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Hybrid turtle possible first in Australia

A TURTLE RESCUED from a Queensland port earlier this month with both hawksbill and green turtle features is suspected to be the first hybrid of its kind in Australia.


The unusual turtle was rescued by concerned onlookers and taken to Reef HQ Aquarium’s turtle hospital on the Great Barrier Reef after it was seen lingering in the Townsville Port following entanglement in a crab pot.


Two fishing hooks lodged in its mouth were extracted before it was sent to James Cook University’s veterinary school for X-rays to assess possible internal injuries.


With the all-clear, the turtle was returned to Reef HQ for some rest and rehabilitation – and its unusual appearance soon sparked interest in the scientific community.


Hybrid turtle


The turtle appears to have traits of both the hawksbill and green turtle. (Image: Reef HQ Great Barrier Reef Aquarium)


“This turtle is quite unique looking and it certainly isn’t like any of the others we’ve had come into the turtle hospital over the 27-odd years that we’ve been open,” said Hamish Tristram, a senior aquarist at Reef HQ.


Using an identification key to determine its species, the team at Reef HQ found several features that were not consistent with either a hawksbill or green turtle, instead Summer – as the turtle was affectionately named, after Hamish’s daughter – appeared to have traits of both.


“The post-ocular scales that go behind the eyes – generally the green turtle has four and the hawksbill has three,” explained Hamish. “This particular animal has three on one side and four on the other so it has an intermediate (trait) or has features of both.”


Hamish says the animals’ scutes (the large scales on the back of its shell) appear to overlap and the lower scutes have serrated edges, which are traits of the hawksbill, but its single-clawed flippers and paired rostral scales are features of the green turtle.


Hybrid turtle


The large scales (called scutes) on Summer’s shell (above) appear to overlap, and the lower scutes have serrated edges; traits of the hawksbill turtle, such as Shelly, pictured below. (Image: Reef HQ Great Barrier Reef Aquarium)


Hybrid turtle


First for Australian waters


Summer’s hybrid status has not yet been confirmed, but genetic testing and a laparoscopy will be undertaken to verify the turtle’s heritage and determine whether or not it is a viable animal (able to breed).


“We’re very excited about what that might reveal,” said Hamish. “It is a very rare opportunity to have an animal like this to have those tests done.”


If it is indeed a hybrid hawksbill-green turtle, Mark Harmann, an associate professor of marine biology at James Cook University, says it will be the first recorded in Australian waters. However, he added, “that’s not to say it wouldn’t have happened before.”


Hybrid turtle


Sofie, a green turtle, brought to Reef HQ in February 2016, shares some traits – such as single-clawed flippers – with Summer. (Image: Reef HQ Great Barrier Reef Aquarium)


Mark said cases have been recorded in East Africa and Southern and Central America, and it comes down to people recognising the difference and reporting it.


Until the necessary testing has been conducted, Summer will be kept at the hospital and used for educational purposes, and with her recovery on track Hamish said she will then be released back to her natural environment.


“I’m glad to say that we’re very confident of her going back to the wild,” he said, adding, “She will certainly be a success story and if we can get a bit more knowledge from her whilst we’ve got her then it’s a win-win for everyone.”


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Hybrid turtle possible first in Australia

India's first underwater restaurant opens






India has got its first underwater restaurant in Ahmedabad, Gujarat. The restaurant named Real Poseidon offers unique dining experience 20-feet below ground level along with picturesque view of aquatic species.


A report in The Indian Express states that February will see Amdavadis have a new place to dock their palates, with an underwater restaurant making its way into the city’s culinary landscape.



Restaurant owner Bharat Bhatt informed that he conceived the idea of setting up an underwater restaurant from his son, adding that he has been working on this project since two years.



The 32-seater restaurant opens its doors to diners on February 1 and offers a culinary experience like no other. According to reports, Real Poseidon is built 20 feet below ground level and offers its diners a view of over 4000 species of fish all around it.


The menu at Real Poseidon offers a wide variety of cuisines including Indian, Thai, Chinese and Mexican. However, the only fish available at restaurant are the ones you can look at while dining. The restaurant only offers an all-vegetarian dining experience.




Here are the features of the restaurant:


1.Spread across 3000 square feet, it’s plushed with 1,50,000 litres of water.


2.Around 4000 species of fish and marine species are sourced from the local markets in Ahmedabad, Rajkot and Vadodara.


