Skip slideshow

Browse Articles

Open access

Surface Water and Groundwater Interactions in Salt Marshes and Their Impact on Plant Ecology and Coastal Biogeochemistry

  •  2 February 2022

Key Points

  • Tides play a primary role in salt marsh surface water and groundwater interactions

  • Surface water and groundwater interactions affect plant zonation, and carbon and nutrient outwelling

  • Future research needs to couple hydrological processes to ecological and geochemical processes

Open access

From Fluid Flow to Coupled Processes in Fractured Rock: Recent Advances and New Frontiers

  •  1 February 2022

Key Points

  • Understanding and predicting fractured systems requires integrating field and lab experiments, simulation and uncertainty quantification

  • Densely monitored field sites and in situ lab experiments provide quantitative measures of flow and transport that can constrain models

  • Physics-based models with machine-learning emulators enable uncertainty quantification of flow and transport in complex fracture networks

Open access

Radiocarbon as a Dating Tool and Tracer in Paleoceanography

  •  12 January 2022

Key Points

  • Radiocarbon is a powerful carbon cycle tracer and radiometric dating tool, that is widely used in paleoceanography

  • Marine radiocarbon activities, relative to the contemporary atmosphere, integrate three main effects: gas exchange, transport times, and the mixing of different water masses

  • Reconstructions attest to ocean ventilation's role in past CO2 change, but the long-term closure of the radiocarbon cycle remains unresolved

Open access

Climate Changes and Their Elevational Patterns in the Mountains of the World

  •  11 January 2022

Key Points

  • Using station and gridded data sets, we compare global precipitation and temperature trends by elevation

  • Local comparisons of paired stations and regional comparisons using gridded data often show faster mountain than lowland warming

  • Precipitation differences between mountains and adjacent lowlands are reducing, often driven by stronger precipitation increase in lowlands

Open access

Realistic Forests and the Modeling of Forest‐Atmosphere Exchange

  •  4 January 2022

Key Points

  • Most forests are naturally patchy. Many are being fragmented by humans. Studies of forest-air exchange rarely consider this heterogeneity

  • Gaps, edges, and patchy sources/sinks generate fluxes of momentum and scalars. Scalar quantities are rarely at equilibrium around forests

  • Better representations of forest structure, for example, from laser scans, should be included in models, along with more physics and chemistry

full access

The Magnetic and Color Reflectance Properties of Hematite: From Earth to Mars

  •  30 December 2021

Key Points

  • Hematite with/without cation substitution can be identified and quantified effectively by combining magnetic and color spectral analyses

  • Hematite can be useful for reconstructing paleoclimate variations on Earth

  • Terrestrial hematite may be analogous to Martian hematite and provide evidence for the former presence of water on Mars

free access

Issue Information

  •  27 December 2021
Open access

Nordic Seas Heat Loss, Atlantic Inflow, and Arctic Sea Ice Cover Over the Last Century

  •  9 December 2021

Key Points

  • Nordic Seas heat loss dominates variability and mean Arctic Ocean heat loss

  • Atlantic water volume and heat transport has increased over the last century consistently with increased wind forcing and heat loss

  • Ocean heat transport anomalies affect Greenland melting, Arctic sea ice, water transformations, and Arctic CO2 uptake

Open access

Polar Vortices in Planetary Atmospheres

  •  1 December 2021

Key Points

  • Earth is not unique in having polar vortices, every well-observed planetary body with a substantial atmosphere appears to have one

  • The range of vortices in our solar system is diverse, but much of their character can be explained in terms of the fluid dynamics for Earth

  • Classifying vortices into those with predominantly circumpolar flow and those with large zonal asymmetries captures all that we know about

Open access

Amazon Hydrology From Space: Scientific Advances and Future Challenges

  •  12 October 2021

Key Points

  • Integrated view of scientific advances in Amazon hydrology with remote sensing

  • Expected progress to understand the water cycle, aquatic ecosystems, and environmental changes with upcoming hydrology-oriented missions

  • Need to translate advanced knowledge from remote sensing to support water management and environmental governance

more >

There are no results at this time

more >
Open access

A Review of Global Precipitation Data Sets: Data Sources, Estimation, and Intercomparisons

Key Points

  • We conduct a comprehensive review of precipitation data sets
  • We evaluate the differences between data sets at different spatial and temporal scales
  • We explore the opportunities and challenges in generating reliable precipitation estimates

Open access

A review on regional convection‐permitting climate modeling: Demonstrations, prospects, and challenges

Key Points

  • Convection-permitting climate models reduce errors in large-scale models
  • Added value in convective processes, regional extremes, and over mountains
  • Discusses challenges/potentials of convection-permitting climate simulations

more >
free access

Vertical land motion as a key to understanding sea level change and variability

Key Points

  • Vertical land motion: a key element to understanding sea level change along the coasts
  • Updated results on vertical land motion from the primary space geodetic methods
  • Discussion on the predominance of subsidence or uplift along the world coasts

free access

An Assessment of Earth's Climate Sensitivity Using Multiple Lines of Evidence

Key Points

  • We assess evidence relevant to Earth's climate sensitivity S: feedback process understanding and the historical and paleoclimate records
  • All three lines of evidence are difficult to reconcile with S < 2 K, while paleo evidence provides the strongest case against S > 4.5 K
  • A Bayesian calculation finds a 66% range of 2.6–3.9 K, which remains within the bounds 2.3–4.5 K under plausible robustness tests

Plain Language Summary

Earth's global “climate sensitivity” is a fundamental quantitative measure of the susceptibility of Earth's climate to human influence. A landmark report in 1979 concluded that it probably lies between 1.5°C and 4.5°C per doubling of atmospheric carbon dioxide, assuming that other influences on climate remain unchanged. In the 40 years since, it has appeared difficult to reduce this uncertainty range. In this report we thoroughly assess all lines of evidence including some new developments. We find that a large volume of consistent evidence now points to a more confident view of a climate sensitivity near the middle or upper part of this range. In particular, it now appears extremely unlikely that the climate sensitivity could be low enough to avoid substantial climate change (well in excess of 2°C warming) under a high-emission future scenario. We remain unable to rule out that the sensitivity could be above 4.5°C per doubling of carbon dioxide levels, although this is not likely. Continued research is needed to further reduce the uncertainty, and we identify some of the more promising possibilities in this regard.

