earth-surface processes

Iron release in aqueous environment by fresh volcanic ash from Mount Etna (Italy) and Popocatépetl (Mexico) volcanoes

In this study, we performed leaching experiments for timescales of hours-to-months in deionized water on fresh volcanic ash from Mt. Etna (Italy) and Popocatépetl (Mexico) volcanos to monitor Fe release as a function of ash mineral chemistry and size, with the aim of clarifying Fe release mechanisms and eventually evaluating the impact of volcanic ash on marine and lacustrine environments. To define sample mineralogy and Fe speciation, inclusive characterization was obtained by means of XRF, SEM, XRPD, EELS and Mössbauer spectroscopies.

Multiple movements recorded in a crustal weakness zone in NE Iberia. The Vallès-Penedès Fault revisited

Structural analysis and Anisotropy of Magnetic Susceptibility are here applied to the fault zone (several hundreds of meters thick) associated with an E-W striking, 20 km-long segment of the Vallès-Penedès Fault (Catalan Coastal Ranges). The results obtained indicate a complex structure, mainly resulting from the imprint of Paleogene compressional events on a fabric inherited from the Variscan orogeny, and its Late-Variscan and Mesozoic extensional history. The prevailing foliation on the fault gouge and microbreccia is oblique (striking NW-SE) to the main E-W trace of the fault.

Strain indicators and magnetic fabric in intraplate fault zones. Case study of Daroca thrust, Iberian Chain, Spain

Anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS) has been applied to the study of shallow fault zones, although interpretation of the results requires establishing clear relationships between petrofabric and magnetic features, magnetic behaviour of fault rocks, and an extensive knowledge of P-T conditions. In this work, we demonstrate that magnetic methods can be applied to the study of heterogeneous fault zones, provided that a series of requisites are met.

Detecting syn-orogenic extension and sediment provenance of the Cilento wedge top basin (southern Apennines, Italy). Mineralogy and geochemistry of fine-grained sediments and petrography of dispersed organic matter

Wedge-top basins can provide highly sensitive information on the uplift and erosion history of an evolving collisional belt, but their burial and thermal history has generally been neglected because their siliciclastic infill records the very low temperature history, which is difficult to detect. This paper provides an integrated approach for defining the first order tectonic events shaping the southern Apennines in Neogene times through the study of a wedge-top basin.

Organic geochemical and palynological evidence for Holocene natural and anthropogenic environmental change at Lake Dojran (Macedonia/Greece)

In this study, we present lipid biomarker and palynological data for a sediment core from Lake Dojran (Macedonia/Greece), which covers the entire Holocene period. We analyzed vascular plant-derived n-alkanes, combustion-derived polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), fecal steroids, and bacterial and archaeal glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraether (GDGT) lipids in concert with microcharcoal and pollen assemblages to reconstruct climatic, environmental, and human impact in the Dojran catchment and the greater Dojran area.

The environmental and evolutionary history of Lake Ohrid (FYROM/Albania). Interim results from the SCOPSCO deep drilling project

This study reviews and synthesises existing information generated within the SCOPSCO (Scientific Collaboration on Past Speciation Conditions in Lake Ohrid) deep drilling project. The four main aims of the project are to infer (i) the age and origin of Lake Ohrid (Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia/Republic of Albania), (ii) its regional seismotectonic history, (iii) volcanic activity and climate change in the central northern Mediterranean region, and (iv) the influence of major geological events on the evolution of its endemic species.

Advanced three-dimensional microwave tomography for the imaging of buried targets

The imaging of buried targets by means of Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) surveys is typically affected by nonideal and critical operational conditions. The targets are often located in the near-field region of the illuminating antennas, having size comparable to the probing wavelengths and, thus, to the resolution limits of the considered system.

Tyrrhenian central Italy. Holocene population and landscape ecology

This paper compares changes in vegetation structure and composition (using synthetic fossil pollen data) with proxy data for population levels (including settlements and radiocarbon dates) over the course of the last 10 millennia in Tyrrhenian central Italy. These data show generalised patterns of clearance of woodland in response both to early agriculturalists and urbanism, as well as the specific adoption of tree crops and variations in stock grazing.

Leaf thickness and density drive the responsiveness of photosynthesis to air temperature in Mediterranean species according to their leaf habitus

The responsiveness of net photosynthetic rate (Aa) to mean monthly air temperature (TM) of eight Mediterranean
evergreen species was investigated by analyzing the inter-annual changes in leaf mass area (LMA), leaf tissue
density (LTD) and leaf thickness (LT). We wanted to test if species leaf habitus affected this response. To hit the
goal, a multi-year dataset from our previously published papers was used. The inter-annual variability in LMA,
LTD and LT was assessed by their coefficients of variation (CVs). Aa sensitivity to TM (SAa) was quantified by the

Tephrostratigraphy of paleoclimatic archives in central Mediterranean during the Bronze Age

Re-examination of central Mediterranean paleoclimate archives on tephra layers indicates that three widely dispersed tephra layers occurred during the Bronze Age, namely Agnano Mt Spina from Campi Flegrei (ca. 4.4 cal ka BP), Avellino from Somma-Vesuvius (ca. 3.9 cal ka BP), and FL from Etna (ca. 3.3 cal ka BP). Stratigraphical correlations of selected archives using these tephra layers indicate that some records have severe chronological biases, posing important limitations to the use of these archives for defining the paleoclimate conditions during the Bronze Age.

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