18 research outputs found

    Redox control of sulfur degassing in silicic magmas

    No full text
    International audienceExplosive eruptions involve mainly silicic magmas in which sulfur solubility and diffusivity are low. This inhibits sulfur exsolution during magma uprise as compared to more mafic magmas such as basalts. Silicic magmas can nevertheless liberate large quantities of sulfur as shown by the monitoring of SO2 in recent explosive silicic eruptions in arc settings, which invariably have displayed an excess of sulfur relative to that calculated from melt degassing. If this excess sulfur is stored in a fluid phase, it implies a strong preference of sulfur for the fluid over the melt under oxidized conditions, with fluid/melt partition coefficients varying between 50 and 2612, depending on melt composition. Experimentally determined sulfur partition coefficients for a dacite bulk composition confirm this trend and show that in volcanic eruptions displaying excess gaseous sulfur, the magmas were probably fluid-saturated at depth. The experiments show that in more reduced silicic magmas, those coexisting only with pyrrhotite, the partition coefficient decreases dramatically to values around 1, because pyrrhotite locks up nearly all the sulfur of the magma. Reevaluation of the sulfur yields of some major historical eruptions in the light of these results shows that for oxidized magmas, the presence of 1-5 wt % fluid may indeed account for the differences observed between the petrologic estimate of the sulfur yield and that constrained from ice core data. Explosive eruptions of very large magnitude but involving reduced and cool silicic magmas, such as the Toba or the Bishop events, release only minor amounts of sulfur and could have consequently negligible long-term (years to centuries) atmospherical effects. This redox control on sulfur release diminishes as the melt composition becomes less silicic and as temperature increases, because both factors favor more efficient melt sulfur degassing owing to the increased diffusivity of sulfur in silicate melts under such conditions

    Les représentations profanes de l'effet de serre

    No full text
    Cet article Ă©tudie les reprĂ©sentations sociales de l'effet de serre Ă  partir du BaromĂštre Environnement EDF-R&D 2004, en mobilisant Ă©galement les enquĂȘtes de l'ADEME rĂ©alisĂ©es entre 2000 et 2005. Au-delĂ  des mĂ©connaissances du public, l'effet de serre suscite des cognitions cohĂ©rentes productrices de sens, qui donnent des causes Ă  leur objet en s'appuyant sur le cadre cognitif prĂ©existant. Ce travail cognitif se traduit par des rapprochements qui Ă©chappent Ă  la logique savante, entre effet de serre et couche d'ozone, pollution de l'air, voire nuclĂ©aire civil. Invisibles et controversĂ©es, les consĂ©quences de l'effet de serre inquiĂštent peu le public, et pourraient renvoyer Ă  des craintes d'Ă©lite. Enfin, si l'efficacitĂ© des actions engagĂ©es contre l'effet de serre par les autoritĂ©s requiert l'adhĂ©sion du public, une faible confiance Ă  l'Ă©gard de ces autoritĂ©s freine la prise de conscience des enjeux environnementaux liĂ©s Ă  l'effet de serre

    Ces ondes qui nous menacent. Perceptions profanes des risques associés à quatre dispositifs émettant des ondes électromagnétiques