Open access

Large earthquakes and creeping faults

Key Points

  • Plate tectonic strain is accumulated and released in a variety of ways including both locked and unlocked (creeping) fault behavior
  • Deep fault creep occurs for all tectonic plate-bounding faults whereas only some faults creep at shallower depths over long time periods
  • The existence of fault creep illuminates faults but may not reduce ground shaking during large earthquakes

Open access

A Review of Global Precipitation Data Sets: Data Sources, Estimation, and Intercomparisons

Key Points

  • We conduct a comprehensive review of precipitation data sets
  • We evaluate the differences between data sets at different spatial and temporal scales
  • We explore the opportunities and challenges in generating reliable precipitation estimates

Open access

Detecting, Extracting, and Monitoring Surface Water From Space Using Optical Sensors: A Review

Key Points

  • Satellite-based optical sensors are an efficient means for observing surface water regionally and globally
  • Pixel unmixing and reconstruction, and spatio-temporal fusion are two common and low-cost approaches to enhance surface water monitoring
  • The potential to estimate flow using only optical remote sensing has greatly enriched the data source of hydrological studies

Plain Language Summary

Observing surface water is essential for ecological and hydrological studies. This paper reviews the current status of detecting, extracting, and monitoring surface water using optical remote sensing, especially progress in the last decade. It also discusses the current status and challenges in this field. For example, it was found that pixel unmixing and reconstruction, and spatio-temporal fusion are two common and low-cost approaches to enhance surface water monitoring. Remote sensing data have been integrated with in situ river flow to model spatio-temporal dynamics of surface water. Recent studies have also proved that the river discharge can be estimated using only optical remote sensing imagery. This will be a breakthrough for hydrological studies in ungauged areas. Optical sensors are also easily obscured by clouds and vegetation. This limitation can be reduced by integrating optical data with synthetic aperture radar data and digital elevation model data. There is increasing demand of monitoring global water dynamics at high resolutions. It is now easy to achieve with the development of big data and cloud computation techniques. Enhanced global or regional water monitoring in the future requires integrated use of multiple sources of remote sensing data.

free access

Where glaciers meet water: Subaqueous melt and its relevance to glaciers in various settings

Key Points

  • Glaciers entering water display a great variety of shapes and behaviors
  • This variety can be explained by different rates of subaqueous melt
  • Subaqueous melt can trigger shifts in glacier dynamics

Open access

Interglacials of the last 800,000 years

Key Points

  • We have reviewed the occurrence, strength, shape, and timing of interglacials
  • Despite spatial variability, MIS 5 and 11 stand out as strong/warm
  • The current interglacial is expected to be longer than any of those reviewed

Open access

Deep Learning for Geophysics: Current and Future Trends

Key Points

  • The concept of deep learning (DL) and classical architectures of deep neural networks are introduced

  • A review of state-of-the-art DL methods in geophysical applications is provided

  • The future directions for developing new DL methods in geophysics are discussed

Plain Language Summary

With the rapid development of artificial intelligence (AI), students and researchers in the geophysical community would like to know what AI can bring to geophysical discoveries. We present a review of deep learning (DL), a popular AI technique, for geophysical readers to understand recent advances, open problems, and future trends. This review aims to pave the way for more geophysical researchers, students, and teachers to understand and use DL techniques.

Open access

The Role of Geomagnetic Field Intensity in Late Quaternary Evolution of Humans and Large Mammals

Key Points

  • The strength of the geomagnetic field is a proxy for the flux of ultraviolet radiation (UVR)
  • The disappearances of the Neanderthals and many large mammals during the Late Quaternary occurred during minima in geomagnetic field strength
  • Human phylogeny from mitochondrial DNA and Y chromosomes can also be linked to minima in field strength, hence UVR flux

Plain Language Summary

The strength of Earth's magnetic field in the past, recorded by rocks and sediments, provides a proxy for past flux of ultraviolet radiation (UVR) to Earth's surface due to the role of the field in modulating stratigraphic ozone. About 40,000 years ago, mammalian fossils in Australia and Eurasia record an important die-off of large mammals that included Neanderthals in Europe. In the Americas and Europe, a large mammalian die-off appears to have occurred ~13,000 years ago. Both die-offs can be linked to minima in Earth's magnetic field strength implying that UVR flux variations to Earth's surface influenced mammalian evolution. For the last ~200,000 years, estimates of the timing of branching episodes in the human evolutionary tree, from modern and fossil DNA and Y chromosomes, can be linked to minima in field strength, which implies a long-term role for UVR in human evolution. New fossil finds, improved fossil dating, knowledge of the past strength of Earth's magnetic field, and refinements in the human evolutionary tree, are sharpening the focus on a possible link between UVR arriving at the Earth's surface, magnetic field strength, and events in mammalian evolution.

Latest news