Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Amazon's Updated Kindle App Is a Tiny F U to Apple's App Store

Amazon's Updated Kindle App Is a Tiny F U to Apple's App Store

Amazon just released a new update to its Kindle app for iOS, and it basically just told Apple to go f*** itself in the process. The Apple App Store bible absolutely forbids in-app purchases unless the company is willing to give Apple a 30 percent cut, but Amazon has finally found a way around this little speed bump: likely-soon-to-be-banned free samples.

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Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/ni4AEKN3iIQ/amazons-updated-kindle-app-is-a-tiny-f-u-to-apples-ap-966633304

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Ancient whale coprolites, fault slickensides, shergottites, Ediacara, and Cascadia

Ancient whale coprolites, fault slickensides, shergottites, Ediacara, and Cascadia [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 31-Jul-2013
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Contact: Kea Giles
kgiles@geosociety.org
Geological Society of America

New Geology articles posted online ahead of print July 22 and 31, 2013

Boulder, Colo., USA - Two new Geology articles this month are open access: "Steady rotation of the Cascade arc" and "Silica gel formation during fault slip: Evidence from the rock record." Other new articles cover everything from the discovery of fossilized whale "intestinal products" in central Italy to flooding as a result of the 2010 Eyjafjallajkull volcano eruption to new findings via the Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for Mars (CRISM) to using microfossils to reconstruct massive earthquakes in Cascadia.

Highlights are provided below. Geology articles published ahead of print can be accessed online at http://geology.gsapubs.org/content/early/recent. All abstracts are open-access at http://geology.gsapubs.org/; representatives of the media may obtain complimentary Geology articles by contacting Kea Giles at the address above.

Please discuss articles of interest with the authors before publishing stories on their work, and please make reference to Geology in articles published. Contact Kea Giles for additional information or assistance.

Non-media requests for articles may be directed to GSA Sales and Service, gsaservice@geosociety.org.


Steady rotation of the Cascade arc
Ray E. Wells and Robert McCaffrey, U.S. Geological Survey, 345 Middlefield Road, MS 973, Menlo Park, California 94025, USA. Published online 22 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34514.1.

This article by Ray E. Wells and Robert McCaffrey is open-access. Wells and McCaffrey write that the clockwise geologic displacement of the 16 million-year-old (m.y.) ancestral Cascade volcanic arc from the presently active volcanic chain in the northwestern U.S. and Canada is in the same sense and at nearly the same rate as the motions calculated from Global Positioning System (GPS) over the past 15 years. Motion of the ancestral arc can be explained by clockwise rotation of the leading edge of North America at 1.0 degree/m.y. over the magma source generated by the subducting plate, which is itself moving westward 1 to 4.5 km/m.y. as it slowly sinks into the mantle. The remarkable similarities between post-16 m.y. arc migration, paleomagnetic rotation, and modern GPS block motions indicate that the block motions from decadal GPS can be used to calculate meaningful long-term crustal strain rates and earthquake hazards.


Silica gel formation during fault slip: Evidence from the rock record
J.D. Kirkpatrick et al., Dept. of Geosciences, Colorado State University, 1482 Campus Delivery, Fort Collins, Colorado 80523, USA. Published online 22 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34483.1.

This open-access article by J.D. Kirkpatrick and colleagues discusses the dynamic reduction of fault strength as a key process during earthquake rupture. Many mechanisms for causing coseismic weakening have been proposed based on theory and laboratory experiments, including silica gel lubrication. However, few have been observed in nature. Here, Kirkpatrick and colleagues report on the first documented occurrence of a natural silica gel coating a fault surface at the Corona Heights fault slickenside in San Francisco, California, USA.


Comparison of microstructures in superplastically deformed synthetic materials and natural mylonites: Mineral aggregation via grain boundary sliding
Takehiko Hiraga et al., Earthquake Research Institute, University of Tokyo, 1-1-1 Yayoi, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113-0032, Japan. Published online 22 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34407.1

Very similar microstructure, that is, the same phase aggregation is found in both experimentally deformed synthetic materials and natural ultramylonite. The stress-strain-rate relationship, grain-size dependent flow strength, and the achievement of large tensile stain on the synthetic samples indicate that the samples creeped due to grain boundary sliding (GBS). As a result of GBS, grain-switching events allow dispersed phases to contact grains of the same phase oriented in the direction of compression. Mineral phase mixing through GBS, which helps to retain fine grain size in rocks due to grain boundary pinning, has been speculated to occur during formation of mylonites. However, the results presented here by Takehiko Hiraga and colleagues contradict this hypothesis because mineral aggregation through GBS promotes demixing rather than mixing of the mineral phases. GBS processes alone will not promote a transformation of well-developed monomineralic bands to polymineralic bands during mylonitization.


Sea-level-induced seismicity and submarine landslide occurrence
Daniel S. Brothers et al., U.S. Geological Survey, Coastal and Marine Science Center, 384 Woods Hole Road, Woods Hole, Massachusetts 02543, USA. Published online 22 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34410.1.

