338 research outputs found
Ferromanganese micronodules from the surficial sediments of Georges Bank
Ferromanganese micronodules have been found on Georges Bank, off the U.S. northeast coast, distributed throughout the surficial sediments within an area about 125 km long and at least 12 km wide. These coarse, sand-sized concretions have precipitated from metal-rich interstitial waters and contain many of the textural and structural features common to other neritic nodules. Most of the nodules have accreted around detrital grains, and X-ray powder diffraction analyses indicate the presence of geothite and vernadite (δ-MnO2) in the ferromanganese layers. Chemical analyses of the micronodules, when compared with similar data on deep-sea manganese nodules, reveal lower Mn/Fe ratios, significantly higher concentrations of V and As, comparable values of Mo, and an order of magnitude less of Co, Ni, Ce and most other metals
The composition and role of convergent technological repertoires in audiovisual media consumption
This mixed-method research focuses on the growing appropriation of multiple screen devices for audiovisual media consumption. Based on survey measures, we distinguish three patterns: (a) maintaining the status quo, by mainly drawing upon television, (b) broadening up the repertoire, by extending television with computers and mobile devices, or (c) even replacing television by a computer. Next, we draw upon insights from niche theory, rationalising media choices in terms of competing gratifications. This perspective is however too one-sided, as our results indicate that habit is a much stronger explanatory variable, especially when a broad range of devices are appropriated. In a follow-up qualitative study, based on Q-methodology, we found that the orientations towards what people seek in audiovisual technologies are only mildly contingent with specific technology appropriation. This problematises the very substance of niches in the audiovisual: as technologies are capable of the same benefits, their discriminating power is declining. Hence, in future applications of niche theory, gratifications and habits of communication modes (what people do with media technologies) should be taken into account, rather than media as tied to a specific technology. Niche theory's core remains, but its applications should be updated to theoretical insights matching the evolving media environment
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“Our Relationship? It’s the Odd Mucky Weekend, Not a One Night Stand”: Journalists and aid agencies in the UK, and the current challenges to sourcing in humanitarian disasters
In humanitarian crises, the sources that journalists employ have always helped determine which stories achieve a high media profile, as well as play a part in framing the story. In particular, aid agencies acted as powerful gatekeepers to disaster zones, providing flights, transport, fixers and translators to journalists–and more recently, text, images and resources for the social web. Questions have been raised around transparency and objectivity in such reporting as a result. This paper draws on 40 semi-structured qualitative interviews with UK national journalists (broadcast, print and online) and aid agencies belonging to the UK's Disasters Emergency Committee. As a result, this paper builds on journalism studies looking at boundary (re)negotiations in journalism and the source-media relationship to show the current patterns in what has been described as a “mutually exploitative” relationship. It compares and contrasts what assistance journalists say they accept from aid agencies and what aid agencies report. It examines how both sides are often unwilling to acknowledge the close association. It will also look at how the increasing professionalisation of NGO operations including the employment of former journalists and producing their own content may be affecting the power dynamics. Finally, it asks whether the slow emergence of scandals means this relationship has not only affected stories that are covered but those that are not
Friends and Enemies Within: The Roles of Subgroups, Imbalance, and Isolates in Geographically Dispersed Teams
Research regarding geographically dispersed teams (GDTs) is increasingly common and has
yielded many insights into how spatio-temporal and socio-demographic factors affect GDT functioning
and performance. Largely missing, however, is research on the effects of the basic geographic
configuration of GDTs. In this study, we explore the impact of GDT configuration (i.e., the relative
number of team members at different sites, independent of the characteristics of those members or the
spatial and temporal distances among them) on GDT dynamics. In a quasi-experimental setting, we
examine the effects of configuration using a sample of 62 six-person teams in four different one- and twosite
configurations. As predicted, we find that configuration significantly affects team dynamics –
independent of spatio-temporal distance and socio-demographic factors. More specifically, we find that
teams with geographically-based subgroups (defined as two or more members per site) have significantly
less shared team identity, less effective transactive memory, more conflict, and more coordination issues.
