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  • English  (4)
  • 2015-2019  (4)
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  • 1
    Keywords: soil ; pedology ; Latin America ; Caribbean ; South America
    Description / Table of Contents: The European Commission's in-house science service today publishes the first ever comprehensive overview of the soils of Latin America and the Caribbean. Through colourful maps and illustrations the atlas explains in a simple and clear manner the diversity of soil across Central and South America and the Caribbean. It highlights the vital importance of a natural non-renewable resource which provides food, fodder and fuel for 580 million people. The atlas shows the delicate relationships between soils and the functions that they provide. It raises awareness of the inter-relationships with climate and land use while illustrating the role of soil in food security, particularly in relation to climate change. Latin America's soils also support some of the world's most biodiverse ecosystems. In Latin America and the Caribbean, soils have to meet the needs of a population that is in continuous and rapid growth. More than half of the 576 million hectares of arable land of Latin America are estimated to be affected by degradation processes, notably in South America and Mesoamerica. The main causes are change in land use (especially deforestation), over-exploitation, climate change and social inequality. The atlas presents a number of strategies for soil preservation and conservation.
    Pages: Online-Ressource (176 Seiten)
    ISBN: 9789279465130
    Language: English
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2020-02-12
    Description: The 2015 Mw8.3 Illapel, Chile earthquake is the latest megathrust event on the central segment of that subduction zone. It generated strong ground motions and a large (up to 11 m runup) tsunami which prompted the evacuation of more than 1 million people in the first hours following the event. Observations during recent earthquakes suggest that these phenomena can be associated with rupture on different parts of the megathrust. The deep portion generates strong shaking while slow, large slip on the shallow fault is responsible for the tsunami. It is unclear whether all megathrusts can have shallow slip during coseismic rupture and what physical properties regulate this. Here we show that the Illapel event ruptured both deep and shallow segments with substantial slip. We resolve a kinematic slip model using regional geophysical observations and analyze it jointly with teleseismic backprojection. We find that the shallow and deep portions of the megathrust are segmented and have fundamentally different behavior. We forward calculate local tsunami propagation from the resolved slip and find good agreement with field measurements, independently validating the slip model. These results show that the central portion of the Chilean subduction zone has accumulated a significant shallow slip deficit and indicates that, given enough time, shallow slip might be possible everywhere along the subduction zone.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2020-02-12
    Description: This thesis presents studies which address the regional-scale distribution of fluids during the seismic cycle in the subduction zone of Northern Chile. To infer the distribution of fluids, this work investigated the regional-scale electrical resistivity structure of the subduction zone. The resistivity structure was imaged and monitored using the magnetotelluric (MT) geophysical method. The analysed MT data were collected at nine permanent sites of the Integrated Plate Boundary Observatory Chile (IPOC) located along the forearc region in Northern Chile (21°-23.5°S, 69°-70°W). The regional-scale resistivity structure was derived by modelling long-period MT data using 3-D inversion approach. This model exhibits a complex resistivity structure, suggesting significant spatial variability in the fluid content at different regions of the subduction zone. The model shows that the continental South American plate within the forearc region is mainly characterized by high resistivities (〉1000 Ωm) between the coast and 69°W. The model shows additionally a number of regional low resistivity zones (LRZs, 〈10 Ωm) within the continental crust. Long-active fault zones and clusters of seismicity are observed within these LRZs, suggesting that these resistivity anomalies are relatively weak and permeable regions of the continental crust, where deformation processes and circulation of fluids have been focused over geologic time. Some of these LRZs reach the continental lower crust above the intraplate seismogenic zone, coinciding spatially with boundaries of the rupture area of large earthquakes and regional NW-SE structural lineaments. In the forearc mantle wedge the model exhibits a 150 km-long trench-parallel LRZ above the intermediate-depth seismogenic zone, suggesting significant along-strike variability in the amount of fluids released from the oceanic Nazca plate. The temporal evolution of the resistivity structure was monitored by analysing the IPOC MT data during 2007-2014. This analysis reveals anomalous temporal variations of the vertical magnetic transfer function (VTF) at one IPOC site. These anomalous variations were reproduced by modelling a decrease in resistivity within a seismically active region of the continental crust located above the interplate seismogenic zone. The spatiotemporal distribution of seismicity suggests that the inferred changes in resistivity were associated with episodes of upward migration of fluids generated at the plate interface. The sensitivity of MT data to changes in the resistivity structure and in the geomagnetic activity was evaluated. Possible regional-scale resistivity changes above the interplate seismogenic zone were simulated, obtaining that they can generate measurable variations in MT responses (TFs) recorded at the IPOC sites. However, the modelled variations in IPOC TFs can be masked by unwanted effects correlated with changes in magnetic fields generated in the atmosphere (source effects). The analysis of 18 years of geomagnetic data recorded at mid-latitude sites reveals that globally the VTF exhibits patterns related to source effects. Main patterns identified were periodical seasonal variations and a long-term trend correlated with the 11-year solar cycle. Such source effects can be identified as patterns observed synchronously in temporal variations of VTFs recorded at neighbouring sites, and which additionally show significant correlation with fluctuations of the geomagnetic activity.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesis
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2020-05-19
    Description: This paper describes the formation of, and initial results for, a new FLUXNET coordination network for ecosystem-scale methane (CH4) measurements at 60 sites globally, organized by the Global Carbon Project in partnership with other initiatives and regional flux tower networks. The objectives of the effort are presented along with an overview of the coverage of eddy covariance (EC) CH4 flux measurements globally, initial results comparing CH4 fluxes across the sites, and future research directions and needs. Annual estimates of net CH4 fluxes across sites ranged from −0.2 ± 0.02 g C m–2 yr–1 for an upland forest site to 114.9 ± 13.4 g C m–2 yr–1 for an estuarine freshwater marsh, with fluxes exceeding 40 g C m–2 yr–1 at multiple sites. Average annual soil and air temperatures were found to be the strongest predictor of annual CH4 flux across wetland sites globally. Water table position was positively correlated with annual CH4 emissions, although only for wetland sites that were not consistently inundated throughout the year. The ratio of annual CH4 fluxes to ecosystem respiration increased significantly with mean site temperature. Uncertainties in annual CH4 estimates due to gap-filling and random errors were on average ±1.6 g C m–2 yr–1 at 95% confidence, with the relative error decreasing exponentially with increasing flux magnitude across sites. Through the analysis and synthesis of a growing EC CH4 flux database, the controls on ecosystem CH4 fluxes can be better understood, used to inform and validate Earth system models, and reconcile differences between land surface model- and atmospheric-based estimates of CH4 emissions.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
    Format: application/pdf
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