Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences - Volume 47, 2019
Volume 47, 2019
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Big Time
Vol. 47 (2019), pp. 1–17More LessThe Proterozoic Eon was once regarded as the neglected middle half of Earth history. The name refers to early animals, but they did not appear until the eon (2.5–0.54 Ga) was nearly over. Eukaryotic cells and sexual reproduction evolved much earlier in the eon, as did chloroplasts. Molecular dioxygen, the presence of which altered the geochemical behavior of nearly every element essential to life, rose from negligible to near-modern levels, and then plummeted before rising fitfully again. Plate tectonics took on a modern form, and two supercontinents, Nuna and Rodinia, successively congregated and later dispersed. Climate regulatory failures, i.e., Snowball Earth, appear to be a uniquely Proterozoic phenomenon, having occurred twice in rapid succession near the end of the eon (from 717 to 660 Ma and from 650 to 635 Ma) and arguably once near its beginning (ca. 2.43 Ga). Dynamic sea glaciers covered Snowball Earth oceans from pole to pole, and equatorial sublimation drove slow-moving ice sheets on land. Ultimately, the gradual accumulation of CO2 triggered rapid deglaciation and transient greenhouse aftermaths. Physically based and geologically tested, Neoproterozoic Snowball Earth appears to have molecular legacies in ancient bitumens and modern organisms. This is the story of my love affair with an eon that is now a little less neglected.
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Unanticipated Uses of the Global Positioning System
Vol. 47 (2019), pp. 19–40More LessGlobal Positioning System (GPS) instruments are routinely used today to measure crustal deformation signals from tectonic plate motions, faulting, and glacial isostatic adjustment. In parallel with the expansion of GPS networks around the world, several new and unexpected applications of GPS have been developed. For example, GPS instruments are now being used routinely to measure ground motions during large earthquakes. Access to real-time GPS data streams has led to the development of better hazard warnings for tsunamis, flash floods, earthquakes, and volcanic eruptions. Terrestrial water storage changes can be derived from GPS vertical coordinate time series. Finally, GPS signals that reflect on the surfaces below a GPS antenna can be used to measure soil moisture, snow accumulation, vegetation water content, and water levels. In the future, combining GPS with the signals from the Russian, European, and Chinese navigation constellations will significantly enhance these applications.
- ▪ GPS data are now routinely used to study the dynamics of earthquake rupture.
- ▪ GPS instruments are an integral part of warning systems for earth- quakes, tsunamis, flash floods, and volcanic eruptions.
- ▪ Reflected GPS signals provide a new source of soil moisture, snow depth, vegetation water content, and tide gauge data.
- ▪ GPS networks can sense changes in soil moisture, groundwater, and snow depth and thus can contribute to water resource assessments.
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Dynamics in the Uppermost Lower Mantle: Insights into the Deep Mantle Water Cycle Based on the Numerical Modeling of Subducted Slabs and Global-Scale Mantle Dynamics
Vol. 47 (2019), pp. 41–66More LessIn this review, we address the current status of numerical modeling of the mantle transition zone and uppermost lower mantle, focusing on the hydration mechanism in these areas. The main points are as follows: (a) Slab stagnation and penetration may play significant roles in transporting the water in the whole mantle, and (b) a huge amount of water could be absorbed into the deep mantle to preserve the surface seawater over the geologic timescale. However, for further understanding of water circulation in the deep planetary interior, more mineral physics investigations are required to reveal the mechanism of water absorption in the lower mantle and thermochemical interaction across the core–mantle boundary region, which can provide information on material properties to the geodynamics community. Moreover, future investigations should focus on determining the amount of water in the early planetary interior, as suggested by the planetary formation theory of rocky planets. Moreover, the supplying mechanism of water during planetary formation and its evolution caused by plate tectonics are still essential issues because, in geodynamics modeling, a huge amount of water seems to be required to preserve the surface seawater in the present day and to not be dependent on an initial amount of water in Earth's system.
- ▪ Slab stagnation and penetration of the hydrous lithosphere are essential for understanding the global-scale material circulation.
