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59 result(s) for "Scheu, B."
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Heat flows in rock cracks naturally optimize salt compositions for ribozymes
Catalytic nucleic acids, such as ribozymes, are central to a variety of origin-of-life scenarios. Typically, they require elevated magnesium concentrations for folding and activity, but their function can be inhibited by high concentrations of monovalent salts. Here we show that geologically plausible high-sodium, low-magnesium solutions derived from leaching basalt (rock and remelted glass) inhibit ribozyme catalysis, but that this activity can be rescued by selective magnesium up-concentration by heat flow across rock fissures. In contrast to up-concentration by dehydration or freezing, this system is so far from equilibrium that it can actively alter the Mg:Na salt ratio to an extent that enables key ribozyme activities, such as self-replication and RNA extension, in otherwise challenging solution conditions. The principle demonstrated here is applicable to a broad range of salt concentrations and compositions, and, as such, highly relevant to various origin-of-life scenarios.The correct function of ribozymes in a prebiotic world would be dependent on the presence of optimal salt compositions and concentrations. Now, local heat fluxes have been shown to create an ideal salt habitat for ribozyme activity based on geologically plausible salt-leaching processes.
Atmosphere injection of sea salts during large explosive submarine volcanic eruptions
The 15 January 2022 submarine eruption at Hunga volcano was the most explosive volcanic eruption in 140 years. It involved exceptional magma and seawater interaction throughout the entire submarine caldera collapse. The submarine volcanic jet breached the sea surface and formed a subaerial eruptive plume that transported volcanic ash, gas, sea salts and seawater up to ~ 57 km, reaching into the mesosphere. We document high concentrations of sea salts in tephra (volcanic ash) collected shortly after deposition. We also discuss the potential climatic consequences of large-scale injection of salts into the upper atmosphere during submarine eruptions. Sodium chloride in these volcanic plumes can reach extreme concentrations, and dehalogenation of chlorides and bromides poses the risk of long-term atmospheric and weather impact. Salt content in rapidly collected tephra samples may also be used as a proxy to estimate the water:magma ratio during eruption, with implications for quantification of fragmentation efficiency in submarine breaching events. The balance between salt loading into the atmosphere versus deposition in ash aggregates is a key factor in understanding the atmospheric and climatic consequences of submarine eruptions.
Evolution of a small hydrothermal eruption episode through a mud pool of varying depth and rheology, White Island, NZ
White Island volcano, New Zealand was a host to multiple hydrothermal eruptive episodes within a mud-sulphur pool in 2013. Although hydrothermal activity is common at White Island, past events have largely gone undescribed in favour of the larger phreatomagmatic and magmatic eruptions. Here, we detail the first and longest hydrothermal episode of 2013, lasting from 15 January to 7 February using video and photo analysis from tour operators and staff responsible for monitoring the volcano. Differences in the dominant bubble burst style across this episode led to the classification of four distinct eruption regimes: (1) multiple irregular bursts on the pool surface, (2) larger distinct symmetric hemispheres with starbursts and/or followed by mud heaves, (3) no initial pool surface deformation but a vertical steam jet followed by a sometimes large directed mud heave and (4) no lake and continuous pulsating dry ash and block venting. The progression through these regimes is associated with a lowering lake level and a concomitantly increasing viscosity of the pool, which initially comprises a low viscosity muddy water, and partially evaporates to yield a shallow layer of high viscosity mud that ends with the complete drying up of the mud pool. Formation of primary mud hemispheres or gas jets is followed by heaves or secondary upheaval events. The heights of these heaves are used as a measure of explosivity. Heights increase from ∼8 m during regime 1 on 15 January to ∼102 m during regime 3 on 28 January. Venting of dry mud during regime 4 developed on 29 January before a regression back to regime 1 took place on 7 February as the pool re-established. Through observations of the shapes of ejected mud clots, we propose that the increasing explosivity of higher number regimes is primarily due to increasing slug bubble lengths teamed with increasing mud pool viscosity. We attribute a lesser control to the decreasing depth of the pool during its progressive desiccation, which may in turn influence the bubble burst depth. Occasionally, visible yellowing of the steam/gas plume led us to suggest that elemental sulphur may also be present in the conduit and may also play a role in regulating bubble release dynamics. Although, evidence for magmatic/phreatomagmatic eruptions was present during eruptions later in 2013, we found no evidence for juvenile magma in the January-February eruption episode described here. However, we concur with other investigators that magma was probably intruded to shallow levels and may have driven heat and gas flux. Our explanation for the correlation of pool depth, mud viscosity and eruption regime is based on a conceptual model in which a pool is perched above a two phase hydrothermal system and is sensitive to changes in the heat and gas flux from shallow magma. The variable release of gas and thermal perturbations in the course of the January-February eruptive episode impacted the pool level, the water to sediment ratio in the pool, and thus its viscosity, and in turn modulated the eruption regime. The varying degree of explosivity throughout this episode calls for a new consideration of pool properties in assessing eruption hazards at this frequently visited volcano. We additionally emphasise that ballistic hazards from small eruptions exist coupled with a range of seismic signals and that the hazard was greatest during infrasound tremor.