Furthermore, in teams with subgroups, imbalance (i.e., the uneven distribution of members across sites)
exacerbates these effects; subgroups with a numerical minority of team members report significantly
poorer scores on the same four outcomes. In contrast, teams with geographically isolated members (i.e.,
members who have no teammates at their site) outperform both balanced and imbalanced configurations
Release of mineral-bound water prior to subduction tied to shallow seismogenic slip off Sumatra
Plate-boundary fault rupture during the 2004 Sumatra-Andaman subduction earthquake extended closer to the trench than expected, increasing earthquake and tsunami size. International Ocean Discovery Program Expedition 362 sampled incoming sediments offshore northern Sumatra, revealing recent release of fresh water within the deep sediments. Thermal modeling links this freshening to amorphous silica dehydration driven by rapid burial-induced temperature increases in the past 9 million years. Complete dehydration of silicates is expected before plate subduction, contrasting with prevailing models for subduction seismogenesis calling for fluid production during subduction. Shallow slip offshore Sumatra appears driven by diagenetic strengthening of deeply buried fault-forming sediments, contrasting with weakening proposed for the shallow Tohoku-Oki 2011 rupture, but our results are applicable to other thickly sedimented subduction zones including those with limited earthquake records
Insights on geochemical cycling of U, Re and Mo from seasonal sampling in Boston Harbor, Massachusetts, USA
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2006. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier B.V. for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 71 (2007): 895-917, doi:10.1016/j.gca.2006.10.016.This study examined the removal of U, Mo, and Re from seawater by
sedimentary processes at a shallow-water site with near-saturation bottom water O2 levels
(240-380 μmol O2/L), very high organic matter oxidation rates (annually averaged rate is
870 μmol C/cm2/y), and shallow oxygen penetration depths (4 mm or less throughout the
year). Under these conditions, U, Mo, and Re were removed rapidly to asymptotic pore
water concentrations of 2.2–3.3 nmol/kg (U), 7–13 nmol/kg (Mo), and 11–14 pmol/kg
(Re). The order in which the three metals were removed, determined by fitting a
diffusion-reaction model to measured profiles, was Re < U < Mo. Model fits also suggest
that the Mo profiles clearly showed the presence of a near-interface layer in which Mo
was added to pore waters by remineralization of a solid phase. The importance of this
solid phase source of pore water Mo increased from January to October as the organic
matter oxidation rate increased, bottom water O2 decreased, and the O2 penetration depth
decreased. Experiments with in situ benthic flux chambers generally showed fluxes of U
and Mo into the sediments. However, when the overlying water O2 concentration in the
chambers was allowed to drop to very low levels, Mn and Fe were released to the
overlying water along with the simultaneous release of Mo and U. These experiments
suggest that remineralization of Mn and/or Fe oxides may be a source of Mo and perhaps
U to pore waters, and may complicate the accumulation of U and Mo in bioturbated
sediments with high organic matter oxidation rates and shallow O2 penetration depths.
Benthic chamber experiments including the nonreactive solute tracer, Br-,
indicated that sediment irrigation was very important to solute exchange at the study site.
The enhancement of sediment-seawater exchange due to irrigation was determined for
the nonreactive tracer (Br-), TCO2, NH4
+, U and Mo. The comparisons between these
solutes showed that reactions within and around the burrows were very important for
modulating the Mo flux, but less important for U. The effect of these reactions on Mo
exchange was highly variable, enhancing Mo (and, to a lesser extent, U) uptake at times
of relatively modest irrigation, but inhibiting exchange when irrigation rates were faster.
These results reinforce the observation that Mo can be released to and removed from pore
waters via sedimentary reactions.