- ▪ Thermal feedback caused by water-dependent viscosity is a main driving mechanism of water absorption in the mantle transition zone and uppermost lower mantle.
- ▪ The hydrous state in the early rocky planets remains to be determined from cosmo- and geochemistry and planetary formation theory.
- ▪ Volatile cycles in the deep planetary interior may affect the evolution of the surface environment.
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Atmospheric Escape and the Evolution of Close-In Exoplanets
Vol. 47 (2019), pp. 67–90More LessExoplanets with substantial hydrogen/helium atmospheres have been discovered in abundance, many residing extremely close to their parent stars. The extreme irradiation levels that these atmospheres experience cause them to undergo hydrodynamic atmospheric escape. Ongoing atmospheric escape has been observed to be occurring in a few nearby exoplanet systems through transit spectroscopy both for hot Jupiters and for lower-mass super-Earths and mini-Neptunes. Detailed hydrodynamic calculations that incorporate radiative transfer and ionization chemistry are now common in one-dimensional models, and multidimensional calculations that incorporate magnetic fields and interactions with the interstellar environment are cutting edge. However, comparison between simulations and observations remains very limited. While hot Jupiters experience atmospheric escape, the mass-loss rates are not high enough to affect their evolution. However, for lower-mass planets, atmospheric escape drives and controls their evolution, sculpting the exoplanet population that we observe today.
- ▪ Observations of some exoplanets have detected atmospheric escape driven by hydrodynamic outflows, causing the exoplanets to lose mass over time.
- ▪ Hydrodynamic simulations of atmospheric escape are approaching the sophistication required to compare them directly to observations.
- ▪ Atmospheric escape sculpts sharp features into the exoplanet population that we can observe today; these features have recently been detected.
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The Sedimentary Cycle on Early Mars
Vol. 47 (2019), pp. 91–118More LessTwo decades of intensive research have demonstrated that early Mars (
2 Gyr) had an active sedimentary cycle, including well-preserved stratigraphic records, understandable within a source-to-sink framework with remarkable fidelity. This early cycle exhibits first-order similarities to (e.g., facies relationships, groundwater diagenesis, recycling) and first-order differences from (e.g., greater aeolian versus subaqueous processes, basaltic versus granitic provenance, absence of plate tectonics) Earth's record. Mars’ sedimentary record preserves evidence for progressive desiccation and oxidation of the surface over time, but simple models for the nature and evolution of paleoenvironments (e.g., acid Mars, early warm and wet versus late cold and dry) have given way to the view that, similar to Earth, different climate regimes on Mars coexisted on regional scales and evolved on variable timescales, and redox chemistry played a pivotal role. A major accomplishment of Mars exploration has been to demonstrate that surface and subsurface sedimentary environments were both habitable and capable of preserving any biological record.
- ▪ Mars has an ancient sedimentary rock record with many similarities to but also many differences from Earth's sedimentary rock record.
- ▪ Mars’ ancient sedimentary cycle shows a general evolution toward more desiccated and oxidized surficial conditions.
- ▪ Climatic regimes of early Mars were relatively clement but with regional variations leading to different sedimentary mineral assemblages.
- ▪ Surface and subsurface sedimentary environments on early Mars were habitable and capable of preserving any biological record that may have existed.
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New Horizons Observations of the Atmosphere of Pluto
Vol. 47 (2019), pp. 119–140More LessNew Horizons data provide a snapshot of the current state of Pluto's atmosphere. Winds are slow and mostly controlled by sublimation of surface ices. Molecular nitrogen is the primary constituent below 1,800 km, while methane and carbon monoxide are important minor species. Photolysis of these gases leads to a thin haze that encompasses Pluto from the surface up to >500-km altitude and is important in heating and cooling the atmosphere. A cold (∼70 K) upper atmosphere curtails the escape of Pluto's molecular nitrogen to space, although there is substantial escape of methane (∼5 × 1025 molecules s−1), coincidentally about equal to its loss by photochemistry. It is unknown if the current atmosphere is representative of its long-term average state. From the inferred rapid rate of haze settling, it seems that Pluto's atmosphere must occasionally undergo collapse to allow time for radiation processing of the colorless haze material into the dark deposits found on the surface.
