Monthly Archives: December 2021
SS21 #13 Budek et al. (2017) Effect of mobility ratio on interaction between the fingers in unstable growth processes
https://journals.aps.org/pre/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevE.96.042218 Solicitation: This paper is one of the few out there to really get a handle on loops. The approach is so clever. It’s been a building block for me. What was awesome? It was a building a block for … Continue reading
SS21 #12 Wang et al. (2008) Atlantic Warm Pool acting as a link between Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation and Atlantic tropical cyclone activity
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1029/2007GC001809 Salutation: This served as a critical paper for trying to connect the volcanoes and Atlantic multidecadal variability to tropical cyclone precipitation in my reconstruction. I genuinely could not stop thinking about this paper, and I think it set the … Continue reading
SS21 #11 Hayes and Wallace (2019) Exploring records of Saharan dust transport and hurricanes in the western North Atlantic over the Holocene
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0277379118307339 Salutation: This helped me develop a conceptual dynamic setting for the impact that local/regional volcanic eruptions—particularly the ash plumes—may have on tropical cyclones (TC) and TC precipitation. What was awesome? It had excellent figures and documentation, it was helpful, … Continue reading
SS21 #10 Altman et al. (2021) Large volcanic eruptions reduce landfalling tropical cyclone activity: Evidence from tree rings
Salutation: This paper gave me the idea to explore the connections between volcanoes and tropical cyclone rainfall in tree rings. The authors use d18O in tree rings to look at changes tropical cyclone activity in response to volcanoes. Given that … Continue reading
SS21 #9 Millet et al. (2021) The Rosebank Field, NE Atlantic: Volcanic characterisation of an inter‐lava hydrocarbon discovery
Salutation: It provides a comprehensive cross-field borehole based lithofacies interpretation, which indicates the complex lava-sediment interactions. This work deepened our understanding of volcanism and magmatism influences on the rift margin evolution. What was awesome? It’s a scientific frontier! From Hehe … Continue reading
SS21 #8 DGL Zircon Database
Salutation: It is an amazing database for detrital zircon geochronological studies. With the database growing, it will provide us with a very convenient way to trace sediments from source to sink. What was awesome? Excellent figures and documentation, Helpful!, Surprising, … Continue reading
SS21 #7 Ugelvig et al. (2016) Glacial landscape evolution by subglacial quarrying: A multiscale computational approach
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/2016JF003960 Salutation: We read this paper in a graduate discussion seminar, and I was impressed and delighted by their multi-scale approach to modeling glacial erosion by quarrying. It’s such a nice demonstration of how one can derive a “geologic scale” … Continue reading
SS21 #6 Dongfeng Li et al. (2021) Exceptional increases in fluvial sediment fluxes in a warmer and wetter High Mountain Asia
https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.abi9649 Salutation: This study demonstrates impacts of modern climate change on sediment fluxes from high-mountain source areas, as warming and deglaciation generally increase sediment transport and change some of the source areas. It’s important work for understanding physical climate-change impacts … Continue reading
SS21 #5 Coast2Cast
https://coastalhub.science/coast2cast In a year where we were all stuck inside and less able to meet new colleagues abroad at conferences etc., Ana Vila Concejo and Giovanni Coco brought us all together with the Coast2Cast podcast. By interviewing experienced coastal researchers … Continue reading
SS21 #4 Source to Sink Lecture Series
https://meas.ncsu.edu/sealevel/s2s/talks.html Salutation: This is my favorite pandemic era science innovation. A simple accessible format, the flexibility of watching later, one general topic, and a murderers row of excellent talks and presenters. I have learned so much from this series this … Continue reading