3.The restaurant offers vegetarian food from different cuisines like Punjabi, Thai, Chinese, and Mexican.


4.It has a 1,200 square feet dining hall with 32 seaters. 5.In the near future, it will also have a live orchestra/band for the diners’ entertainment.




 The world’s most incredible underwater restaurants


Here are some of the most fascinating innovations in underwater travel.


 Ithaa Undersea Restaurant, Maldives



Ithaa boasts the title of the world’s first all-glass undersea restaurant, located 16 feet below sea level at the Conrad Maldives Rangali Island hotel.  Ithaa consists of three five-metre wide x 125mm thick glass arches sitting one metre below the sea level during low tide and almost two metres at high tide, the widest constructed underwater structure in the world at the time of building. The inside of the restaurant is nine metres long and five metres wide and sits on four ‘legs’ 8 metres above the seabed. 


The Al Mahara, Dubai  



The floor-to-ceiling aquarium inside Al Mahara is exactly the underwater dining experience you’d expect from a restaurant within Dubai’s luxurious Burj Al Arab hotel. Diners are ushered through a golden tunnel into the elipse-shaped dining room, a space dominated by a colossal central aquarium that bathes the surrounding tables in gentle turquoise light. 


Subsix, Maldives



Located nearly 20 feet below the Indian Ocean, Subsix earns bragging rights as the world’s first underwater club. International DJs spin as patrons dance beneath the waves. The floor-to-ceiling windows lining the walls of the Subsix provide spectacular night views of the illuminated ocean floor. More than 545 yards from the coast, Subsix is only accessible by boat from the Niyama Resort. 


Cargo Hold, South Africa



Housed within the stern of the Phantom Ship, a tribute to Durban’s coastal ghost lore, Cargo Hold Restaurant incorporates the region’s culture and history into its ambiance. The ‘Cargo Hold’ restaurant is built in a replica of South Africa’s legendary ghost ship ‘The Phantom’ and masterfully incorporated into the famous uShaka aquarium.  


Jules’ Undersea Lodge, Florida


Image courtesy: Daily Mail


Jules’ Undersea Lodge is an American hotel located in Key Largo, Florida and is the only underwater hotel in the United States. It is 30 feet deep on the ocean floor and guests have to scuba dive to get to their rooms. The hotel is located at the bottom of the Emerald Lagoon and was opened in 1986. 


Utter Inn, Sweden



Utter Inn is an art project by Mikael Genberg that offers underwater accommodation to the public. The facility is entered through a small, typical-appearing Swedish house located on the surface of the water. The ‘floatel’ is the brainchild of artist Mikael Genburg, known for his unique hotel experiences including one in a tree in a city centre park, and the sunken villa which opened this summer not far from Utter Inn by Lake Malaren, Vasteras. 


The Poseidon Resort



The Poseidon Resort comprises approximately 225 acres and is about a mile long. It is surrounded by a 5,000-acre lagoon and boasts pristine waters abundant sea life. The resort claims to be perfect for the ‘elite vacationer’ and boasts breathtaking views of the nearby corals and vibrant sealife from the windows of the individual suites. The complex is 40feett under the sea in an off-shore lagoon and houses 25 suites, as well as a restaurant, gym, and even an underwater wedding chapel.


SEA Restaurant, Maldives


Image courtesy: Daily Mail


From your over-water villa, head underwater to the aptly named Sea at Anantara Kihavah Villas in the Maldives. The mirrored interior reflects the surrounding Indian Ocean sea life as you dine on European cuisine and take suggestions from the sommelier. 


Aquarium Restaurant



Image courtesy:Culturemagnet.com


This “underwater dining adventure” is right in the heart of Nashville. Located within the Opry Mills Mall, the Aquarium Restaurant offers expansive underwater views of its 200,000-gallon aquarium. The menu includes mahi mahi, shrimp, and macadamia-crusted tilapia, paired with views of an aquarium that houses more than 100 species of fish from around the world.






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India"s first underwater restaurant opens

Vancouver Aquarium certifies first Ocean Wise pet food

A new pet food company is making it easier for dog owners to make ethical and humane choices when it comes to feeding their four-legged friend.


The Vancouver Aquarium’s Ocean Wise program, which gives consumers a way to choose sustainable seafood while limiting our impact on the world’s oceans, has just certified its very first pet food.