The relationships between global climate change and marine geohazards remains poorly understood. This study by Daniel S. Brothers and colleagues investigates compelling linkages between rapid sea-level rise, bending of the lithosphere, and stress loading of crustal faults. Rupture of such faults may induce slope failure and generate submarine landslides, thus offering a new explanation for the temporal coincidence between many submarine landslides and rapid sea level rise between 16,000 and 8,000 years ago.


Reconciling disparate estimates of total offset on the southern San Andreas fault
Michael H. Darin and Rebecca J. Dorsey, Dept. of Geological Sciences, 1272 University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon 97403-1272, USA. Published online 22 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34276.1.

The total amount of motion along a fault can be estimated by offset geologic markers that were once continuous across the fault. There are various pairs of cross-fault markers along the San Andreas fault in southern California that suggest different amounts of offset ranging from 160-240 km. These estimates assume that the markers were offset solely by sliding along the fault. In this paper, Michael H. Darin and Rebecca J. Dorsey reinterpret one pair of offset markers and use a simple geometric model to show that fault block rotation adjacent to the fault can account for a small but significant amount of the apparent offset, thus reducing the amount of sliding required to displace the formerly continuous markers. Their model provides a new estimate of ~200 km of total offset on the San Andreas fault within the Salton Trough region, which is consistent with all other geologic data from various offset markers. This new lower estimate of total slip on the southern San Andreas fault implies that more slip is required on other faults in California and Arizona, in order to satisfy estimates of the total amount of motion between the Pacific and North American plates.


Erosion of the Tsangpo Gorge by megafloods, Eastern Himalaya
Karl A. Lang et al., Dept. of Earth and Space Sciences, and Quaternary Research Center, University of Washington, Box 351310, Seattle, Washington 98195, USA. Published online 22 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34693.1.

Karl Lang and colleagues present new detrital zircon U-Pb provenance data from large magnitude "megaflood" deposits immediately downstream of the Yarlung-Tsangpo River Gorge in the easternmost Himalaya. These data support the previous hypothesis that Tibetan lakes restrained by glacial ice and debris within the Yarlung-Tsangpo drainage episodically evacuated through this steep, narrow gorge. These extreme flood events were capable of transporting a considerable amount of material from steep channel-adjacent hillslopes, focusing erosion within the gorge. Although megaflood frequency remains unconstrained, these data support a mechanism to substantially contribute to the Quaternary erosion of the Yarlung-Tsangpo Gorge.


The role of multiple glacier outburst floods in proglacial landscape evolution: The 2010 Eyjafjallajkull eruption, Iceland
Stuart A. Dunning et al., Geography, Engineering and Environment, Northumbria University, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 8ST, UK. Published online ahead of print 30 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34665.1.

In 2010, Eyjafjallajkull volcano in Iceland erupted, causing global disruption due to the dispersing ash cloud. Less well known are the series of floods (known by the Icelandic term "jkulhlaup") generated by the melting of parts of the volcano ice-cap. Stuart A. Dunning and colleagues had a unique opportunity to survey the flood routing prior to the flooding as monitoring indicated an imminent eruption, and to then return after the eruption ended. They used laser scanning and time-lapse camera imagery to create detailed 3D models of the landscape to quantify change. The jkulhlaups completely in-filled a lake at the foot of Gigjkull glacier with sediment totaling more than 17 million cubic meters -- enough to cover nearly 315 NFL pitches 10 m deep in a mix of ash, rock, and ice. Contrary to prior models assuming that the largest events dominate the proglacial landscape, much change occurred during a series of comparatively small jkulhlaup events. It is erosion and deposition from these events that dominate the current surface landscape.


Globally synchronous Marinoan deglaciation indicated by U-Pb geochronology of the Cottons Breccia, Tasmania, Australia
C.R. Calver et al., Mineral Resources Tasmania, PO Box 56, Rosny Park, Tasmania 7018, Australia. Published online ahead of print 30 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34568.1.

The apparently global distribution of Marinoan glacial deposits inspired the "snowball Earth" hypothesis, and prompted designation of the top of the type Marinoan glacials in South Australia as the Global Stratotype Section and Point ("golden spike") for the base of the terminal Proterozoic, Ediacaran System. However, horizons suitable for radioisotopic dating are lacking in the stratotype section and correlated sequences on mainland Australia. Ash beds suitably placed to directly and precisely date the Cryogenian-Ediacaran transition have so far been found only in Namibia (635.5 plus or minus 0.8 million years ago) and south China (635.2 plus or minus 0.8 million years ago). In this paper, C.R. Calver and colleagues show that a probable reworked volcaniclastic horizon at the very top of the Cottons Breccia, a Marinoan glacial correlative on King Island, Tasmania, has yielded an abundant population of juvenile zircons dated (by U-Pb on zircon, using chemical abrasion-thermal ionization mass spectroscopy) at 636.4 plus or minus 0.5 million years ago. Equivalence to the ash bed dates from Namibia and China supports correlation of those strata to the Australian type sections, and globally synchronous deglaciation at the beginning of the Ediacaran Period, and is consistent with the "snowball Earth" hypothesis.


A hematite-bearing layer in Gale Crater, Mars: Mapping and implications for past aqueous conditions
A.A. Fraeman et al., Dept. of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri 63130, USA. Published online ahead of print 30 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34613.1.

The Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for Mars (CRISM) instrument on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter collected data in a spatially overlapping mode that show hematite, an iron oxide mineral, is present on the top of a layered ridge located about 3 km away from the Curiosity rover's proposed arrival point at Mount Sharp's base. The hematite formed either through leaching of local material in neutral to acidic waters or through mixing of anoxic groundwaters with a more oxidizing water body or atmosphere. These formation hypotheses can be tested using Curiosity's payload, and both scenarios indicate that the ridge was a site of past active iron oxidation. In similar environments on Earth, iron oxidation is almost exclusively mediated by microorganisms. This hematite ridge therefore represents a specific site where concentrated and localized iron oxidation occurred, and is a prime location to search for signs of past habitability.


Dynamic pore-pressure variations induce substrate erosion by pyroclastic flows
O. Roche et al., Laboratoire Magmas et Volcans, Universit Blaise Pascal, CNRS UMR6524, IRD R163, 5 rue Kessler, F-63038 Clermont-Ferrand, France. Published online ahead of print 30 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34668.1.

Pyroclastic flows are ground-hugging dense mixtures of gas and particles generated during volcanic eruptions. Field evidence shows that they can entrain blocks from underlying substrates formed by earlier geological events, yet, counter-intuitively, they are less likely to erode unconsolidated layers of fine particles. O. Roche and colleagues report laboratory experiments that reproduce these seemingly contradictory observations and also offer a means to infer pyroclastic flow velocity. Experiments demonstrate that the sliding head of a granular flow generates a dynamic upward pore pressure gradient at the flow-substrate interface. Associated upward air flux is enough to fluidize a smooth substrate of fines, so that particles are not entrained individually but the substrate instead results in small shear instabilities. In contrast, coarse particles forming a non-fluidized rough substrate are lifted at a critical upward force due to the pore pressure gradient, according to their individual masses, which provides a basis for a model to calculate the flow velocity. Application to the 18 May 1980 pyroclastic flow deposits at Mount St. Helens gives velocities of about 9 to 13 meters per second at about 6 to 7 km from the vent on gentle slopes (less than 4 to 6 degrees), in agreement with field observations at this volcano and others.


A stable and hot Turonian without glacial {delta}18O excursions is indicated by exquisitely preserved Tanzanian foraminifera
Kenneth G. MacLeod et al., Department of Geological Sciences, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri 65211, USA. Published online ahead of print 30 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34510.1.

A shift over a few centuries from the icehouse climate state in which humans evolved to a greenhouse climate similar to that of Late Cretaceous (~100 to 65 million years ago) is an often repeated, cautionary prediction of the likely consequence of continued burning of fossil fuels and other anthropogenic additions to atmospheric CO2. The corollary, that understanding previous greenhouse times might help predict future conditions, has justified many Late Cretaceous studies. The resolution of these studies has increased to the point where temporal variability in greenhouse climates can be examined. Widespread warmth is generally accepted to have existed during the Late Cretaceous, but times of growth of continental ice sheets have also been proposed. To test this "greenhouse glacial" hypothesis, Kenneth G. MacLeod and colleagues measured the oxygen isotopic composition of more than 1,000 samples of exceptionally well-preserved shells of single celled organisms (foraminifera) from Tanzania to estimate temperatures spanning a proposed Late Cretaceous glacial interval. Results indicate that hot and remarkably stable conditions prevailed along coastal east Africa during the entire interval examined. There are no indications for growth of glacial ice at this time, and these results support an interpretation that the Earth is effectively ice-free during greenhouse times.


Implications for late Grenvillian (Rigolet phase) construction of Rodinia using new U-Pb data from the Mars Hill terrane, Tennessee and North Carolina, United States
John N. Aleinikoff et al., U.S. Geological Survey, MS 963, Denver, Colorado 80225, USA. Published online ahead of print 30 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34779.1.

New ion microprobe U-Pb geochronology of zircon and monazite from high grade gneisses of the Mars Hill terrane in western North Carolina and eastern Tennessee, USA, indicate that these rocks, previously considered to be 1.8 billion-year-old meta-igneous rocks, are really 1.0 billion-year-old metasedimentary rocks. Thus, they do not represent a fragment of ancient Amazonian crust and were not accreted to Laurentia during the Ottawan phase of the Grenvillian orogeny 1.05 billion years ago. Instead, according to John N. Aleinikoff and colleagues, these rocks probably are composed of detritus eroded from Amazonian crust; the sediments were deposited late in the development of the Rodinia supercontinent, no earlier than about 1.02 Ga, and were metamorphosed at about 0.98 Ga. As such, they are part of a long belt of recently discovered and described late Grenvillian metasedimentary rocks that extends from at least the Smoky Mountains to northern Virginia.


Magma chamber-scale liquid immiscibility in the Siberian Traps represented by melt pools in native iron
Vadim S. Kamenetsky et al., ARC Centre of Excellence in Ore Deposits and School of Earth Sciences, University of Tasmania, Hobart, TAS 7001, Australia. Published online ahead of print 30 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34638.1.

