsey was fired in February as part of the government’s purge of probationary employees. She said that the fate of the website had been under debate for months, with political appointees arguing for its removal and career staffers defending it.

“We operated exactly how you would want an independent, non-partisan communications group to operate,” Lindsey said. “It does seem to be part of this sort of slow and quiet way of trying to keep science agencies from providing information to the American public about climate.”

 
Related

Another former NOAA employee noted that the climate.gov purge spared two website developers. For some, this raised concerns that the climate.gov site might survive, but host anti-science content and misinformation under the guise of a once-trusted source of climate science.

This move comes amid a slew of other anti-science actions from the Trump Administration, including blocking EPA science funding, halting maintenance of key Arctic data, removing access to longstanding NOAA datasets, proposing to slash NASA’s Earth science funding, and pulling U.S. scientists out of domestic and international climate change reports.

“Hiding the impacts of climate change won’t stop it from happening,” said one former NOAA contractor, “it will just make us far less prepared when it does.”

—Kimberly M. S. Cartier (@astrokimcartier.bsky.social), Staff Writer

These updates are made possible through information from the scientific community. Do you have a story about how changes in law or policy are affecting scientists or research? Send us a tip at eos@agu.org. Text © 2025. AGU. CC BY-NC-ND 3.0
Except where otherwise noted, images are subject to copyright. Any reuse without express permission from the copyright owner is prohibited.

Mini Dunes Form When Sand Stops Bouncing

EOS - Wed, 06/11/2025 - 12:00

Next time you explore a beach or a desert, look down at the sand. You might spot patches of small ripples just a few centimeters tall. Wind can shape these miniature dunes in less than half an hour and blow them away just as quickly. Unlike the processes that form larger dunes that define desert landscapes and shorelines, those that shape mini dunes have been elusive.

“There have been some observations of such small, meter-scale bedforms, but not many quantitative studies,” said Camille Rambert, a doctoral student at École Supérieure de Physique et de Chimie Industrielles de la Ville de Paris and lead author on the new research. “And there have not been any models to explain their formation.”

Recently, a group of researchers used high-resolution laser scanning in the Namib Desert in Namibia to watch how tiny dunes form. Those scans informed dune formation models, which found that the key factor is how sand grains bounce on smooth versus grainy surfaces.

Blowing in the Wind

Although small sand bedforms are a common phenomenon in most sandy places, their ephemeral nature has made it challenging for geomorphologists to decode what makes a small dune form where only flat, featureless sand exists.

“More sand can be transported on a consolidated surface than on the erodible surface.”

A team of researchers, including Rambert, set out to the Namib Desert in coastal southern Africa seeking to understand how these bedforms take shape. The team used a laser scanner sitting on the surface to collect repeated high-resolution topographic maps of nearby flat areas, roughly 5 meters wide × 5 meters long, nestled between larger dunes. The scanner measured the distance from the laser emitter to the ground and also measured near-surface wind speed and direction. The team could detect vertical changes to the surface of about half a millimeter and horizontal changes of about a centimeter.

“From those measurements, we can deduce how bedforms evolve,” Rambert said. “Do they grow and migrate, or do they shrink?”

They developed a mini dune formation model on the basis of well-established physics governing large dune formation, but with a key twist: The small dunes started on consolidated surfaces like gravel or hard-packed sand rather than on an erodible foundation such as loose sand. That difference altered how far wind could transport a sand grain and how the grain bounced or stuck when it landed.

Researchers created digital elevation maps showing how small dunes form in the Namib Desert using a high-resolution terrestrial laser scanner. Credit: University of Southampton

“This difference in surface materials affects the sand transport,” Rambert said. “More sand can be transported on a consolidated surface than on the erodible surface.”

If a grain wasn’t swept away by the next gust of wind, its presence made the surface a little rougher and more likely to trap the next grain of sand—and the next. The gradual buildup of grains into tiny bumps altered near-surface wind patterns, which helped trap even more sand and created distinctive dune patterns in the bedform.

