875 research outputs found

    Picrite-basalt associated to Ethiopian-Yemeni CFB and their relevance to mantle plume processes

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    The Oligocene Northern Ethiopian-Yemeni LIP, represented by a CFB plateau extending ca. 700 km in diameter, is characterized by a well-defined zonal arrangement with increasing plume-related physico-chemical features of erupted magmas, such as thermal regime, incompatible element enrichment and specific Sr-Nd-Pb-He isotopic fingerprint, from the periphery to the central plateau area [1]. Two CFB volcanic piles in the Lalibela district (Northern Ethiopia, ca. 2 km thick) and in the Manakhah section (Northern Yemeni plateau, ca. 1 km thick) which erupted close to the Oligocene Afar plume axis, are similarly characterized by very high-Titransitional basalts and picrites (HT2, [1] [2]) that account for ca. 13% (40,000 km3) of the total Ethiopian-Yemeni CFB lavas. These magmas are characterized, in addition to the extremely high TiO2content (3-6 wt%) by a high MgO content (mostly between 8 and 18 wt%), and show striking compositional analogies with those from the Karoo province and the Siberian meimechites [3] [4]. Petrological modelling based on whole rock FeO-MgO and Ol composition [5] indicates that some of picrites (MgO 16-17 wt%) are near-primary magmas with olivine phenoscrysts up to Fo 90.4. Calculation shows that the primary melts have picrite composition MgO 19.8-20.7 wt% and were generated by polybaric melting in the pressure range 3-4 GPa at a potential temperature of 1570°C. Together with high-MgO lavas from Hawaii and Gorgona, these are the highest temperatures of any OIB and LIP lavas. The available data suggest that HT2 magma sources necessarily require the involvement of specific high-Ti (and Fe) deep-seated sublithospheric components which were entrained and remobilized by the rising plume. References: [1] Beccaluva et al. (2009), J. Petrol. 50, 1377-1403. [2] Beccaluva et al. (2011), GSA Sp. Paper 478, 77-104. [3] Ellam & Cox (1991), Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 105, 330-342. [4] Heinonen et al.(2014), Earth Planet. Sci. Lett.394, 229-241. [5] Herzberg et al. (2007), Geochem. Geophys. Geosyst. 8, doi:10.1029GC001390

    High-MgO lavas associated to CFB as indicators of plume-related thermochemical effects: the case of ultra-titaniferous picrite-basalt from the Northern Ethiopian-Yemeni plateau

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    A comprehensive petrological and geochemical dataset is reported in order to define the thermo-compositional characteristics of Ti (Fe)-enriched picrite-basalt lavas (HT2, TiO2 3-7 wt%), erupted close to the axial zone of the inferred Afar mantle plume, at the centre of the originally continuous Ethiopian-Yemeni CFB plateau (ca. 30Ma) which is zonally arranged with progressively lower Ti basalts (HT1, TiO2 2-4 wt%; LT, TiO2 1-3 wt%) toward the periphery. Integrated petrogenetic modelling based on major and trace element analyses of bulk rocks, minerals and melt inclusions in olivines, as well as Sr-Nd-Pb-He-O isotope compositional variations enables us to make several conclusions. 1) The phase equilibria constraints indicate that HT2 primary picrites were generated at ca. 1570°C mantle potential temperatures (Tp) in the pressure range 4-5 GPa whereas the HT1 and LT primary melts formed at shallower level (< 2 to 3 GPa, Tp 1530 °C for HT1 and 1430°C for LT). Thus the Afar plume head was a thermally and compositionally zoned melting region with maximum excess temperatures of 300-350°C with respect to the ambient mantle. 2) The HT2 primary melts upwelled nearly adiabatically to the base of the continental crust (ca. 1 GPa) where fractionation of olivine, followed by clinopyroxene, led to variably differentiated picritic and basaltic magmas. 3) Trace element modelling requires that the primary HT2 melts were generated - either by fractional or batch melting (F 9-10%) - from a mixed garnet peridotite source (85%) with 15% eclogite (derived from transitional MORB protoliths included in Panafrican terranes) that has to be considered a specific Ti-Fe and incompatible element enriched component entrained by the Afar plume. 4) The LT, HT1 and HT2 lavas have 143Nd/144Nd = 0.5131-0.5128, whereas Sr-Pb isotopes are positively correlated with TiO2, varying from 87 Sr/86Sr 0.7032 and 206Pb/204Pb 18.2 in LT basalts to 87Sr/86Sr 0.7044 and 206Pb/204Pb 19.4 in HT2 picrite-basalts. High 3He/4He (15-20 RA) ratios are exclusively observed in HT2 lavas, confirming earlier evidence that these magmas require a component of deep mantle in addition to eclogite, while the LT basalts may more effectively reflect the signature of the pre-existing mantle domains. The comparison between high-MgO (13-22%) lavas from several Phanerozoic CFB provinces (Karoo, Paranà-Etendeka, Emeishan, Siberia, Deccan, North Atlantic Province) shows that they share extremely high mantle potential temperatures (Tp 1550-1700°C) supporting the view that hot mantle plumes are favoured candidates for triggering many LIPs. However, the high incompatible element and isotopic variability of these high-MgO lavas (and associated CFB) suggest that plume thermal anomalies are not necessarily accompanied by significant and specific chemical effects, which depend on the nature of mantle materials recycled during the plume rise, as well as by the extent of related mantle enrichments (if any) on the pre-existing lithospheric section