Exceptional preservation of glass inclusions in intrusive rocks of the Siberian Large Igneous Province evidences evolutionary processes of tholeiitic basalts, the most common terrestrial magmas. Silicate liquid immiscibility between aluminosilicate and iron-rich paired melts is recorded by melt pools in native iron. These unique snapshots of magma evolution prove that cooling and crystallizing basaltic magma reaches a two-liquid stability field, and two contrasting silicate melts split at large-scale. The recognition of this mechanism in the Earth's largest magmatic province is critical for understanding common compositional bimodality in other continental magmas and origin of orthomagmatic iron-titanium-phosphorus ore deposits.


Affirming life aquatic for the Ediacara biota in China and Australia
Shuhai Xiao et al., Dept. of Geosciences, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, Virginia 24061, USA. Published online ahead of print 30 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34691.1.

The Ediacara biota (579-541 million years old) has been long championed as a snapshot of the marine ecosystem on the eve of the Cambrian explosion and provides important insights into the early evolution of animals. A recent reinterpretation of the eponymous Ediacara Member of South Australia as paleosols and Ediacara fossils as lichens or microbial colonies that lived on terrestrial soils, if correct, questions the relevance of the Ediacara biota to our understanding of early marine ecosystems. This reinterpretation, however, is not supported by comparative paleobiological and functional morphological analysis. The Ediacara Member shares a number of fossil forms with Ediacaran-age assemblages preserved in unequivocally marine sediments elsewhere in the world, including marine black shales in South China. In addition, Ediacara fossils show no morphological adaptions to address the most fundamental challenges for terrestrial life, for example, mechanical support and desiccation. Thus, comparative paleobiological and functional morphological data support the conventional interpretation that the Ediacara biota records the marine ecosystems just prior to the Cambrian explosion of animals.


Water and the composition of Martian magmas
J. Brian Balta (corresponding) and Harry Y. McSween, Jr., Dept. of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of Tennessee, 1412 Circle Drive, Knoxville, Tennessee 37996, USA. Published online ahead of print 30 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34714.1.

Shergottites are the most common type of martian meteorite. Their composition is basaltic, similar to igneous rocks from Iceland and Hawaii, but with some important differences. When the shergottites are dated using common isotope-decay techniques, they generally are found to be only a few hundred-million years old. On Mars, the only sources of igneous rocks of that age are the large volcanoes, such as Olympus Mons, which are also made of basalt. But, when J. Brian Balta and Harry Y McSween Jr. compare the shergottites to measurements of the composition of those volcanoes by orbiting spacecraft, they find that they do not match, particularly in their silica contents. Despite the shergottites matching the volcanoes in age, the volcanoes appear to be made of a different type of basalt from most of the meteorites in our collection. Magmas can dissolve small amounts of water in them, and that water can change the silica contents of magmas in a way that could explain both the volcanoes and the shergottites. Balta and McSween propose that the shergottites represent magmas generated with water and the volcanoes represent drier magmas. Magmas similar to the shergottites could therefore have been a major source of the water present on the martian surface early in its history.


Syn-tectonic, meteoric waterderived carbonation of the New Caledonia peridotite nappe
Benot Quesnel et al., Gosciences Rennes, Universit Rennes 1, UMR 6118 CNRS, 35042 Rennes Cedex, France. Published online ahead of print 30 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34531.1.

Ultramafic rocks, originated in the mantle, are sometimes carried upon continents through the process of obduction. The weathering of such rocks under warm and wet climates results in the formation of laterites associated with nickel ore deposits. A typical example is provided by the peridotite nappe of New Caledonia, SW Pacific. Carbonation of the ultramafic rocks is also indicated by abundant veins of magnesite (MgCO3) found along the serpentine sole of the nappe. In this study, exceptional outcrops recently exposed in the Koniambo Massif allow Benoit Quesnel and colleagues to document (1) the synkinematic character of many magnesite veins with respect to pervasive shear deformation of the sole, providing the first known example of syntectonic carbonation of an ultramafic nappe; and (2) the meteoric origin of the fluids from which the veins have been formed, by means of stable isotopic analyses, which indicates that carbonation and laterization represent complementary records of meteoric water infiltration. Taken together, these results suggest a scenario in which synlaterization tectonic activity has enhanced water infiltration through the nappe, leading to widespread carbonation of the serpentine sole. This calls for renewed examination of other magnesite-bearing ultramafic nappes worldwide in order to establish whether active tectonics is commonly a major agent for carbonation.


Testing the use of microfossils to reconstruct great earthquakes at Cascadia
S.E. Engelhart et al. -- B.P. Horton, corresponding: Sea Level Research, Institute of Marine and Coastal Sciences, School of Environmental and Biological Sciences, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey 08901, USA. Published online ahead of print 30 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34544.1.