These patches of mini dunes disappeared when a strong enough wind blew the sand grains off the consolidated surface. If the wind had been gentler, those patches might have continued growing.

The team found that their model observations accurately portrayed what they saw in the laser scans from the Namib. They published these results in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

“This study highlights the importance of bed heterogeneities, such as whether a surface is sand covered or not, in how meter-scale bedforms evolve,” Joel Davis, a planetary geologist at Imperial College London in the United Kingdom, wrote in an email. Davis was not involved with the research. “It’s intriguing [that] those small-scale variations in dynamics…could influence whether these small bedforms become a larger dune field, or simply disappear.”

Dunes Beyond Earth

Scientists have discovered dunes on both Mars and Saturn’s moon Titan, but the instruments that have explored those distant worlds are far less advanced than the laser scanners on Earth.

“Studies like these, on the dynamics of Earth dunes, are particularly useful for investigating dunes in a planetary setting, such as on Mars or Titan,” wrote Davis, who studies Martian dunes.

Meter-scale dunes, like this one in Namibia, form because sand grains bounce differently on smooth surfaces than on rough ones. Credit: University of Southampton

Some of Mars’s dunes form inside craters, which presumably trap a lot of loose sand, but they are also found outside the craters in less sandy areas. “We don’t really know why they have formed in these locations, but perhaps bed heterogeneities are a control on this,” Davis wrote. “It would be interesting to see if we could identify any metre-scale bedforms in these expansive interdune areas of Mars…similar to the Namibia examples.”

What’s more, Earth’s dunes tend to be either very short (centimeters) or very long (tens to hundreds of meters). Though hundreds of dunes near Mars’s north pole are the same shape as Earth dunes, most of them are 1–2 meters long. Planetary geologists are still puzzling over this.

“Mars, and also other planetary bodies such as Titan, are, in a way, laboratories where the physical conditions are different than on Earth.”

“This is a hotly debated topic that is rapidly evolving,” wrote Lior Rubanenko in an email. Rubanenko is a planetary surfaces researcher at the Planetary Science Institute in Tucson, Ariz., who was not involved with the new research.

“Mars, and also other planetary bodies such as Titan, are, in a way, laboratories where the physical conditions are different than on Earth­—different atmospheric density, different grain size and material type,” Rubanenko wrote. “This allows us to conduct and observe ‘planet-size’ experiments which challenge our current paradigms.”

“Comparing observations of dunes between these planets can help us better understand the mechanisms that govern sand transport and dune formation,” he added.

—Kimberly M. S. Cartier (@astrokimcartier.bsky.social), Staff Writer

Citation: Cartier, K. M. S. (2025), Mini dunes form when sand stops bouncing, Eos, 106, https://doi.org/10.1029/2025EO250216. Published on 11 June 2025. Text © 2025. The authors. CC BY-NC-ND 3.0
Except where otherwise noted, images are subject to copyright. Any reuse without express permission from the copyright owner is prohibited.

Kuroshio Intrusions into Luzon Strait Increase Chlorophyll

EOS - Wed, 06/11/2025 - 12:00
Editors’ Highlights are summaries of recent papers by AGU’s journal editors. Source: Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans

The surface waters of warm western boundary currents are poor in nutrients. Therefore, intrusions of these nutrient-depleted water into the region are considered to reduce biological production. Although warm waters of the Kuroshio, one of the western boundary currents, often intrude into the South China Sea through the Luzon Strait, their biogeochemical consequences are not well understood.

Li et al. [2025] use data from 20 cruises conducted in the South China Sea between 2004 and 2015, reveal that the Kuroshio intrusion counterintuitively increases the chlorophyll pigments that are contributed by small phytoplankton called picophytoplankton and nanophytoplankton. Previous studies have pointed out that global warming has weakened the Kuroshio intrusion into the South China Sea. Therefore, this study raises concerns that global warming would cause a decrease in primary production in the future.