It’s an important milestone for the Ocean Wise program, which has added more than 600 restaurants, retailers and suppliers that offer sustainable seafood since launching 10 years ago.


Open Farm will use sustainable Ocean Wise-recommended fish in its “Catch-of-the-Day Whitefish and Green Lentil” recipe. The ocean-caught fish selection will rotate seasonally based on what’s available.


Each bag will be stamped with the local whitefish that’s used, like Pacific Cod, for example.



(Open Farm)

Image: Open Farm



By sourcing seasonally, the company says it can guarantee the freshest fish while also maintaining its commitment to using sustainable sources.


“We can also give pet parents a high level of comfort in where their pet’s food comes from,” company founder Jacqueline Prehogan tells Vancity Buzz.


At a time where more Canadians are starting to demand more wholesome and ethically sourced food, the sustainable pet food marks a much bigger shift in consumer behaviour – and demands, says Ann-Marie Copping, program manager at Ocean Wise.


“Open Farm pet food has helped to send a message that eating sustainable goes beyond what we order in restaurants or buy at the fish counter. It’s a lifestyle choice. Consumer awareness has noticeably increased in recent years,” she told Vancity Buzz.



It isn’t limited to sustainable fish: Open Farm only uses humanely and sustainably farmed meats and local vegetables, and is the first and only dog food to receive the Humane Farm Animal Care Certified Humane® label.  Their standards are extensive, and include how animals are handled, how much space they have and what they’re fed.


“We started this company because we could never understand loving our pets and feeding them factory farm meats that comes from animals that weren’t even treated without even a basic level of respect. We wanted to give people a humane option,” said Prehogan.


“Each purchase improves the lives of farm animals used in food production, rewarding family farmers who are doing things the right way, and incentivizing conventional farmers to adopt humane and sustainable practices,” said Prehogan.



Open Farm pet food products. (Instagram)

Open Farm pet food products / Instagram



Bowing to huge demand, the company is currently working on wet and dry cat food formulas, and dog treats.


Open Farm’s philosophy is a breath of fresh air in an industry that has a less than pristine reputation. A recent Slate series exposed the darker side of the pet food industry, revealing that things like recalled meat, roadkill, dead zoo animals and even euthanized pets can end up being ground up and processed into pet food.


The food is available in pet specialty store in the Vancouver area as well as in Coquitlam, Kelowna, Port Moody, Langley, Burnaby, Penticton, Abbotsford and Richmond. You can find a complete list and store locator on its website.



Vancouver Aquarium certifies first Ocean Wise pet food

Octopus Cannibalism Caught on Video for First Time


Related Links



When octopuses go hunting for prey, they sometimes end up “dining” on members of their own species, and the cephalopods seem to have a taste for their victims’ arm tips.


Divers have captured video of this octopus-on-octopus action in the wild for the first time on video.


In a new study, researchers described three cases of cannibalism in the common octopus — Octopus vulgaris — recorded with a camcorder by scuba divers in Ría de Vigo, Spain, located on the northeastern Atlantic coast. In two of the cases, the predators had started to eat the tips of the arms of their prey by the time the divers found them. [See Images of the Cannibalistic Octopus]


And, in one of the cases, the predator had access to more “traditional” prey in the form of mussels, but it still chose to feed on another, smaller octopus.


Although scientists had been aware of cannibalism occurrences among members of O. vulgaris, the previously reported cases were known only from analyses of stomach contents and laboratory observations, the researchers wrote in the study published Sept. 8 in the Journal of Comparative Psychology.


However, “this behavior has never been described from direct observations in the wild by scuba diving,” said study author Jorge Hernández-Urcera of the Institute of Marine Research (IIM) in Vigo, Spain.


The researchers documented the first of the three cannibalism cases on Dec. 11, 2012, at a depth of 40 feet (12 meters), on a rocky bottom off the Cíes Islands, which are part of the National Park of the Atlantic Islands of Galicia (NAPAIG). A male octopus weighing about 4.85 pounds (2.2 kilograms) was holding in its grasp a smaller octopus without visible sexual characteristics, which weighed a bit less than a pound (about 400 grams). [See Video of the Cannibalistic Octopus in Action]


“The animal was dead, showing a pale white color and the tips of its arms had been eaten,” the researchers wrote.