In 1700, a massive earthquake struck the west coast of North America. Though it was powerful enough to cause a tsunami as far as Japan, a lack of local documentation has made studying this historic event challenging. In a study lead by S.E. Engelhart, Benjamin Horton, Professor in the Institute of Marine and Coastal Science at Rutgers University, and colleagues have helped unlock this geological mystery using a fossil-based technique. Their work provides a finer-grained portrait of this earthquake and the changes in coastal land level it produced, enabling modelers to better prepare for future events. The Cascadia Subduction Zone runs along the Pacific Northwest coast of the United States and up to Vancouver Island in Canada. This major fault line is capable of producing megathrust earthquakes 9.0 or higher, though this trait was only discovered within the last several decades from geology records due to a dearth of observations or historical records. The Lewis and Clark expedition would not make the first extensive surveys of the region for another 100 years, and contemporaneous aboriginal accounts were scarce and incomplete. To provide a clearer picture of how the earthquake occurred, Horton and his colleagues applied a technique they have used in assessing historic sea level rise. They traveled to various sites along the Cascadia Subduction Zone, taking core samples from up and down the coast and working with local researchers who donated preexisting data sets. The researchers' targets were microscopic fossils known as foraminifera. Through radiocarbon dating and an analysis of different species' positions within the cores over time, Horton and colleagues were able to piece together a historical picture of the changes in land and sea level along the coastline. This research revealed how much the coast suddenly subsided during the earthquake. This subsidence was used to infer how much the tectonic plates moved during the earthquake.


Synchronous Oligocene-Miocene metamorphism of the Pamir and the north Himalaya driven by plate-scale dynamics
Michael A. Stearns et al., Earth Science Department, University of California, Santa Barbara, California 93106, USA. Published online ahead of print 30 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34451.1.

The Pamir and Himalaya are both parts of the India-Asia continent collision, and both have exposed deep crustal rocks ideal for investigating processes operating deep within continent collisions. Mineral dates and chemistry provide both a time record and a petrologic record of the collision at both localities. Both locations experienced metamorphism from 28 to 15 million years ago. Mineral compositions indicate a transition from crustal thickening to thinning 20 million years ago at both places. These events coincide with two tearing events of the subducting Indian plate inferred from tomography.


Enigmatic, biogenically induced structures in Pleistocene marine deposits: A first record of fossil ambergris
Angela Baldanza et al., Department of Earth Sciences, University of Perugia, Piazza Universit, 06123 Perugia, Italy. Published 30 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34731.1.

This article deals to the discovery of unknown, enigmatic trace fossils in marine clay deposits about 1.75 million years ago in central Italy (Umbria Region). Some hypotheses about their origin are considered, but the most convincing explanation stands in the close similarity with large masses of present-day ambergris (known as "floating gold"), a solid, waxy, dull grey or blackish flammable substance usually associated with sperm whales. Preliminary chemical data reveal the presence of organic molecules compatible with mammalian gastric or intestinal activity. Squid beaks are also found. Most of the geological, paleontological, and chemical results allow the identification of these structures as intestinal products of sperm whales living about 1.75 million years ago. At this time, they represent the only known example worldwide of Pleistocene sperm whale "coprolites," and enhance the knowledge about the cetacean frequentation of the ancient Mediterranean Sea.

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Ancient whale coprolites, fault slickensides, shergottites, Ediacara, and Cascadia [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 31-Jul-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Kea Giles
kgiles@geosociety.org
Geological Society of America

New Geology articles posted online ahead of print July 22 and 31, 2013

Boulder, Colo., USA - Two new Geology articles this month are open access: "Steady rotation of the Cascade arc" and "Silica gel formation during fault slip: Evidence from the rock record." Other new articles cover everything from the discovery of fossilized whale "intestinal products" in central Italy to flooding as a result of the 2010 Eyjafjallajkull volcano eruption to new findings via the Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for Mars (CRISM) to using microfossils to reconstruct massive earthquakes in Cascadia.

Highlights are provided below. Geology articles published ahead of print can be accessed online at http://geology.gsapubs.org/content/early/recent. All abstracts are open-access at http://geology.gsapubs.org/; representatives of the media may obtain complimentary Geology articles by contacting Kea Giles at the address above.

Please discuss articles of interest with the authors before publishing stories on their work, and please make reference to Geology in articles published. Contact Kea Giles for additional information or assistance.

Non-media requests for articles may be directed to GSA Sales and Service, gsaservice@geosociety.org.


Steady rotation of the Cascade arc
Ray E. Wells and Robert McCaffrey, U.S. Geological Survey, 345 Middlefield Road, MS 973, Menlo Park, California 94025, USA. Published online 22 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34514.1.

This article by Ray E. Wells and Robert McCaffrey is open-access. Wells and McCaffrey write that the clockwise geologic displacement of the 16 million-year-old (m.y.) ancestral Cascade volcanic arc from the presently active volcanic chain in the northwestern U.S. and Canada is in the same sense and at nearly the same rate as the motions calculated from Global Positioning System (GPS) over the past 15 years. Motion of the ancestral arc can be explained by clockwise rotation of the leading edge of North America at 1.0 degree/m.y. over the magma source generated by the subducting plate, which is itself moving westward 1 to 4.5 km/m.y. as it slowly sinks into the mantle. The remarkable similarities between post-16 m.y. arc migration, paleomagnetic rotation, and modern GPS block motions indicate that the block motions from decadal GPS can be used to calculate meaningful long-term crustal strain rates and earthquake hazards.


Silica gel formation during fault slip: Evidence from the rock record
J.D. Kirkpatrick et al., Dept. of Geosciences, Colorado State University, 1482 Campus Delivery, Fort Collins, Colorado 80523, USA. Published online 22 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34483.1.