- ▪ This article outlines what has been gleaned about Pluto's atmosphere in the years since the New Horizons flyby.
- ▪ Pluto's atmosphere is most similar to Titan's—with the photochemistry of supervolatile nitrogen and hydrocarbons resulting in a kind of factory for cold haze production.
- ▪ Much has been learned about Pluto's atmosphere, but many new questions have arisen, and these will likely remain unanswered until there is a follow-up mission—no doubt a long time from now.
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The Compositional Diversity of Low-Mass Exoplanets
Vol. 47 (2019), pp. 141–171More LessLow-mass planets have an extraordinarily diverse range of bulk compositions, from primarily rocky worlds to those with deep gaseous atmospheres. As techniques for measuring the masses of exoplanets advance the field toward the regime of rocky planets, from ultrashort orbital periods to Venus-like distances, we identify the bounds on planet compositions, where sizes and incident fluxes inform bulk planet properties. In some cases, the precision of measurement of planet masses and sizes is approaching the theoretical uncertainties in planet models. An emerging picture explains aspects of the diversity of low-mass planets, although some problems remain: Do extreme low-density, low-mass planets challenge models of atmospheric mass loss? Are planet sizes strictly separated by bulk composition? Why do some stellar characterizations differ between observational techniques? With the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) mission, low-mass exoplanets around the nearest stars will soon be discovered and characterized with unprecedented precision, permitting more detailed planetary modeling and atmospheric characterization of low-mass exoplanets than ever before.
- ▪ Following the Kepler mission, studies of exoplanetary compositions have entered the terrestrial regime.
- ▪ Low-mass planets have an extraordinary range of compositions, from Earth-like mixtures of rock and metal to mostly tenuous gas.
- ▪ The TESS mission will discover low-mass planets that can be studied in more detail than ever before.
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Destruction of the North China Craton in the Mesozoic
Vol. 47 (2019), pp. 173–195More LessThe North China Craton (NCC) was originally formed by the amalgamation of the eastern and western blocks along an orogenic belt at ∼1.9 Ga. After cratonization, the NCC was essentially stable until the Mesozoic, when intense felsic magmatism and related mineralization, deformation, pull-apart basins, and exhumation of the deep crust widely occurred, indicative of destruction or decratonization. Accompanying this destruction was significant removal of the cratonic keel and lithospheric transformation, whereby the thick (∼200 km) and refractory Archean lithosphere mantle was replaced by a thin (<80 km) juvenile one. The decratonization of the NCC was driven by flat slab subduction, followed by a rollback of the paleo-Pacific plate during the late Mesozoic. A global synthesis indicates that cratons are mainly destroyed by oceanic subduction, although mantle plumes might also trigger lithospheric thinning through thermal erosion. Widespread crust-derived felsic magmatism and large-scale ductile deformation can be regarded as petrological and structural indicators of craton destruction.
- ▪ A craton, a kind of ancient continental block on Earth, was formed mostly in the early Precambrian (>1.8 Ga).
- ▪ A craton is characterized by a rigid lithospheric root, which provides longevity and stability during its evolutionary history.
- ▪ Some cratons, such as the North China Craton, can be destroyed by losing their stability, manifested by magmatism, deformation, earthquake, etc.
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Seawater Chemistry Through Phanerozoic Time
Vol. 47 (2019), pp. 197–224More LessThe major ion balance of the ocean, particularly the concentrations of magnesium (Mg), calcium (Ca), and sulfate (SO4), has evolved over the Phanerozoic (last 550 million years) in concert with changes in sea level and the partial pressure of carbon dioxide (pCO2). We review these changes, along with changes in Mg/Ca and strontium/calcium (Sr/Ca) of the ocean; how the changes were reconstructed; and the implication of the suggested changes for the overall charge balance of the ocean. We conclude that marine Mg, Ca, and SO4 concentrations are responding to different aspects of coupled tectonic changes over the Phanerozoic and the resulting effect on sea level. We suggest a broad conceptual model for the Phanerozoic changes in Mg, Ca, and SO4 concentrations along with the seawater 87Sr/86Sr and sulfur isotope composition.