The second case was recorded July 13, 2013, on a sandy bottom about 60 feet (18 m) below the surface near the Estelas Islands. A male octopus of about the same weight as the in first case carried an octopus weighing a bit more than a pound (540 grams) inside a ball-shaped sack that it had formed with its arms and web – the skin between its arms that it can spread to capture prey.


The diver who recorded the case realized that “the prey was still alive, because it poked and moved one of its arms between the dorsal pair of arms of the predator,” the researchers wrote. The diver disturbed the predator, which in turn let go of the prey, letting it escape, and therefore the researchers classified this case as “an attempted predation.”



Octopus Cannibalism Caught on Video for First Time

Carp virus first seen in Rock River spreading to hit Janesville, Beloit in coming weeks


NEWVILLE, Wis. — The koi herpes virus that’s expected to kill thousands of common carp has spread from Rock River to Lake Koshkonong, and will likely hit Janesville and Beloit in the next few weeks, a Wisconsin biologist said.


Laura Stremick-Thompson, a fisheries biologist at the state Department of Natural Resources, told The Janesville Gazette (http://bit.ly/1lynACf ) local residents have reported hundreds of dead fish downstream of Lake Koshkonong and upstream of the Indianford Dam. One man said he has picked up about 30 dead carp along the Lake Koshkonong shoreline.


The koi herpes virus affects carp like Ebola affects humans, according to Stremick-Thompson, with a mortality rate that can reach up to 80 percent. She said the virus only affects koi species, which include common carp, and was probably spread by a domesticated koi fish that was abandoned in the Rock River.


This outbreak marks the first time the virus has been reported in Wisconsin waters, but Stremick-Thompson said now it’s here to stay.


“Hopefully, this virus will take a really large bite out of the carp population. They’re very destructive to the overall habitat,” said Brian Christianson, chairman of the Rock-Koshkonong Lake District.


But future outbreaks shouldn’t be as bad because survivors will build immunity to the virus and reproduce, Stremick-Thompson said.


“It’s not going to kill all the carp. It’s really just creating a very bad situation for our recreational water users,” she said.


The state Department of Natural Resources, the lake district and Rock County Health Department are not responsible for cleanup, so people may be deterred from participating in activities involving the affected water.





Carp virus first seen in Rock River spreading to hit Janesville, Beloit in coming weeks

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Tennessee Aquarium Announces First Penguin Chick of 2014

Ka'ena Volcano: First building block for O'ahu discovered

Ka


Boulder, Colo., USA – Researcher John Sinton of the University of Hawai’i along with colleagues from the Monterrey Bay Aquarium and the French National Center for Scientific Research have announced the discovery of an ancient Hawaiian volcano. Now located in a region of shallow bathymetry extending about 100 km WNW from Ka’ena Point at the western tip of O’ahu, this volcano, which they have named Ka’ena, would have risen about 1,000 meters above sea level 3.5 million years ago.


Sinton and colleagues have found compelling evidence beneath the sea that this long-lived volcano was the first to contribute to the formation the island of O’ahu, and that the younger Wai’anae and Ko’olau volcanoes were built on its flanks. Geological observations of the seafloor and studies of volcanic rocks collected from Ka’ena provide evidence for its age and details of its lava chemistry and volcanic evolution. This GSA Bulletin paper was posted online on 2 May 2014.


More GSA Bulletin articles are highlighted below.


GSA BULLETIN articles published ahead of print are online at http://gsabulletin.gsapubs.org/content/early/recent; abstracts are open-access at http://gsabulletin.gsapubs.org/. Representatives of the media may obtain complimentary copies of articles by contacting Kea Giles.


Sign up for pre-issue publication e-alerts at http://www.gsapubs.org/cgi/alerts for first access to new journal content as it is posted. Subscribe to RSS feeds at http://gsabulletin.gsapubs.org/rss/.


Please discuss articles of interest with the authors before publishing stories on their work, and please make reference to GSA BULLETIN in your articles or blog posts. Contact Kea Giles for additional information or assistance.


Non-media requests for articles may be directed to GSA Sales and Service, gsaservice@geosociety.org.


FEATURED ARTICLE


Ka’ena Volcano — A precursor volcano of the island of O’ahu, Hawai’i J.M. Sinton et al., University of Hawai’i, 1680 East-West Road, Honolulu, Hawaii 96822, USA. Posted online 2 May 2014; http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/B30936.1.