This open-access article by J.D. Kirkpatrick and colleagues discusses the dynamic reduction of fault strength as a key process during earthquake rupture. Many mechanisms for causing coseismic weakening have been proposed based on theory and laboratory experiments, including silica gel lubrication. However, few have been observed in nature. Here, Kirkpatrick and colleagues report on the first documented occurrence of a natural silica gel coating a fault surface at the Corona Heights fault slickenside in San Francisco, California, USA.


Comparison of microstructures in superplastically deformed synthetic materials and natural mylonites: Mineral aggregation via grain boundary sliding
Takehiko Hiraga et al., Earthquake Research Institute, University of Tokyo, 1-1-1 Yayoi, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113-0032, Japan. Published online 22 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34407.1

Very similar microstructure, that is, the same phase aggregation is found in both experimentally deformed synthetic materials and natural ultramylonite. The stress-strain-rate relationship, grain-size dependent flow strength, and the achievement of large tensile stain on the synthetic samples indicate that the samples creeped due to grain boundary sliding (GBS). As a result of GBS, grain-switching events allow dispersed phases to contact grains of the same phase oriented in the direction of compression. Mineral phase mixing through GBS, which helps to retain fine grain size in rocks due to grain boundary pinning, has been speculated to occur during formation of mylonites. However, the results presented here by Takehiko Hiraga and colleagues contradict this hypothesis because mineral aggregation through GBS promotes demixing rather than mixing of the mineral phases. GBS processes alone will not promote a transformation of well-developed monomineralic bands to polymineralic bands during mylonitization.


Sea-level-induced seismicity and submarine landslide occurrence
Daniel S. Brothers et al., U.S. Geological Survey, Coastal and Marine Science Center, 384 Woods Hole Road, Woods Hole, Massachusetts 02543, USA. Published online 22 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34410.1.

The relationships between global climate change and marine geohazards remains poorly understood. This study by Daniel S. Brothers and colleagues investigates compelling linkages between rapid sea-level rise, bending of the lithosphere, and stress loading of crustal faults. Rupture of such faults may induce slope failure and generate submarine landslides, thus offering a new explanation for the temporal coincidence between many submarine landslides and rapid sea level rise between 16,000 and 8,000 years ago.


Reconciling disparate estimates of total offset on the southern San Andreas fault
Michael H. Darin and Rebecca J. Dorsey, Dept. of Geological Sciences, 1272 University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon 97403-1272, USA. Published online 22 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34276.1.

The total amount of motion along a fault can be estimated by offset geologic markers that were once continuous across the fault. There are various pairs of cross-fault markers along the San Andreas fault in southern California that suggest different amounts of offset ranging from 160-240 km. These estimates assume that the markers were offset solely by sliding along the fault. In this paper, Michael H. Darin and Rebecca J. Dorsey reinterpret one pair of offset markers and use a simple geometric model to show that fault block rotation adjacent to the fault can account for a small but significant amount of the apparent offset, thus reducing the amount of sliding required to displace the formerly continuous markers. Their model provides a new estimate of ~200 km of total offset on the San Andreas fault within the Salton Trough region, which is consistent with all other geologic data from various offset markers. This new lower estimate of total slip on the southern San Andreas fault implies that more slip is required on other faults in California and Arizona, in order to satisfy estimates of the total amount of motion between the Pacific and North American plates.


Erosion of the Tsangpo Gorge by megafloods, Eastern Himalaya
Karl A. Lang et al., Dept. of Earth and Space Sciences, and Quaternary Research Center, University of Washington, Box 351310, Seattle, Washington 98195, USA. Published online 22 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34693.1.

Karl Lang and colleagues present new detrital zircon U-Pb provenance data from large magnitude "megaflood" deposits immediately downstream of the Yarlung-Tsangpo River Gorge in the easternmost Himalaya. These data support the previous hypothesis that Tibetan lakes restrained by glacial ice and debris within the Yarlung-Tsangpo drainage episodically evacuated through this steep, narrow gorge. These extreme flood events were capable of transporting a considerable amount of material from steep channel-adjacent hillslopes, focusing erosion within the gorge. Although megaflood frequency remains unconstrained, these data support a mechanism to substantially contribute to the Quaternary erosion of the Yarlung-Tsangpo Gorge.


The role of multiple glacier outburst floods in proglacial landscape evolution: The 2010 Eyjafjallajkull eruption, Iceland
Stuart A. Dunning et al., Geography, Engineering and Environment, Northumbria University, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 8ST, UK. Published online ahead of print 30 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34665.1.

In 2010, Eyjafjallajkull volcano in Iceland erupted, causing global disruption due to the dispersing ash cloud. Less well known are the series of floods (known by the Icelandic term "jkulhlaup") generated by the melting of parts of the volcano ice-cap. Stuart A. Dunning and colleagues had a unique opportunity to survey the flood routing prior to the flooding as monitoring indicated an imminent eruption, and to then return after the eruption ended. They used laser scanning and time-lapse camera imagery to create detailed 3D models of the landscape to quantify change. The jkulhlaups completely in-filled a lake at the foot of Gigjkull glacier with sediment totaling more than 17 million cubic meters -- enough to cover nearly 315 NFL pitches 10 m deep in a mix of ash, rock, and ice. Contrary to prior models assuming that the largest events dominate the proglacial landscape, much change occurred during a series of comparatively small jkulhlaup events. It is erosion and deposition from these events that dominate the current surface landscape.