    No full text
    Cet article Ă©tudie les perceptions des risques associĂ©s Ă  quatre dispositifs Ă©mettant des ondes Ă©lectromagnĂ©tiques, les lignes Ă  trĂšs haute tension (THT), les tĂ©lĂ©viseurs, les tĂ©lĂ©phones portables et les fours Ă  micro-ondes, Ă  partir du BaromĂštre Environnement EDF-R&D 2004. De nombreuses personnes s’inquiĂštent de l’impact des ondes Ă©lectromagnĂ©tiques sur notre santé : elles interfĂ©reraient avec notre Ă©lectricitĂ© naturelle, dĂ©rĂ©gleraient notre systĂšme nerveux, provoqueraient des cancers
 Ces opinions s’appuient sur des conceptions profanes du corps, de la santĂ© et de la maladie, et mobilisent diverses sources, plus ou moins lĂ©gitimes, du discours expert Ă  l’intuition personnelle. L’analyse statistique a mis en Ă©vidence un phĂ©nomĂšne de cumul des risques perçus : les enquĂȘtĂ©s qui pensent qu’un dispositif Ă©metteur d’ondes est dangereux ont tendance Ă  penser de mĂȘme pour d’autres dispositifs. Enfin, les risques perçus pour ces diffĂ©rents dispositifs partagent des dĂ©terminants similaires. Ces rĂ©sultats suggĂšrent l’existence d’un cadre perceptif commun, qui prĂ©siderait Ă  la façon dont nous percevons tout risque induit par des ondes. Ces perceptions ne sont pas rĂ©ductibles Ă  de « fausses croyances » : elles mobilisent des conceptions cohĂ©rentes du corps, de la santĂ© et de la maladie, elles se nourrissent du nivellement contemporain des savoirs, et elles rĂ©vĂšlent un rapport conflictuel des individus aux transformations que connaissent les sociĂ©tĂ©s contemporaines

    Quels publics pour le dĂ©bat public ? ProblĂšmes et « ingĂ©nierie sociale » dans le domaine de l’environnement Ă  EDF

    No full text
    I. INTRODUCTION Un des aspects les plus frappants du « nouvel esprit de l’action publique » ou de « l’impĂ©ratif dĂ©libĂ©ratif » – pour rependre les termes de LoĂŻc Blondiaux et Yves Sintomer – est l’interaction, la circulation constante entre les dispositifs dĂ©libĂ©ratifs et les sciences humaines. Non seulement les sciences humaines observent les dispositifs mais, en outre, il est frĂ©quent qu’elles fournissent aussi un appui thĂ©orique, des Ă©lĂ©ments de mĂ©thodes, voire des hommes pour penser, mettr..

    Male Sex Is Associated With Cervical Artery Dissection in Patients With Fibromuscular Dysplasia

    No full text
    International audienceBackground Cervical artery dissection (CeAD) is a frequent manifestation of fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD). However, risk factors for CeAD are unknown. We investigated factors associated with CeAD in the ARCADIA (Assessment of Renal and Cervical Artery Dysplasia) registry. Methods and Results The ARCADIA registry includes women or men aged ≄18 years, with a diagnosis of renal, cervical, or intracranial artery FMD, who were prospectively recruited at 16 university hospitals in France and Belgium. Diagnosis of acute or past CeAD at inclusion was established on imaging according to standard diagnostic criteria. Associations between potential determinants and CeAD were assessed by logistic regression analyses. Among 469 patients (75 men) with FMD, 65 (13.9%) had CeAD. Patients with CeAD were younger, more likely to be men, have a history of migraine, and less likely to have a history of hypertension than patients without CeAD. In the multivariable analysis, male sex (odds ratio [OR], 2.66; 95% CI, 1.34–5.25), history of migraine (OR, 1.90; 95% CI, 1.06–3.39), age ≄50 years (OR, 0.41; 95% CI, 0.23–0.73), history of hypertension (OR, 0.35; 95% CI, 0.20–0.64), and involvement of ≄3 vascular beds (OR, 2.49; 95% CI, 1.15–5.40) were significantly associated with CeAD. To validate the association between CeAD and sex, we performed a systematic review. We collected additional data on sex from 2 published studies and unpublished data from the US Registry for Fibromuscular Dysplasia and the European/International FMD Registry. In the pooled analysis (289 CeAD, 1933 patients), male sex was significantly associated with CeAD (OR, 2.04; 95% CI, 1.41–2.95; I 2 =0%). Conclusions In patients with FMD, male sex and multisite involvement are associated with CeAD, in addition to other previously known risk factors
    corecore