- ▪ Marine concentrations of magnesium, sulfate, and calcium have varied over the last 550 million years in sync with changes in sea level and atmospheric carbon dioxide.
- ▪ Seawater chemistry and sea level both respond to supercontinent formation and breakup, age of the ocean floor, and extent of continental shelf area.
- ▪ Changes in plate tectonics impact the ocean's chemical balance and the carbon cycle in varied ways, resulting in cyclical changes in key climatic variables over geological time.
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Global Patterns of Carbon Dioxide Variability from Satellite Observations
Xun Jiang, and Yuk L. YungVol. 47 (2019), pp. 225–245More LessAdvanced satellite technology has been providing unique observations of global carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations. These observations have revealed important CO2 variability at different timescales and over regional and planetary scales. Satellite CO2 retrievals have revealed that stratospheric sudden warming and the Madden-Julian Oscillation can modulate atmospheric CO2 concentrations in the mid-troposphere. Atmospheric CO2 also demonstrates variability at interannual timescales. In the tropical region, the El Niño–Southern Oscillation and the Tropospheric Biennial Oscillation can change atmospheric CO2 concentrations. At high latitudes, mid-tropospheric CO2 concentrations can be influenced by the Northern Hemispheric annular mode. In addition to modulations by the large-scale circulations, sporadic events such as wildfires, volcanic eruptions, and droughts, which change CO2 surface emissions, can cause atmospheric CO2 concentrations to increase significantly. The natural variability of CO2 summarized in this review can help us better understand its sources and sinks and its redistribution by atmospheric motion.
- ▪ Global satellite CO2 data offer a unique opportunity to explore CO2 variability in different regions.
- ▪ Atmospheric CO2 concentration demonstrates variations at intraseasonal, seasonal, and interannual timescales.
- ▪ Both large-scale circulations and variations of surface emissions can modulate CO2 concentrations in the atmosphere.
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Permeability of Clays and Shales
Vol. 47 (2019), pp. 247–273More LessThe low permeability of clays, shales, and other argillaceous lithologies makes them key controls of transport and deformation processes in the crust but is known for being challenging to characterize. As muds are modified by compaction and diagenesis to low-porosity shales, permeability can decrease by six or more orders of magnitude, but at large scales it is often dramatically and unpredictably increased by fractures, faults, and other features. Testing and inverse modeling show that petrophysical properties and the geological environment are dominant controls of clay and shale matrix permeability and its scale dependence. Active sedimentation and tectonism on continental margins cause large-scale permeability to vary with time, but in stable continent interiors it is unclear how regional permeability of argillaceous formations changes over time or, in most cases, what controls it. Although rarely considered, it is also unknown whether Darcian permeability adequately describes flow in clay-rich materials.
- ▪ Critical for problems in energy, water supply, waste isolation, and geologic hazards, clay and shale permeability remains problematic.
- ▪ Test data and inverse model analyses are beginning to reveal where and how permeability of clay and shale changes with scale.
- ▪ In clays and shales, causes of permeability scale effects, their time dependence, and even flow behavior continue to raise questions.
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Flood Basalts and Mass Extinctions
Vol. 47 (2019), pp. 275–303More LessFlood basalts were Earth's largest volcanic episodes that, along with related intrusions, were often emplaced rapidly and coincided with environmental disruption: oceanic anoxic events, hyperthermals, and mass extinction events. Volatile emissions, both from magmatic degassing and vaporized from surrounding rock, triggered short-term cooling and longer-term warming, ocean acidification, and deoxygenation. The magnitude of biological extinction varied considerably, from small events affecting only select groups to the largest extinction of the Phanerozoic, with less-active organisms and those with less-developed respiratory physiology faring especially poorly. The disparate environmental and biological outcomes of different flood basalt events may at first order be explained by variations in the rate of volatile release modulated by longer trends in ocean carbon cycle buffering and the composition of marine ecosystems. Assessing volatile release, environmental change, and biological extinction at finer temporal resolution should be a top priority to refine ancient hyperthermals as analogs for anthropogenic climate change.
