3 research outputs found

    Evidence for long-lived (>100 Myr) continental intraplate volcanism: Mongolia since the last ocean closure

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      Since the closure of the Mongol-Okhotsk Ocean in the Mesozoic, Mongolia has been in an intraplate tectonic setting; the nearest plate boundary being ∼3,000 km to the east, at the active Pacific subduction front. Throughout this time, Mongolia has experienced magmatism in the form of distinctive, small-volume volcanic fields dispersed along the central and eastern parts of the country. On the basis of geochemical, isotopic, palaeomagnetic and zircon data, the magmatism can be discriminated from preceding post-collisional magmatism. Gradual change from a lithospheric to an asthenospheric mantle source suggests lithospheric delamination occurred beneath Mongolia, starting at ∼140 Ma and terminating at ∼107 Ma. Accordingly, the onset of intraplate magmatism is set at 107 Ma. Regardless of the spatial and temporal occurrence and evolution of the intraplate magmatism in Mongolia, the geochemistry of the resultant volcanic rocks throughout time remains remarkably similar, although the cause of magmatism has been much debated. Through evaluation of available K-Ar and Ar-Ar data from the literature, along with newly-obtained data from three different volcanic fields, we have identified that the intraplate volcanism in Mongolia has been near-continuous since its onset, with hiatuses of only <6 Myr. Since 35 Ma, hiatuses have reduced to <1 My. In light of these findings, we re-evaluate the various models that have been proposed for the origins of this long-lived volcanism and suggest the cause of magmatism results from asthenospheric upwellings initiated by a delamination event in the Mesozoic, but have been prolonged by enhanced mantle flow relating to northward progression of India, the closure of Neo-Tethys, and ultimately the Indo-Asian collision. This example of intraplate magmatism is one of the longest-lived volcanic intraplate regimes on Earth that does not appear to relate to a geophysically-recognisable high heat-flux mantle plume.</p

    Images of Research 2020

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    Images Of Research 2020 Winners: Martha Papadopoulou – ‘Melting The Secrets Of Rocks’ - Judges’ Prize Winner and People’s Choice Runner-up Pedro Rodriguez Veiga – ‘Art Meets Radar’ - Judges’ Prize Runners-up Damian Roland – ‘COVID19 And Children: The True Cost Of The Pandemic’ - Katherine May People’s Choice Winner and Leicester Institute of Advanced Studies Interdisciplinary Prize Victoria Szafara - ‘Feeding The Machine’ - Leicester Institute of Advanced Studies Interdisciplinary Prize Images Of Research 2020 submissions: Barry Hawthorne – ‘Transport to death or transport to safety?’ Chiara Marabelli – ‘The ‘aura’ of the original?’ Christian Harrison – ‘The Beauty in the Small Things’ Denise Corsel – ‘With Fish Under their Feet, How Could You Ever Go Hungry?’ Emily Richardson – ‘Beautiful, But Deadly.’ Freya Tyrer – ‘Let’s Talk about Health!’ Helen Elliott-Mainwaring – ‘Kitchen Table Research in a Pandemic’ Jack O'Doherty – ‘Aegis’ Kellie Lucken – ‘Cancer cells promote cell division errors’ Laura Albertini – ‘Here we used to cross the river’ Michael J Curtis – ‘An ancient mariner’s tale’ Paige Emerick – ‘Royal Road’ Shirley Yang – ‘Scandalous man missing in the news ‘ Sohaib Rufai – ‘Window of the Soul’ Sophia Sheikh & Kristina Tomkova – ‘At the CELLestial level’ Tia Ndu – ‘The height of gentrification?’ Tom Matheson – ‘Abandoned’ Vinay Patel – ‘Microstructure from a Steel Alloy Wheel from a Earth Moving Vehicle’</p