Schematics of the study showing surface chlorophyll concentration, which is proportional to phytoplankton biomass and abundant in the mixed water property between South China Sea (KI=0%) western Pacific (KI=100%), is intensified with strong Kuroshio intrusion (blue curve) in the South China Sea. Credit: Li et al. [2025], Figure 9

Citation: Li, W., Shang, Y., Li, C., Xu, C., Laws, E. A., Liu, X., & Huang, B. (2025). A stronger Kuroshio intrusion leads to higher chlorophyll a concentration in the northern South China Sea. Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 130, e2024JC021389. https://doi.org/10.1029/2024JC021389

—Takeyoshi Nagai, Editor, JGR: Oceans

Text © 2025. The authors. CC BY-NC-ND 3.0
Except where otherwise noted, images are subject to copyright. Any reuse without express permission from the copyright owner is prohibited.

Nottingham Trent University and the University of Hull

EOS - Wed, 06/11/2025 - 11:42

Later this year I’ll leave the University of Hull to take up the role of Vice-Chancellor and President at Nottingham Trent University.

Nottingham Trent University has about 40,000 students and staff spanning five university sites. It is the fifth largest university in terms of enrolled students in the UK. In recent years it has enjoyed remarkable success, led by its current Vice-Chancellor and President, Professor Edward Peck. For example, it has been named University of the Year repeatedly over the last decade (e.g. THE Awards 2017, The Guardian Awards 2019, The Times and Sunday Times 2018 and 2023, Whatuni Student Choice Awards 2023). It has an extraordinary track record in terms of widening participation and it is deeply rooted in its local communities.

A part of the campus at Nottingham Trent University. Image by NTU Credit: Nottingham Trent University

Thus, it is a real honour to have been invited to become NTU’s next Vice-Chancellor and President, a role that I will take up in December 2025. I’m very excited to have the opportunity to work with its staff, students and alumni, as well as its many partners across the East Midlands and beyond. To be able to lead such an institution will be an extraordinary priviledge.

Of course, this means that I must step down from my role as Vice-Chancellor of the University of Hull in December. I’ll do so with real sadness – I’ve loved my time at Hull. It’s a wonderful University with exceptionally dedicated staff, inspiring students and deeply engaged alumni. Since I joined the University we have done a considerable amount of work to respond to the major challenges that the sector is facing. The ways in which the community has engaged with this has been amazing, and the trajectory of the University is now steeply upwards. I’m sure that the University has a bright future and that it will thrive in my absence.

Of course, I’ll continue to be Vice-Chancellor of the University of Hull for the next six months, and I’ll remain committed to the mission of the institution through this time. There will be many more opportunities to describe the great things that are happening at Hull.

Over the remainder of the year I’ll be extraordinarily fortunate to be able to engage with two amazing academic communities. I’ll do so with a sense of great excitement.

Return to The Landslide Blog homepage Text © 2023. The authors. CC BY-NC-ND 3.0
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Study offers detailed look at winter flooding in California's central valley

Phys.org: Earth science - Wed, 06/11/2025 - 11:07
California's Central Valley—one of the nation's most critical agricultural regions and home to over 1.3 million people—is prone to flooding. Mapping the extent of winter floods has been challenging for experts, however, because clouds can obscure the view of satellites.

Landslides triggered by Hurricane Helene in September 2024

EOS - Wed, 06/11/2025 - 06:25

The USGS has published a preliminary report on landslides triggered across western North Carolina, northern South Carolina, eastern Tennessee, and parts of southern Virginia by Hurricane Helene in September 2024. Over 2,000 failures were triggered by up to c.700 mm of rainfall in a 72 hour period.

Between 26 and 28 September 2024, the remnants of Hurricane Helene swept across the parts of the USA, triggering extreme rainfall in western North Carolina, northern South Carolina, eastern Tennessee, and parts of southern Virginia. In western North Carolina for example, 782 mm of precipitation fell in 72 hours. It has been quite difficult to get accurate information about the resultant landslides.