Magmatic architecture of dome-building eruptions at Volcán de Colima, Mexico
Changes in the physical, chemical and rheological properties of ascending magma regulate the style of volcanic eruptions. Volcán de Colima’s eruptive cycles of lava dome growth and explosions have been thoroughly monitored during the period 1998–2010 and provide a remarkable opportunity for deepening our understanding of the underlying processes responsible for the evolution of magma properties. Here, we integrate direct observation with analytical and experimental data to: (1) constrain the configuration of the shallow plumbing system and its influence on eruptive activity, (2) describe the rheological behaviour of the magma and (3) assess the conditions that lead to fragmentation and, ultimately, to explosive eruptions. The configuration of the shallow plumbing system was inferred from direct observation of extrusion sites and porosity of the erupted products. During the ongoing eruptive phase, magma was never extruded from a central vent: Both explosive and effusive activities were restricted to discrete vents inside the crater. Extensive field-based density measurements on 500 blocks in pyroclastic flow deposits reveal a bimodality of porosity at values of 12 and 26 vol.%. The least porous rocks tend to be altered, whereas the more porous rocks are pristine. This bimodal distribution, combined with the lack of a central vent, suggests the presence of a central, dense, altered plug, the fragments of which are entrained during explosive eruptions. During effusive periods, the plug appears to deflect the ascent of magma at a shallow depth and, consequently, the site of lava extrusion. The rheological properties and deformation-induced seismogenic behaviour of the magmas were investigated using a uniaxial deformation apparatus instrumented with acoustic sensors. The homogeneity in the physicochemical properties of the erupted magma permits the description of a flow law at eruptive temperature and strain rate conditions. The crystal-rich magma of Volcán de Colima exhibits a shear thinning rheology and becomes increasingly brittle at higher strain rates. Complete failure of magma can be predicted using the material failure forecast method, which integrates the acceleration of released acoustic energy throughout the deformation. Rapid decompression experiments of samples pressurised with argon were performed to assess the fragmentation conditions under which explosive eruptions progress. In the absence of gas loss due to permeable flow, the pore pressure required to fragment volcanic products is inversely proportional to the porosity. At Volcán de Colima, a rapid decompression of >6 MPa is required to fragment magma averaging 26 vol.% pores and to thereby instigate an explosive eruption. Analysis of ballistic impacts (4–6 km away from the vent) from recent explosive eruptions further requires decompression as great as 20 MPa, which is sufficient to disrupt the more porous material as well as a fraction of the denser plug. The continuing growth of a lava dome and of a larger, more impermeable plug could have consequences for the stability of the edifice and development of stronger and more erratic explosive activity at Volcán de Colima.
Permeability and degassing of dome lavas undergoing rapid decompression: An experimental determination
The gas permeability of volcanic rocks may influence various eruptive processes. The transition from a quiescent degassing dome to rock failure (fragmentation) may, for example, be controlled by the rock's permeability, in as much as it affects the speed by which a gas overpressure in vesicles is reduced in response to decompression. Using a modified shock-tube-based fragmentation bomb (Alidibirov and Dingwell 1996a,b; Spieler et al. 2003a), we have measured unsteady-state permeability at a high initial pressure differential. Following sudden decompression above the rock cylinder, pressurized gas flows through the sample. Two pressure transducers record the pressure signals above and below the sample. A transient 1D filtration code has been developed to calculate permeability using the experimental decay curve of the lower pressure transducer. Additionally an analytical steady-state method to achieve permeability is presented as an alternative to swiftly predict the sample permeability in a sufficiently precise manner. Over 100 permeability measurements have been performed on samples covering a wide range of porosity. The results show a general positive relationship between porosity and permeability with a high data scatter. Our preferred interpretation of the results is a combination of two different, but overlapping effects. We propose that at low porosities, gas escape occurs predominantly through microcracks or elongated micropores and therefore could be described by simplified forms of Kozeny-Carman relations (Carman 1956) and fracture flow models. At higher porosities, the influence of vesicles becomes progressively stronger as they form an increasingly connected network. Therefore, a model based on the percolation theory of fully penetrable spheres is used, as a first approximation, to describe the permeability-porosity trend. In the data acquired to date it is evident, that in addition to the porosity control, the sample's bubble size, shape and distribution strongly influence the permeability. This leads to a range of permeability values up to 2.5 orders of magnitude at a given porosity.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]
MeMoVolc report on classification and dynamics of volcanic explosive eruptions
Classifications of volcanic eruptions were first introduced in the early twentieth century mostly based on qualitative observations of eruptive activity, and over time, they have gradually been developed to incorporate more quantitative descriptions of the eruptive products from both deposits and observations of active volcanoes. Progress in physical volcanology, and increased capability in monitoring, measuring and modelling of explosive eruptions, has highlighted shortcomings in the way we classify eruptions and triggered a debate around the need for eruption classification and the advantages and disadvantages of existing classification schemes. Here, we (i) review and assess existing classification schemes, focussing on subaerial eruptions; (ii) summarize the fundamental processes that drive and parameters that characterize explosive volcanism; (iii) identify and prioritize the main research that will improve the understanding, characterization and classification of volcanic eruptions and (iv) provide a roadmap for producing a rational and comprehensive classification scheme. In particular, classification schemes need to be objective-driven and simple enough to permit scientific exchange and promote transfer of knowledge beyond the scientific community. Schemes should be comprehensive and encompass a variety of products, eruptive styles and processes, including for example, lava flows, pyroclastic density currents, gas emissions and cinder cone or caldera formation. Open questions, processes and parameters that need to be addressed and better characterized in order to develop more comprehensive classification schemes and to advance our understanding of volcanic eruptions include conduit processes and dynamics, abrupt transitions in eruption regime, unsteadiness, eruption energy and energy balance.