    Images of Research 2019

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    Images Of Research 2019 Winners: Yang Chen – ‘Spiral Up and Down’ - Judges’ Prize Winner Dina El-Hamamsy – ‘Where is my patient Patient?’ - Joint Judges’ Prize Runners-up Tom Matheson – ‘Ginormous Genome’ (1) - Joint Judges’ Prize Runners-up Styliano Spathariotis – ‘Girl with a Metallic Earring’ - Katherine May People’s Choice Winner Soheb Mandhai – ‘The Cosmic Dance of Two Neutron Stars’ - People’s Choice Runner-up Brandon Fathy – ‘Speed, Space, and Time’ - Leicester Institute of Advanced Studies Interdisciplinary Prize Images Of Research 2018 submissions: Abbey Ellis – ‘Carving Out an Understanding’ (1) Abbey Ellis – ‘The Art of the Reproduction’ (2) Ahmed Elimam - Untitled Artur Soczawa-Stronczyk – ‘Do the locomotion with me’ Aseel Alfuhied – ‘Cosmic storm in the heart of darkness’ (1) Aseel Alfuhied – ‘Heart to Heart’ (2) Aseel Alfuhied – ‘Pop Heart’ (3) Beatriz Sanchez-Cano – ‘The Sun, our neural connection’ Cesare Cuzzola – ‘Buddha Day 2019’ Charlotte Barratt – ‘Sound’ (1) Charlotte Barratt – ‘Girl Praying’ (2) Chris Allen – ‘Perceptions and Realities: Building Community Resilience Against Extremism’ (1) Chris Allen – ‘Perceptions and Realities: Building Community Resilience Against Extremism’ (2) David Unwin – ‘Death flight’ Diane Urquhart – ‘Laying ghosts to rest’ Eloisa Rodrigues – ‘Tropical self-portrait’ Fernando Schlindwein – ‘Chaos in the heart’ (1) Fernando Schlindwein – ‘Porcupine’ (2) Graham Frobisher – ‘The 7th Decade Manager’ Hanna McQuail – ‘That colossal wreck, boundless and bare’ Hatice Kayman – ‘Immigrants have opportunities to do their festivals in London’ Hedwig Krawczyk – ‘Underwater Time Machines’ Hipolito Treffinger – ‘Layers’ Jacqueline Taylor – ‘Miriam Haughton at the British Academy’ Jan Vandeburie – ‘Dress to Impress’ Jennifer Beamer – ‘Human-Animal Relationships in Weaving’ John Goodwin – ‘Slow Sociology in South Wigston’ Kinga Kolodziej – ‘In a blink of an eye…’ (1) Kinga Kolodziej – ‘In a blink of an eye…’ (2) Kristina Wright – ‘Janus-Faced Seoul’ Kseniia Bondarenko – ‘Your brain drives me crazy’ (1) Kseniia Bondarenko – ‘Your brain drives me crazy’ (2) Liam Crawford – ‘The heartfelt love story between one nanoparticle and another’ Lisa Huddlestone – ‘Seeing the wood and the trees’ (1) Lisa Huddlestone – ‘Seeing the wood and the trees’ (2) Margarita Avgerinopoulou – ‘A dash of magic’ (1) Margarita Avgerinopoulou – ‘Fantasy at the making’ (2) Martha Papadopoulou – ‘The power of a drop’ (1) Martha Papadopoulou – ‘Every drop counts’! (2) Mayamin Altae - Untitled (or the Tennyson quote) Michael Curtis – ‘The arrival of the shoreline detective’ (1) Michael Curtis – ‘The arrival of the shoreline detective’ (2) Neelam Dave – ‘The damage bacteria can do’ Neil Harris – ‘Colour amongst the chaos’ Nitu Gupta – ‘Far Beyond Insecurities’ Nora Ngii Musyoka – ‘She’s Just the Other Half of Me’ Nukul Charlin – ‘Why are Ladyboy Tolerated in Thai Society?’ Pariyakorn Petkaew – ‘Be silent…Be thinking’ Rachel Belben – ‘Ardeadactylus longicollum’ (1) Rachel Belben – ‘Psittacosaurus’ (2) Roberto Sommariva - Untitled Saima Ahmad – ‘The Command Centre’ (1) Saima Ahmad – ‘Vial do you see it?’ (2) Saima Ahmad – ‘Beyond the Canopy’ (3) Samuel J Perry – ‘Metallic snowflakes’ (1) Samuel J Perry – ‘Metallic snowflakes’ (2) Stephanie Bowry – ‘Storm Clouds over Vaux-le-Vicomte’ Tom Matheson – ‘Ginormous Genome’ (2) Yewande Okuleye – ‘Commemoration, Remembrance and Bodies of Evidence’ Yewande Okuleye, Robert Garner – ‘From pain to pleasure: We no longer just eat our greens, it’s imperative to photograph share and like on Instagram.’ (1) Yewande Okuleye, Robert Garner – ‘A green plaque for animal ethics?’ (2) Yewande Okuleye, Robert Garner – ‘A green plaque for animal ethics?’ (3)</p
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