- ▪ Flood basalts, the largest volcanic events in Earth history, triggered dramatic environmental changes on land and in the oceans.
- ▪ Rapid volcanic carbon emissions led to ocean warming, acidification, and deoxygenation that often caused widespread animal extinctions.
- ▪ Animal physiology played a key role in survival during flood basalt extinctions, with reef builders such as corals being especially vulnerable.
- ▪ The rate and duration of volcanic carbon emission controlled the type of environmental disruption and the severity of biological extinction.
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Repeating Earthquakes
Vol. 47 (2019), pp. 305–332More LessRepeating earthquakes, or repeaters, are identical in location and geometry but occur at different times. They appear to represent recurring seismic energy release from distinct structures such as slip on a fault patch. Repeaters are most commonly found on creeping plate boundary faults, where seismic patches are loaded by surrounding slow slip, and they can be used to track fault creep at depth. Their hosting environments also include volcanoes, subducted slabs, mining-induced fault structures, glaciers, and landslides. While true repeaters should have identical seismic waveforms, small differences in their seismograms can be used to examine subtle changes in source properties or in material properties of the rocks through which the waves propagate. Source studies have documented the presence of smaller slip patches within the rupture areas of larger repeaters, illuminated earthquake triggering mechanisms, and revealed systematic changes in rupture characteristics as a function of loading rate.
- ▪ Repeating earthquakes are observed in diverse tectonic and nontectonic settings.
- ▪ Their occurrence patterns provide quantitative information about fault creep, earthquake cycle dynamics, triggering, and predictability.
- ▪ Their seismic waveform characteristics provide important insights on earthquake source variability and temporal Earth structure changes.
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Soil Functions: Connecting Earth's Critical Zone
Vol. 47 (2019), pp. 333–359More LessSoil is the central interface of Earth's critical zone—the planetary surface layer extending from unaltered bedrock to the vegetation canopy—and is under intense pressure from human demand for biomass, water, and food resources. Soil functions are flows and transformations of mass, energy, and genetic information that connect soil to the wider critical zone, transmitting the impacts of human activity at the land surface and providing a control point for beneficial human intervention. Soil functions are manifest during bedrock weathering and, in fully developed soil profiles, correlate with the porosity architecture of soil structure and arise from the development of soil aggregates as fundamental ecological units. Advances in knowledge on the mechanistic processes of soil functions, their connection throughout the critical zone, and their quantitative representation in mathematical and computational models define research frontiers that address the major global challenges of critical zone resource provisioning for human benefit.
- ▪ Connecting the mechanisms of soil functions with critical zone processes defines integrating science to tackle challenges of climate change and food and water supply.
- ▪ Soil functions, which develop through formation of soil aggregates as fundamental eco-logical units, are manifest at the earliest stages of critical zone evolution.
- ▪ Global degradation of soil functions during the Anthropocene is reversible through positive human intervention in soil as a central control point in Earth's critical zone.
- ▪ Measurement and mathematical translation of soil functions and critical zone processes offer new computational approaches for basic and applied geosciences research.
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Earthquake Early Warning: Advances, Scientific Challenges, and Societal Needs
Vol. 47 (2019), pp. 361–388More LessEarthquake early warning (EEW) is the delivery of ground shaking alerts or warnings. It is distinguished from earthquake prediction in that the earthquake has nucleated to provide detectable ground motion when an EEW is issued. Here we review progress in the field in the last 10 years. We begin with EEW users, synthesizing what we now know about who uses EEW and what information they need and can digest. We summarize the approaches to EEW and gather information about currently existing EEW systems implemented in various countries while providing the context and stimulus for their creation and development. We survey important advances in methods, instrumentation, and algorithms that improve the quality and timeliness of EEW alerts. We also discuss the development of new, potentially transformative ideas and methodologies that could change how we provide alerts in the future.