The removal rate of U and Mo from seawater by sedimentary reactions was found
to agree with the rate of accumulation of authigenic U and Mo in the solid phase. The
fluxes of U and Mo determined by in situ benthic flux chamber measurements were the
largest that have been measured to date. These results confirm that removal of redoxsensitive
metals from continental margin sediments underlying oxic bottom water is
important, and suggest that continental margin sediments play a key role in the marine
budgets of these metals.We appreciate the financial support
from the National Science Foundation (OCE-0220892). Funding for this work was also
provided to JLM by the Postdoctoral Scholar Program at WHOI courtesy of the Cabot
Marine Environmental Science Fund and the J. Seward Johnson Fund. Financial support
to IMK was given by The Swedish Foundation for International Cooperation in Research
and Higher Education
Long term records of erosional change from marine ferromanganese crusts
Ferromanganese crusts from the Atlantic, Indian and Pacific Oceans record the Nd and Pb isotope compositions of the water masses from which they form as hydrogenous precipitates. The10Be/9Be-calibrated time series for crusts are compared to estimates based on Co-contents, from which the equatorial Pacific crusts studied are inferred to have recorded ca. 60 Ma of Pacific deep water history. Time series of ɛNd show that the oceans have maintained a strong provinciality in Nd isotopic composition, determined by terrigenous inputs, over periods of up to 60 Ma. Superimposed on the distinct basin-specific signatures are variations in Nd and Pb isotope time series which have been particularly marked over the last 5 Ma.
It is shown that changes in erosional inputs, particularly associated with Himalayan uplift and the northern hemisphere glaciation have influenced Indian and Atlantic Ocean deep water isotopic compositions respectively. There is no evidence so far for an imprint of the final closure of the Panama Isthmus on the Pb and Nd isotopic composition in either Atlantic or Pacific deep water masses
The relationship between salivary C-reactive protein and cognitive function in children aged 11-14 years: Does psychopathology have a moderating effect?
Elevated C-reactive protein (CRP), a non-specific biomarker of systemic bodily inflammation, has been associated with more pronounced cognitive impairments in adults with psychiatric disorders, particularly in the domains of memory and executive function. Whether this association is present in early life (i.e., the time at which the cognitive impairments that characterise these disorders become evident), and is specific to those with emerging psychiatric disorders, has yet to be investigated. To this end, we examined the association between salivary CRP and cognitive function in children aged 11- 14 years and explored the moderating effect of psychopathology. The study utilised data from an established longitudinal investigation of children recruited from the community (N=107) that had purposively over-sampled individuals experiencing psychopathology (determined using questionnaires). CRP was measured in saliva samples and participants completed assessments of cognition (memory and executive function) and psychopathology (internalising and externalising symptoms and psychotic-like experiences). Linear regression models indicated that higher salivary CRP was associated with poorer letter fluency (β=-0.24, p=0.006) and scores on the inhibition (β=-0.28, p=0.004) and inhibition/switching (β=-0.36, p<0.001) subtests of the colour-word interference test, but not with performance on any of the memory tasks (working, visual, and verbal memory tasks). Results were largely unchanged after adjustment for psychopathology and no significant interactions between CRP and psychopathology were observed on any cognitive measure. Our findings provide preliminary evidence that elevated salivary CRP is associated with poorer cognitive function in early life, but that this association is not moderated by concurrent psychopathology. These findings have implications for early intervention strategies that attempt to ameliorate cognitive deficits associated with emerging psychiatric disorders. Further research is needed to determine whether salivary CRP levels can be used as a valid marker of peripheral inflammation among healthy adolescents
Meiosis in Mice without a Synaptonemal Complex
The synaptonemal complex (SC) promotes fusion of the homologous chromosomes (synapsis) and crossover recombination events during meiosis. The SC displays an extensive structural conservation between species; however, a few organisms lack SC and execute meiotic process in a SC-independent manner. To clarify the SC function in mammals, we have generated a mutant mouse strain (Sycp1−/−Sycp3−/−, here called SC-null) in which all known SC proteins have been displaced from meiotic chromosomes. While transmission electron microscopy failed to identify any remnants of the SC in SC-null spermatocytes, neither formation of the cohesion axes nor attachment of the chromosomes to the nuclear membrane was perturbed. Furthermore, the meiotic chromosomes in SC-null meiocytes achieved pre-synaptic pairing, underwent early homologous recombination events and sustained a residual crossover formation. In contrast, in SC-null meiocytes synapsis and MLH1-MLH3-dependent crossovers maturation were abolished, whereas the structural integrity of chromosomes was drastically impaired. The variable consequences that SC inactivation has on the meiotic process in different organisms, together with the absence of SC in some unrelated species, imply that the SC could have originated independently in different taxonomic groups
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