    Fluid pressure cycles, variations in permeability, and weakening mechanisms along low-angle normal faults: the Tellaro detachment, Italy

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    Classical frictional fault reactivation models indicate that slip along misoriented fault planes is not possible under most conditions. Nevertheless, active or exhumed low-angle normal faults have been described in many settings worldwide. This discrepancy is addressed by contrasting models: (1) those proposing that low-angle normal faults result from postkinematic passive rotation of former high-angle extensional faults; and (2) those proposing that specific conditions can promote slip along misoriented fault planes. This paper describes the Tellaro detachment, a mid–late Miocene low-angle normal fault that was responsible for ∼500 m of tectonic vertical thinning in the carbonate-dominated Triassic to Lower Miocene succession of the Northern Apennines, Italy. By integrating structural, petrographic, isotopic, and fluid inclusion data, we show that: (1) the main kinematic activity of the Tellaro detachment occurred between ∼8 and 4 km depths and peak temperature ∼190 °C; (2) dilational breccias, tens of cubic meters in volume, are frequently associated with major low-angle fault segments; (3) slip along misoriented planes was favored by elevated fluid pressures and low differential stress; and (4) the fault system was characterized by transient permeability pulses and overpressure buildups, associated with multiple fracturing and cementation events that caused the downward migration of master slip surfaces. Results presented in this study show that: (1) in a fluid-active regime, continental crustal thinning can occur for shallow values of fault dip; (2) low-angle normal faults have a great influence on fluid circulation within the upper crust; and (3) episodic permeability enhancement and destruction in detachment faults can promote overpressure buildups, triggering deformation episodes

    Evolution of the Earth's mantle-crust-atmosphere system from the trace element and isotope geochemistry of the plume-mantle reservoir

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    The 62 million year old lava flows of Baffin Island and West Greenland represent the earliest phase of magmatism in the North Atlantic Igneous Province (NAIP). These picritic lavas are characterised by high magnesium contents owing to their high proportion of olivine crystals. The parental magmas for the picrites are likely to have accumulated olivine crystals on their transit through the lithosphere and crust. Debate over the origin of accumulated crystals in the lavas results in uncertainty in the temperature and composition of the parental magmas for the early NAIP. The magnesium-rich olivine crystals (up to Fo93) in the picrites of this study are shown not to have a xenocrystic origin. The samples, therefore, support the inference of high potential temperatures for the Baffin Island-West Greenland magmas, ~200oC above ambient mantle. The picrites of Baffin Island and West Greenland display the highest terrestrial magmatic 3He/4He (up to 50 Ra, where Ra is the atmospheric value 1.39 x 10-6), values that are considerably higher than the highest 3He/4He in contemporary ocean island basalts, which reach a maximum of ~30 Ra. High 3He/4He in Baffin Island and West Greenland are associated with a wide range of incompatible trace element and lithophile radiogenic isotopic compositions, not dissimilar to the range of compositions displayed by lavas at mid-ocean ridges, and overlapping the range displayed by most northern hemisphere ocean island basalts. Crustal contamination modelling in which high-grade Proterozoic crustal basement rocks are mixed with depleted parents cannot account for the compositional trends displayed by the picrites. Major and trace element compositions were determined on melt inclusions in high- 3He/4He picrites that span a wide range of whole-rock incompatible trace element and radiogenic isotopic compositions. The melt inclusions support the findings from the whole-rock study since melt inclusion compositions reflect the composition of their associated whole-rock, with no anomalous compositions present. In addition, there is no evidence for a contribution of a proportion of depleted melts to the source of the relatively enriched whole-rock samples. Therefore, since all melt inclusions were contained within high-3He/4He samples, it is shown that high 3He/4He is a feature of both depleted and relatively enriched melt compositions. The wide range in whole-rock compositions of the Baffin Island and West Greenland picrites represents that of the sub-lithospheric mantle source region and is inconsistent with derivation of the picrites from residues of ancient mantle depletion. The apparent decoupling of helium from trace elements and radiogenic isotopes is hard to reconcile with simple mixing of a high-helium concentration, high-3He/4He reservoir with various depleted and enriched helium-poor mantle reservoirs. It is possible that primordial helium has diffused into a reservoir with a composition similar to that of the convecting upper mantle. However, this must have occurred after the development of existing mantle heterogeneity. The high-3He/4He picrites require the existence of a deep, primordial helium-rich reservoir. Whether this reservoir is present in the upper or deep mantle, or even the core, remains uncertain