Age and provenance of a Paleoproterozoic to Devonian Canadian Cordilleran sequence of metasedimentary rocks, Thor-Odin dome, southeastern British Columbia Y. Kuiper et al., Dept. of Geology and Geological Engineering, Colorado School of Mines, 1516 Illinois Street, Golden, Colorado 80401, USA, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/B31031.1.


The Thor-Odin dome is an area that has been subject to high pressures and temperatures between ~160 and ~50 million years ago as a result of the formation of the Canadian Cordillera. The rocks are now metamorphic rocks, but they were originally sedimentary rocks deposited along the western margin of what is currently the North American continent. They were brought at deeper levels during Cordilleran mountain building and back at the surface through erosion. The sediment was derived from eroded material that contains a mineral zircon. Numerous of these zircon grains per sample were dated by U-Pb radiometric dating, to investigate the age of the original sediments and the source areas of the zircon grains and sediment. The grains have young overgrowths formed during the Cordilleran mountain building event, but older original cores are preserved that allowed us to conduct out study. The oldest units in the Thor-Odin dome are some of the oldest known sedimentary rocks in the Canadian Cordillera after the formation of the current Canadian Shield. The youngest rocks were deposited shortly before the onset of the Cordilleran mountain building. Parts of as many as ~1.4 billion years of sedimentary history are preserved.


The Pinal Schist of southern Arizona: A Paleoproterozoic forearc complex with evidence of spreading ridge-trench interaction at ca. 1.65 Ga and a Proterozoic arc obduction event Arend Meijer, 9870 E. Fire Agate Place, Tucson, Arizona 85749, USA. Published online 18 Apr. 2014; http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/B31002.1.



Bathymetric map of the seafloor west of O’ahu, Hawai’i, is shown.


(Photo Credit: Sinton et al., GSA Bulletin)




This article by Arend Meijer proposes a new model for the origin of the basement rocks of southern Arizona. In most respects, the model is similar to models for modern-day subduction zones, such as the Cascade subduction zone. However, the model also involves the subduction of an oceanic spreading ridge beneath Arizona 1.65 billion years ago. In this sense, the model is more similar to models for the evolution of the California coast between 10 and 25 million years ago when the East Pacific Rise was subducted beneath California. The advantage of the Arizona terrane over the modern-day subduction terranes is that in Arizona, the internal workings of a subduction zone that experienced a spreading ridge subduction event are exposed at the present-day surface.


Hematite replacement of iron-bearing precursor sediments in the 3.46-b.y.-old Marble Bar Chert, Pilbara craton, Australia B. Rasmussen et al., Dept. of Applied Geology, Curtin University, Kent Street, Bentley, WA 6102, Australia. Published online 15 May 2014; http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/B31049.1.


The ancient history of atmospheric oxygen is not well understood but is of the utmost importance because its accumulation profoundly transformed our planet. The presence of the iron-oxide mineral, hematite, in the Marble Bar Chert from a NASA-funded drill hole in the Pilbara Craton, Australia, has been cited as evidence for an oxygen-bearing ocean 3.46 billion years ago, however, others argue that isotopic data from hematite in the same drill-hole indicates that the ocean contained no oxygen. Both groups agree that the hematite formed in the ocean or just below the seafloor. Our study shows that hematite in jasper bands from the Marble Bar Chert formed long after deposition. The hematite replaced preexisting iron-bearing minerals during the infiltration of oxygen-bearing fluids, imparting the characteristic red color long after deposition. A secondary origin for hematite invalidates arguments for oxygen in the ocean ~3.46 billion ago and provides a new explanation for the formation of ancient jasper bands. We conclude that misinterpretations about the origin of hematite in ancient cherts could lead to false conclusions about the chemistry of the ocean and atmosphere on the early Earth.


Heat flow data in the Four Corners area suggests Neogene crustal warming resulting from partial-lithosphere replacement in the Colorado Plateau interior, southwest USA M. Reiter, New Mexico Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources, Emeritus, New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology, Socorro, New Mexico 87801, USA. Published online 2 May 2014; http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/B30951.1.