Heat flows enrich prebiotic building blocks and enhance their reactivity
The emergence of biopolymer building blocks is a crucial step during the origins of life 1 – 6 . However, all known formation pathways rely on rare pure feedstocks and demand successive purification and mixing steps to suppress unwanted side reactions and enable high product yields. Here we show that heat flows through thin, crack-like geo-compartments could have provided a widely available yet selective mechanism that separates more than 50 prebiotically relevant building blocks from complex mixtures of amino acids, nucleobases, nucleotides, polyphosphates and 2-aminoazoles. Using measured thermophoretic properties 7 , 8 , we numerically model and experimentally prove the advantageous effect of geological networks of interconnected cracks 9 , 10 that purify the previously mixed compounds, boosting their concentration ratios by up to three orders of magnitude. The importance for prebiotic chemistry is shown by the dimerization of glycine 11 , 12 , in which the selective purification of trimetaphosphate (TMP) 13 , 14 increased reaction yields by five orders of magnitude. The observed effect is robust under various crack sizes, pH values, solvents and temperatures. Our results demonstrate how geologically driven non-equilibria could have explored highly parallelized reaction conditions to foster prebiotic chemistry. Heat flows through thin, crack-like geo-compartments are shown to purify previously mixed compounds and enhance their reactivity, providing a selective mechanism for separating molecules relevant to the chemical origins of life.
Heated gas bubbles enrich, crystallize, dry, phosphorylate and encapsulate prebiotic molecules
Non-equilibrium conditions must have been crucial for the assembly of the first informational polymers of early life, by supporting their formation and continuous enrichment in a long-lasting environment. Here, we explore how gas bubbles in water subjected to a thermal gradient, a likely scenario within crustal mafic rocks on the early Earth, drive a complex, continuous enrichment of prebiotic molecules. RNA precursors, monomers, active ribozymes, oligonucleotides and lipids are shown to (1) cycle between dry and wet states, enabling the central step of RNA phosphorylation, (2) accumulate at the gas–water interface to drastically increase ribozymatic activity, (3) condense into hydrogels, (4) form pure crystals and (5) encapsulate into protecting vesicle aggregates that subsequently undergo fission. These effects occur within less than 30 min. The findings unite, in one location, the physical conditions that were crucial for the chemical emergence of biopolymers. They suggest that heated microbubbles could have hosted the first cycles of molecular evolution. High concentrations of prebiotic molecules and dry–wet cycles are difficult to achieve in a submerged system. Now, it has been shown that temperature gradients across gas bubbles in submerged rock pores can provide these conditions. Molecules are continuously accumulated at the warm side of bubbles at the gas–water interface, which enables or enhances many prebiotically relevant processes.
Oxide nanolitisation-induced melt iron extraction causes viscosity jumps and enhanced explosivity in silicic magma
Explosivity in erupting volcanoes is controlled by the degassing dynamics and the viscosity of the ascending magma in the conduit. Magma crystallisation enhances both heterogeneous bubble nucleation and increases in magma bulk viscosity. Nanolite crystallisation has been suggested to enhance such processes too, but in a noticeably higher extent. Yet the precise causes of the resultant strong viscosity increase remain unclear. Here we report experimental results for rapid nanolite crystallisation in natural silicic magma and the extent of the subsequent viscosity increase. Nanolite-free and nanolite-bearing rhyolite magmas were subjected to heat treatments, where magmas crystallised or re-crystallised oxide nanolites depending on their initial state, showing an increase of one order of magnitude as oxide nanolites formed. We thus demonstrate that oxide nanolites crystallisation increases magma bulk viscosity mainly by increasing the viscosity of its melt phase due to the chemical extraction of iron, whereas the physical effect of particle suspension is minor, almost negligible. Importantly, we further observe that this increase is sufficient for driving magma fragmentation depending on magma degassing and ascent dynamics. Oxide nanolites crystallisation in natural magma increases melt, and hence bulk magma viscosity mainly due to iron extraction. This increase can be sufficient to drive magma fragmentation depending on magma degassing and ascent dynamics.