- ▪ Earthquake early warning (EEW) is the rapid detection and characterization of earthquakes and delivery of an alert so that protective actions can be taken.
- ▪ EEW systems now provide public alerts in Mexico, Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan and alerts to select user groups in India, Turkey, Romania, and the United States.
- ▪ EEW methodologies fall into three categories, point source, finite fault, and ground motion models, and we review the advantages of each of these approaches.
- ▪ The wealth of information about EEW uses and user needs must be employed to focus future developments and improvements in EEW systems.
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Noble Gases: A Record of Earth's Evolution and Mantle Dynamics
Vol. 47 (2019), pp. 389–419More LessNoble gases have played a key role in our understanding of the origin of Earth's volatiles, mantle structure, and long-term degassing of the mantle. Here we synthesize new insights into these topics gained from high-precision noble gas data. Our analysis reveals new constraints on the origin of the terrestrial atmosphere, the presence of nebular neon but chondritic krypton and xenon in the mantle, and a memory of multiple giant impacts during accretion. Furthermore, the reservoir supplying primordial noble gases to plumes appears to be distinct from the mid-ocean ridge basalt (MORB) reservoir since at least 4.45 Ga. While differences between the MORB mantle and plume mantle cannot be explained solely by recycling of atmospheric volatiles, injection and incorporation of atmospheric-derived noble gases into both mantle reservoirs occurred over Earth history. In the MORB mantle, the atmospheric-derived noble gases are observed to be heterogeneously distributed, reflecting inefficient mixing even within the vigorously convecting MORB mantle.
- ▪ Primordial noble gases in the atmosphere were largely derived from planetesimals delivered after the Moon-forming giant impact.
- ▪ Heterogeneities dating back to Earth's accretion are preserved in the present-day mantle.
- ▪ Mid-ocean ridge basalts and plume xenon isotopic ratios cannot be related by differential degassing or differential incorporation of recycled atmospheric volatiles.
- ▪ Differences in mid-ocean ridge basalts and plume radiogenic helium, neon, and argon ratios can be explained through the lens of differential long-term degassing.
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Supraglacial Streams and Rivers
Vol. 47 (2019), pp. 421–452More LessSupraglacial meltwater channels that flow on the surfaces of glaciers, ice sheets, and ice shelves connect ice surface climatology with subglacial processes, ice dynamics, and eustatic sea level changes. Their important role in transferring water and heat across and into ice is currently absent from models of surface mass balance and runoff contributions to global sea level rise. Furthermore, relatively little is known about the genesis, evolution, hydrology, hydraulics, and morphology of supraglacial rivers, and a first synthesis and review of published research on these unusual features is lacking. To that end, we review their (a) known geographical distribution; (b) formation, morphology, and sediment transport processes; (c) hydrology and hydraulics; and (d) impact on ice sheet surface energy balance, heat exchange, basal conditions, and ice shelf stability. We conclude with a synthesis of key knowledge gaps and provide recommendations for future research.
- ▪ Supraglacial streams and rivers transfer water and heat on glaciers, connecting climate with subglacial hydrology, ice sliding, and global sea level.
- ▪ Ice surface melting may expand under a warming climate, darkening the ice surface and further increasing melt.
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Isotopes in the Water Cycle: Regional- to Global-Scale Patterns and Applications
Vol. 47 (2019), pp. 453–479More LessStable isotope ratios of hydrogen and oxygen have been applied to water cycle research for over 60 years. Over the past two decades, however, new data, data compilations, and quantitative methods have supported the application of isotopic data to address large-scale water cycle problems. Recent results have demonstrated the impact of climate variation on atmospheric water cycling, provided constraints on continental- to global-scale land-atmosphere water vapor fluxes, revealed biases in the sources of runoff in hydrological models, and illustrated regional patterns of water use and management by people. In the past decade, global isotopic observations have spurred new debate over the role of soils in the water cycle, with potential to impact both ecological and hydrological theory. Many components of the water cycle remain underrepresented in isotopic databases. Increasing accessibility of analyses and improved platforms for data sharing will refine and grow the breadth of these contributions in the future.