Colorado Plateau uplift is of great geologic interest; and heat flow data can provide boundary conditions which need to be met by uplift models. The relative structural continuity of the Plateau interior with respect to the neighboring Southern Rockies and Basin and Range suggests a distinctive Neogene lithosphere evolution. The Four Corners region represents a most unique location in the Colorado Plateau, and perhaps the world, where both low-noise heat flow data, and mineralogical studies relating to pre-Neogene lithosphere temperatures are available. Using a model for heat flow-temperature-depth relations, the mineralogical data allow heat flow and lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary depth (LAB) estimates for about 25 million years ago. With present-day heat flow measurements the present LAB can be approximated. From these calculations the Neogene change in LAB depth (lithosphere thickness) is suggested to be ~ 100 km. The derived Neogene change in near surface heat flow is attributed to non-radioactive heat sources below the crust. The change in lithosphere thickness of ~ 100 km suggests a similar amount of lithosphere replacement may be responsible for the Neogene increase in near surface heat flow. Straightforward models imply partial upper-mantle lithosphere replacement can produce the calculated Neogene heat flow change.


Detrital zircon geochronology of the Grenville/Llano foreland and basal Sauk Sequence in west Texas, USA Christopher J. Spencer et al., Dept. of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of St. Andrews, North Street, St. Andrews KY16 9AL, UK. Published online 18 Apr. 2014; http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/B30884.1.


Christopher J. Spencer and colleagues present ages of zircons from approx. 1.1 billion and approx. 520 million-year-old sedimentary units in west Texas. These zircons provide evidence that the approx. 1.1-billion-year-old sedimentary rocks (the Lanoria and Hazel formations) were deposited in a foreland basin of the Grenvillian mountain system that stretches from west Texas to southern Norway. The younger, approx. 520-million-year-old unit (the Van Horn Formation) was deposited near the shoreline of Laurentia as it rifted away from the supercontinent Rodinia. This study revises the age of the Van Horn Formation from the assumed Neoproterozoic Era to the Middle Cambrian Era. This new age further implies the flooding of the western margin of present-day North America during the Cambrian took place 20 million years earlier than previously thought.


Constraining chronology and time-space evolution of Holocene volcanic activity on the Capelo Peninsula (Faial Island, Azores): The paleomagnetic contribution Anita Di Chiara et al., Istituto Nazionale di Geofisicae Vulcanologia Roma, Via Vigna Murata, 605, 00143 Roma, Italy, and Università degli Studi di Bologna, Dipartimento di Fisica e Astronomia, Viale Berti Pichat, 6/2, 40127, Bologna, Italy. Published online 18 Apr. 2014; http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/B30933.1.


Faial is one of the nine islands of the Azores Archipelago (central-northern Atlantic Ocean); it is an active volcano where two historical eruptions occurred during A.D. 1672-1673 and in A.D. 1957-1958 (the famous Capelinhos eruption). Both the eruptions took place on the Capelo Peninsula (westernmost sector of the island). This study by Anita Di Chiara and colleagues aims at constraining the age of the older exposed volcanic products, so far loosely dated within last 10,000 years (Holocene). Di Chiara and colleagues used paleomagnetism to correlate scoria cones and lava flows yielded by the same eruption, sampling 31 sites (10 basaltic scoriae, 21 basaltic lava flows). In the investigated products, the team recognizes six prehistoric clusters of volcanic activity, correlating 11 lava sites with 4 scoria cones. Dating was assigned by comparing their data with values expected from European relocated reference curves of the paleosecular variation of the geomagnetic field. Di Chiara and colleagues suggest that the studied volcanic rocks of the Peninsula are younger than previously believed, entirely formed in the last 8,000 years, and the activity intensified over the last 3,000 years. This study confirms paleomagnetism as a powerful tool for unraveling the chronology and characteristics of recent activity at volcanoes where geochronological age constraints are lacking.


Magnetic polarity stratigraphy and palynostratigraphy of the Mississippian-Pennsylvanian boundary interval in eastern North America and the age of the beginning of the Kiaman N.D. Opdyke et al., Dept. of Earth Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32611, USA, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/B30953.1.


From the abstract: Magnetic polarity data from the Maritimes Basin in eastern Canada reveal patterns of magnetic reversal through approx. 17 million years of late Mississippian and early Pennsylvanian time. We collected samples from three sections on Cape Breton Island, a fourth that extends a section studied previously, and a fifth from a deep cored well on Prince Edward Island. We compared the polarity data from these sections to previous results from lower parts of the Joggins section of eastern Canada. … Field mapping and magnetic polarity data show closely comparable Mississippian-Pennsylvanian relationships in the Maritimes Basin more than 1500 km northeast of the U.S. sections. … We believe that this polarity boundary is the base of the Kiaman. An early Langsettian position (ca. 318 Ma) for the base-Kiaman superchron is indicated by these new data. In eastern Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, the sedimentary rocks just above the unconformity are of reversed polarity. It is clear that the sedimentation in the two areas is affected by the unconformity, and no magnetic or palynological correlation is possible.