The United States Geological Survey (USGS) has now put that right with a preliminary field report (Allstadt et al. 2025) that describes the failures that were triggered by Hurricane Helene. There is also an excellent public-facing page with some images and a detailed archive with many more images stored as a zip file.

The report documents 2,217 landslides triggered by Hurrican Helene across the area investigated, and it provides a map to show the distribution:-

The distribution of landslides triggered by Hurricane Helene in September 2024. From Allstadt et al. (2025).

The team note that the largest landsides occurred where multiple smaller failures converged to create channelised debris flows, in common with similar events that I have described on this blog (for example in Tanzania, Kenya, India and Pakistan). One such example occurred at “Craigtown”, a small community in Fairview, Buncombe County, North Carolina. This is located at [35.558, -82.317] – the Planet Labs image below shows the aftermath of the event, with the marker placed on Craigtown:-

Satellite image showing the channelised debris flow at Craigtown in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene. Image copyright Planet Labs, used with permission. Image dated 5 October 2024.

Allstadt et al. (2025) provide these images of the aftermath of the landslide at Craigtown:-

Photographs showing the aftermath of the channelised debris flows at Craigtown in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene. From Allstadt et al. (2025).

Thirteen people died in the channelised debris flows at Craigtown – eleven in the first event and two responders in a subsequent debris flow. The New York Times has a very powerful article about the impact on the community.

The USGS report is also careful to note that the aftermath of Hurricane Helene could see an elevated level of landslide hazard in the areas that received high rainfall totals. As they put it:

“High-risk landslides may have not yet been identified because of tree cover in areas where field observations have not yet been conducted.”

And finally, the northern hemisphere tropical cyclone season is just warming up. Tropical Depression Wutip has formed in the western Pacific basin and is now expected to travel to the north to make landfall in China. This is not a major storm, but will undoubtedly bring heavy rainfall. There will be many more to come in the coming weeks.

References

Allstadt, K. et al. 2025 Preliminary Field Report of Landslide Hazards Following
Hurricane Helene
. U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 2025–1028.

Planet Team 2025 Planet Application Program Interface: In Space for Life on Earth. San Francisco, CA. https://www.planet.com/

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New archaeointensity results from ∼7 ka in Eastern China and their constraint on the regional variations of the geomagnetic field

Geophysical Journal International - Wed, 06/11/2025 - 00:00
SUMMARYArchaeomagnetic study serves as an effective way to investigate the detailed variations of the geomagnetic field during the Holocene. China has accumulated numerous high-quality archaeomagnetic data in recent years, but these data are primarily limited to the period younger than 1500 BCE, which limits our comprehensive understanding of the Holocene geomagnetic field evolution. Here we carried out archaeomagnetic research on 28 unoriented pottery shards and baked clays collected from two Neolithic archaeological sites, with ages spanning from ∼5350 to 5030 BCE, in Anhui province, Eastern China. Rock magnetic analyses show that pseudo-single domain magnetite is the main magnetic carrier among the samples with limited contributions from high coercivity minerals such as hematite. The ideal magnetic behaviour demonstrates the samples are suitable for palaeointensity experiments, as confirmed by the palaeointensity results. A total of 14 samples yielded high-fidelity palaeointensity results, indicating that a fast-changed geomagnetic field with virtual axial dipole moments varying from ∼56 to ∼91 ZAm2 over ∼300 years. This inference is further evidenced by intensities recovered from the double-remanent components of some samples through vector calculation. Our new data provide reliable anchors for the strength variations of the geomagnetic field in Eastern Asia during the poorly constrained time period before 4000 BCE. With the new data in this study, we updated the previous Chinese archaeointensity reference curve and named the new curve as ArchInt_China3, which extends the previous curve forward for ∼500 years. The newly reported archaeointensity data and released reference curve in this study will provide valuable insights into the regional and global geomagnetic field variations during the Holocene, and thus assist in understanding the dynamic processes in the Earth's interior.