Globally synchronous Marinoan deglaciation indicated by U-Pb geochronology of the Cottons Breccia, Tasmania, Australia
C.R. Calver et al., Mineral Resources Tasmania, PO Box 56, Rosny Park, Tasmania 7018, Australia. Published online ahead of print 30 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34568.1.

The apparently global distribution of Marinoan glacial deposits inspired the "snowball Earth" hypothesis, and prompted designation of the top of the type Marinoan glacials in South Australia as the Global Stratotype Section and Point ("golden spike") for the base of the terminal Proterozoic, Ediacaran System. However, horizons suitable for radioisotopic dating are lacking in the stratotype section and correlated sequences on mainland Australia. Ash beds suitably placed to directly and precisely date the Cryogenian-Ediacaran transition have so far been found only in Namibia (635.5 plus or minus 0.8 million years ago) and south China (635.2 plus or minus 0.8 million years ago). In this paper, C.R. Calver and colleagues show that a probable reworked volcaniclastic horizon at the very top of the Cottons Breccia, a Marinoan glacial correlative on King Island, Tasmania, has yielded an abundant population of juvenile zircons dated (by U-Pb on zircon, using chemical abrasion-thermal ionization mass spectroscopy) at 636.4 plus or minus 0.5 million years ago. Equivalence to the ash bed dates from Namibia and China supports correlation of those strata to the Australian type sections, and globally synchronous deglaciation at the beginning of the Ediacaran Period, and is consistent with the "snowball Earth" hypothesis.


A hematite-bearing layer in Gale Crater, Mars: Mapping and implications for past aqueous conditions
A.A. Fraeman et al., Dept. of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri 63130, USA. Published online ahead of print 30 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34613.1.

The Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for Mars (CRISM) instrument on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter collected data in a spatially overlapping mode that show hematite, an iron oxide mineral, is present on the top of a layered ridge located about 3 km away from the Curiosity rover's proposed arrival point at Mount Sharp's base. The hematite formed either through leaching of local material in neutral to acidic waters or through mixing of anoxic groundwaters with a more oxidizing water body or atmosphere. These formation hypotheses can be tested using Curiosity's payload, and both scenarios indicate that the ridge was a site of past active iron oxidation. In similar environments on Earth, iron oxidation is almost exclusively mediated by microorganisms. This hematite ridge therefore represents a specific site where concentrated and localized iron oxidation occurred, and is a prime location to search for signs of past habitability.


Dynamic pore-pressure variations induce substrate erosion by pyroclastic flows
O. Roche et al., Laboratoire Magmas et Volcans, Universit Blaise Pascal, CNRS UMR6524, IRD R163, 5 rue Kessler, F-63038 Clermont-Ferrand, France. Published online ahead of print 30 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34668.1.

Pyroclastic flows are ground-hugging dense mixtures of gas and particles generated during volcanic eruptions. Field evidence shows that they can entrain blocks from underlying substrates formed by earlier geological events, yet, counter-intuitively, they are less likely to erode unconsolidated layers of fine particles. O. Roche and colleagues report laboratory experiments that reproduce these seemingly contradictory observations and also offer a means to infer pyroclastic flow velocity. Experiments demonstrate that the sliding head of a granular flow generates a dynamic upward pore pressure gradient at the flow-substrate interface. Associated upward air flux is enough to fluidize a smooth substrate of fines, so that particles are not entrained individually but the substrate instead results in small shear instabilities. In contrast, coarse particles forming a non-fluidized rough substrate are lifted at a critical upward force due to the pore pressure gradient, according to their individual masses, which provides a basis for a model to calculate the flow velocity. Application to the 18 May 1980 pyroclastic flow deposits at Mount St. Helens gives velocities of about 9 to 13 meters per second at about 6 to 7 km from the vent on gentle slopes (less than 4 to 6 degrees), in agreement with field observations at this volcano and others.


A stable and hot Turonian without glacial {delta}18O excursions is indicated by exquisitely preserved Tanzanian foraminifera
Kenneth G. MacLeod et al., Department of Geological Sciences, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri 65211, USA. Published online ahead of print 30 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34510.1.

A shift over a few centuries from the icehouse climate state in which humans evolved to a greenhouse climate similar to that of Late Cretaceous (~100 to 65 million years ago) is an often repeated, cautionary prediction of the likely consequence of continued burning of fossil fuels and other anthropogenic additions to atmospheric CO2. The corollary, that understanding previous greenhouse times might help predict future conditions, has justified many Late Cretaceous studies. The resolution of these studies has increased to the point where temporal variability in greenhouse climates can be examined. Widespread warmth is generally accepted to have existed during the Late Cretaceous, but times of growth of continental ice sheets have also been proposed. To test this "greenhouse glacial" hypothesis, Kenneth G. MacLeod and colleagues measured the oxygen isotopic composition of more than 1,000 samples of exceptionally well-preserved shells of single celled organisms (foraminifera) from Tanzania to estimate temperatures spanning a proposed Late Cretaceous glacial interval. Results indicate that hot and remarkably stable conditions prevailed along coastal east Africa during the entire interval examined. There are no indications for growth of glacial ice at this time, and these results support an interpretation that the Earth is effectively ice-free during greenhouse times.