    Radiogenic Isotopes and Mantle Evolution

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    The radiogenic decay products of radioactive isotopes have been widely used to constrain the extent of compositional heterogeneity in Earth's mantle and the evolution of the silicate Earth. Several radioactive-radiogenic isotope systems have half-lives that are long compared to the age of the Earth and Solar System and provide a time-integrated history of Earth differentiation. Other systems with much shorter half-lives (e.g., 146Smsingle bond142Nd) elucidate processes that occurred in the early Earth when the parent isotopes were extant. Using meteorites as representative of the initial Solar System it is possible to construct evolutionary models for the bulk Earth. The silicate portion of the Earth differentiated into a continental crust enriched in elements that preferentially enter the melt phase during partial melting and a complementary depleted mantle residuum. Mid ocean ridge and ocean island basalts reveal the extent of isotopic heterogeneity in the sub-lithospheric mantle which can be characterized by a series of end-member components, but which are only speculatively linked to definite sources or geological processes. Isotopic systems that are dominated by radioactive (parent) to radiogenic (daughter) element fractionation due to mantle partial melting e.g., Smsingle bondNd and Lusingle bondHf are relatively coherent whereas systems that are affected by intra-crustal processes e.g., Rbsingle bondSr, Usingle bondPb exhibit more complexity. Continental basalts are more isotopically diverse than their oceanic counterparts suggesting interaction between deep-seated magmas and the lithospheric plates. Both contamination with continental crust and entrainment of sub-continental lithospheric mantle have been implicated

    Corrigendum: Machine learning clinical decision support for interdisciplinary multimodal chronic musculoskeletal pain treatment

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    In the published article, there was a mistake in the corresponding author email address for author Rob J. E. M. Smeets. The email was incorrectly displayed as “[email protected]” The correct email address is: “[email protected]” The authors apologize for this error and state that this does not change the scientific conclusions of the article in any way. The original article has been updated.</p

    Tactile Feedback for Artery Detection in Minimally Invasive Robotic Surgery –Preliminary Results of a New Approach

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    Minimally invasive robotic surgery (MIRS) entails total absence of haptic feedback due to the spatial separation of patient and surgeon. In conventional surgery, however, palpation to detect superficial arteries by a slight pulsation is an important, commonly applied, and security-relevant procedure. Therefore, an ultrasound based unidirectional sensor for MIRS was developed feeding back kinesthetic impulses to the surgeon-sided haptic input device

    Effect and Improvement Areas for Port State Control Inspections to Decrease the Probability of Casualty

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    This report is the fourth part of a PhD project called "The Econometrics of Maritime Safety – Recommendations to Enhance Safety at Sea" and is based on 183,000 port state control inspections and 11,700 casualties from various data sources. Its overall objective is to provide recommendations to improve safety at sea. The fourth part looks into measuring the effect of inspections on the probability of casualty on either seriousness or casualty first event to show the differences across the regimes. It further gives a link of casualties that were found during inspections with either the seriousness of casualties and casualty first events which reveals three areas of improvement possibilities to potentially decrease the probability of a casualty – the ISM code, machinery and equipment and ship and cargo operations.maritime safety;correspondence analysis;binary logistic regression;probability of casualty;improvement;Port State Control Effectiveness;casualty first events;detention;port state control deficiences;target factor

    Energy-Efficient Train Timetabling

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    Running time calculation is an essential ingredient in train timetabling. Traditionally, the technical minimum running times are computed in detail after which a running time supplement is added to obtain the scheduled running times. This running time supplement must be translated into lower cruising speeds or coasting regimes to cover the entire scheduled running time for on-time running. How this is done determines the exact time-distance train paths and the energy consumption of the trains. This chapter explains how train trajectory optimization can be used to compute energy-efficient train trajectories between two stops, over multiple stops including the optimal allocation of running time supplements between the stops, and over corridors considering the track occupation of multiple trains. It is argued that microscopic train timetabling based on energy-efficient train trajectories and blocking time theory is required to design robust conflict-free timetables that enable energy-efficient train operation. The theory is illustrated with many examples under realistic conditions, such as varying gradients and speed restrictions.Green Open Access added to TU Delft Institutional Repository ‘You share, we take care!’ – Taverne project https://www.openaccess.nl/en/you-share-we-take-care Otherwise as indicated in the copyright section: the publisher is the copyright holder of this work and the author uses the Dutch legislation to make this work public.Transport and Plannin
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