Magnetosomal Greigite as the Source of Intermediate and Inverse Magnetic Fabrics at IODP Site M0061 (Baltic Sea)

Geophysical Journal International - Wed, 06/11/2025 - 00:00
SUMMARYInterpretation of palaeomagnetic data requires the detection of magnetofossils in sedimentary rocks and an understanding of their influence on magnetic properties. Subsamples collected from IODP site M0061 lost up to 90 per cent of their initial bulk magnetic susceptibility (MS) during cold-room storage of 4 months, which was attributed to the alteration of single-domain magnetosomal greigite (Fe3S4). To test if the magnetic susceptibility loss affected the anisotropy of MS (AMS) we resampled site M0061 with a Kullenberg piston corer (3 cores), took palaeomagnetic subsamples and undertook time-dependent AMS measurements over 1 year in a controlled cool, humidified environment and exposed to air. Most subsamples possessed an initial normal oblate AMS fabric predicted for laminated sediments (horizontal with respect to the bedding plane) but we also detected a negative trend between the degree of anisotropy (Pj) and MS. In accordance with previous observations, MS decreased over 1 year, which we accredit to oxidation of magnetosomal greigite and conversion into a less magnetic phase (probably FeO(OH)) that does not make a detectable contribution to AMS. These results allowed us to isolate, through application of an AMS tensor subtraction routine, the fabric of the magnetosomal greigite component that had decayed. In subsamples with the largest MS loss over one year, the decayed component had a prolate, inverse AMS fabric (defined as the principal susceptibility axis perpendicular to the bedding place) but relatively low Pj. We conclude that the initial (in-situ) AMS ellipsoid consisted of a mixture of a typical normal, oblate sedimentary fabric and the prolate, inverse magnetosomal fabric. The mostly inverse nature of the separated fabric indicates that the long axis of the magnetosomal greigite (as individual single-domain magnetofossils or chains) must be oriented parallel to the bedding plane, which implies that the magnetosomal greigite was deposited from the water column and contributes to a depositional remanent magnetisation (DRM). Our results indicate that greigite magnetofossils can (i) explain the inverse AMS fabrics that have been reported in similar sedimentary environments and (ii) carry DRM with a median destructive field (MDF) of approximately 20 mT, although this remanence is transient under ambient laboratory conditions and is prone to oxidation.

Review uncovers how compound extreme events are becoming a hidden health crisis in China

Phys.org: Earth science - Tue, 06/10/2025 - 21:00
A review in Atmospheric and Oceanic Science Letters reveals that climate extremes are increasingly striking in combination—and their compounding impact is posing a growing threat to public health across China.

Shipboard cloud observations in the Southern Ocean: Antarctic research cruises toward better climate models

Phys.org: Earth science - Tue, 06/10/2025 - 16:00
Climate models are essential tools for understanding our planet's future, helping scientists predict global warming patterns, sea level rise, and extreme weather events. These sophisticated computer simulations play a key role in raising awareness about climate change and informing crucial policy decisions. Thus, they can shape our response to environmental challenges over the coming decades.

NASA's TROPICS mission: Offering detailed images and analysis of tropical cyclones

Phys.org: Earth science - Tue, 06/10/2025 - 16:00
Tropical cyclones represent a danger to life, property, and the economies of communities. Researchers who study tropical cyclones have focused on remote observations, using space-based platforms to image these storms, inform forecasts, better predict landfall, and improve understanding of storm dynamics and precipitation evolution (see fig. 1).

Jarosite: A golden sponge to mop up metals

Phys.org: Earth science - Tue, 06/10/2025 - 15:27
Jarosite might not sparkle like a gem, but in the world of environmental geochemistry, it's a treasure.

New oil and gas fields incompatible with Paris climate goals

Phys.org: Earth science - Tue, 06/10/2025 - 13:00
Opening any new North Sea oil and gas fields is incompatible with achieving the Paris Climate Agreement goals of limiting warming to 1.5°C or holding warming to "well below 2°C" relative to preindustrial levels, finds a new report published by UCL academics.

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