- ▪ Isotope ratios in water integrate information on hydrological processes over scales from cities to the globe.
- ▪ Tracing water with isotopes helps reveal the processes that govern variability in the water cycle and may govern future global changes.
- ▪ Improvements in instrumentation, data sharing, and quantitative analysis have advanced isotopic water cycle science over the past 20 years.
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Marsh Processes and Their Response to Climate Change and Sea-Level Rise
Vol. 47 (2019), pp. 481–517More LessIn addition to their being vital components of mid- to high-latitude coastal ecosystems, salt marshes contain 0.1% of global sequestered terrestrial carbon. Their sustainability is now threatened by accelerating sea-level rise (SLR) that has reached a rate that is many times greater than the rate at which they formed and evolved. Modeling studies have been instrumental in predicting how marsh systems will respond to greater frequencies and durations of tidal inundation and in quantifying thresholds when marshes will succumb and begin to disintegrate due to accelerating SLR. Over the short term, some researchers believe that biogeomorphic feedbacks will improve marsh survival through greater biomass productivity enhanced by warmer temperatures and higher carbon dioxide concentrations. Increased sedimentation rates are less likely due to lower-than-expected suspended sediment concentrations. The majority of marsh loss today is through wave-induced edge erosion that beneficially adds sediment to the system. Edge erosion is partly offset by upland marsh migration during SLR.
- ▪ Despite positive biogeomorphic feedbacks, many salt marshes will succumb to accelerating sea-level rise due to insufficient mineral sediment.
- ▪ The latest multivariate marsh modeling is producing predictions of marsh evolution under various sea-level rise scenarios.
- ▪ The least well-known variables in projecting changes to salt marshes are suspended sediment concentrations and net sediment influx to the marsh.
- ▪ We are in the infancy of understanding the importance and processes of marsh edge erosion and the overall dynamicism of marshes.
- ▪ This review defines the latest breakthroughs in understanding the response of salt marshes to accelerating sea-level rise and decreasing sediment supply.
- ▪ Climate change is accelerating sea-level rise, warming temperatures, and increasing carbon dioxide, all of which are impacting marsh vegetation and vertical accretion.
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Previous Volumes
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Volume 52 (2024)
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Volume 51 (2023)
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Volume 50 (2022)
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Volume 49 (2021)
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Volume 48 (2020)
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Volume 47 (2019)
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Volume 46 (2018)
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Volume 45 (2017)
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Volume 44 (2016)
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Volume 43 (2015)
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Volume 42 (2014)
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Volume 41 (2013)
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Volume 40 (2012)
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Volume 39 (2011)
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Volume 38 (2010)
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Volume 37 (2009)
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Volume 36 (2008)
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Volume 35 (2007)
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Volume 34 (2006)
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Volume 33 (2005)
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Volume 32 (2004)
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Volume 31 (2003)
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Volume 30 (2002)
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Volume 29 (2001)
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Volume 28 (2000)
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Volume 27 (1999)
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Volume 26 (1998)
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Volume 25 (1997)
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Volume 24 (1996)
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Volume 23 (1995)
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Volume 22 (1994)
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Volume 21 (1993)
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Volume 20 (1992)
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Volume 19 (1991)
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Volume 18 (1990)
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Volume 17 (1989)
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Volume 16 (1988)
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Volume 15 (1987)
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Volume 14 (1986)
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Volume 13 (1985)
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Volume 12 (1984)
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Volume 11 (1983)
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Volume 10 (1982)
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Volume 9 (1981)
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Volume 8 (1980)
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Volume 7 (1979)
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Volume 6 (1978)
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Volume 5 (1977)
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Volume 4 (1976)
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Volume 3 (1975)
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Volume 2 (1974)
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Volume 1 (1973)
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Volume 0 (1932)