U-Pb geochronology of the type Nazas Formation and superjacent strata, northeastern Durango, Mexico: Implications of a Jurassic age for continental-arc magmatism in north-central Mexico T.F. Lawton and R.S. Molina Garza, Centro de Geociencias, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM), Boulevard Juriquilla No. 3001, Querétaro 76230, México. Published online 2 May; http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/B30827.1.


U-Pb ages on volcanic ignimbrites and U-Pb detrital ages on associated sandstone in the type Nazas Formation and overlying Upper Jurassic strata in northern Durango, Mexico, demonstrate convincingly that a volcanic arc was present on the continental margin of north-central Mexico in Middle Jurassic time. The magmatism is equivalent in age to similar magmatism in the southwestern US and indicates that the volcanic arc likely continued from the US across northern Mexico. Wind-blown sand that is interbedded in the Middle Jurassic magmatic rocks in southern Arizona and northern Sonora is absent in Durango, despite the presence of abundant red sandstone and shales in Durango. This provides evidence that the rocks in Durango and Sonora were not originally deposited in adjacent settings and subsequently separated by a large-displacement strike-slip fault known as the Mojave-Sonora megashear.


Multiple intrusions and remelting-remobilization events in a magmatic arc: The St. Peter Suite, South Australia N.J. Symington et al., R. Weinberg (corresponding), Monash University School of Geosciences Clayton, Victoria 3800 Australia. Published online 15 May 2014; http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/B30975.1.


The ring of fire surrounding the Pacific Ocean is made of volcanoes fed from magmas formed deep beneath the continental crust. These magmas intrude the crust and cool to form granitic bodies or they keep rising and are extruded from volcanoes giving rise to magmatic arcs. During this process magmas interact with their surroundings exchanging heat and exchanging mass giving rise to a large variety of rocks, mineral deposits and styles of volcanism. In the coast of South Australia, we have the roots of a 1.6 billion year old magmatic arc where we have documented this heat and mass transfer. This exchange leads to a dynamic setting where younger magmas intrude, disrupt and mix with older magmas, or cause the remelting of solidified older batches. Although widely expected on theoretical grounds and indirect evidence, cannibalization of the magmatic arc itself, through remelting has seldom been documented. We concluded that the continuous influx of new magmas reworking slightly older intrusions explains the large variety of end products that so characterizes the ring of fire and all other magmatic arcs formed across history of Earth.


Origin and evolution of the Bainaimiao arc belt: Implications for crustal growth in the southern Central Asian Orogenic Belt S.-H. Zhang et al., Institute of Geomechanics, Chinese Academy of Geological Sciences, MLR Key Laboratory of Paleomagnetism and Tectonic Reconstruction, Beijing 100081, China. Published online 15 May 2014; http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/B31042.1.


Recent results show that evolution of the huge Central Asian Orogenic Belt (CAOB) can be explained in terms of southwest Pacific-style accretion of arcs and microcontinents. As a most important Early Paleozoic arc system south to the Solonker suture zone, origin and evolution of the Bainaimiao arc belt are still not well constrained. New geochronological and geochemical results on magmatic rocks indicate that the Bainaimiao arc was active from 0.52 to 0.42 billion years ago and can extend to east Siping in NE China. Zircon U-Pb geochronological results of metasedimentary rocks in the Bainaimiao arc belt indicate that they are Early Paleozoic in age, not Precambrian as previously regarded. Detrital zircon analysis of metasedimentary rocks and Sr-Nd-Hf geochemical results of magmatic rocks indicate that the Bainaimiao arc was built upon a Precambrian microcontinent with tectonic affinity to the Tarim or Yangtze cratons. The arc was separated by a wide ocean from the northern NCC during Cambrian-Ordovician period. Successive northward subduction resulted in contraction of the ocean and final accretion of the Bainaimiao arc to the northern NCC during Late Silurian-earliest Devonian by arc-continent collision. Arc-continent collision could be an important mechanism for continental crustal growth and formation of huge CAOB.



Ka"ena Volcano: First building block for O"ahu discovered