Implications for late Grenvillian (Rigolet phase) construction of Rodinia using new U-Pb data from the Mars Hill terrane, Tennessee and North Carolina, United States
John N. Aleinikoff et al., U.S. Geological Survey, MS 963, Denver, Colorado 80225, USA. Published online ahead of print 30 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34779.1.

New ion microprobe U-Pb geochronology of zircon and monazite from high grade gneisses of the Mars Hill terrane in western North Carolina and eastern Tennessee, USA, indicate that these rocks, previously considered to be 1.8 billion-year-old meta-igneous rocks, are really 1.0 billion-year-old metasedimentary rocks. Thus, they do not represent a fragment of ancient Amazonian crust and were not accreted to Laurentia during the Ottawan phase of the Grenvillian orogeny 1.05 billion years ago. Instead, according to John N. Aleinikoff and colleagues, these rocks probably are composed of detritus eroded from Amazonian crust; the sediments were deposited late in the development of the Rodinia supercontinent, no earlier than about 1.02 Ga, and were metamorphosed at about 0.98 Ga. As such, they are part of a long belt of recently discovered and described late Grenvillian metasedimentary rocks that extends from at least the Smoky Mountains to northern Virginia.


Magma chamber-scale liquid immiscibility in the Siberian Traps represented by melt pools in native iron
Vadim S. Kamenetsky et al., ARC Centre of Excellence in Ore Deposits and School of Earth Sciences, University of Tasmania, Hobart, TAS 7001, Australia. Published online ahead of print 30 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34638.1.

Exceptional preservation of glass inclusions in intrusive rocks of the Siberian Large Igneous Province evidences evolutionary processes of tholeiitic basalts, the most common terrestrial magmas. Silicate liquid immiscibility between aluminosilicate and iron-rich paired melts is recorded by melt pools in native iron. These unique snapshots of magma evolution prove that cooling and crystallizing basaltic magma reaches a two-liquid stability field, and two contrasting silicate melts split at large-scale. The recognition of this mechanism in the Earth's largest magmatic province is critical for understanding common compositional bimodality in other continental magmas and origin of orthomagmatic iron-titanium-phosphorus ore deposits.


Affirming life aquatic for the Ediacara biota in China and Australia
Shuhai Xiao et al., Dept. of Geosciences, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, Virginia 24061, USA. Published online ahead of print 30 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34691.1.

The Ediacara biota (579-541 million years old) has been long championed as a snapshot of the marine ecosystem on the eve of the Cambrian explosion and provides important insights into the early evolution of animals. A recent reinterpretation of the eponymous Ediacara Member of South Australia as paleosols and Ediacara fossils as lichens or microbial colonies that lived on terrestrial soils, if correct, questions the relevance of the Ediacara biota to our understanding of early marine ecosystems. This reinterpretation, however, is not supported by comparative paleobiological and functional morphological analysis. The Ediacara Member shares a number of fossil forms with Ediacaran-age assemblages preserved in unequivocally marine sediments elsewhere in the world, including marine black shales in South China. In addition, Ediacara fossils show no morphological adaptions to address the most fundamental challenges for terrestrial life, for example, mechanical support and desiccation. Thus, comparative paleobiological and functional morphological data support the conventional interpretation that the Ediacara biota records the marine ecosystems just prior to the Cambrian explosion of animals.


Water and the composition of Martian magmas
J. Brian Balta (corresponding) and Harry Y. McSween, Jr., Dept. of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of Tennessee, 1412 Circle Drive, Knoxville, Tennessee 37996, USA. Published online ahead of print 30 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34714.1.

Shergottites are the most common type of martian meteorite. Their composition is basaltic, similar to igneous rocks from Iceland and Hawaii, but with some important differences. When the shergottites are dated using common isotope-decay techniques, they generally are found to be only a few hundred-million years old. On Mars, the only sources of igneous rocks of that age are the large volcanoes, such as Olympus Mons, which are also made of basalt. But, when J. Brian Balta and Harry Y McSween Jr. compare the shergottites to measurements of the composition of those volcanoes by orbiting spacecraft, they find that they do not match, particularly in their silica contents. Despite the shergottites matching the volcanoes in age, the volcanoes appear to be made of a different type of basalt from most of the meteorites in our collection. Magmas can dissolve small amounts of water in them, and that water can change the silica contents of magmas in a way that could explain both the volcanoes and the shergottites. Balta and McSween propose that the shergottites represent magmas generated with water and the volcanoes represent drier magmas. Magmas similar to the shergottites could therefore have been a major source of the water present on the martian surface early in its history.


Syn-tectonic, meteoric waterderived carbonation of the New Caledonia peridotite nappe
Benot Quesnel et al., Gosciences Rennes, Universit Rennes 1, UMR 6118 CNRS, 35042 Rennes Cedex, France. Published online ahead of print 30 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34531.1.

Ultramafic rocks, originated in the mantle, are sometimes carried upon continents through the process of obduction. The weathering of such rocks under warm and wet climates results in the formation of laterites associated with nickel ore deposits. A typical example is provided by the peridotite nappe of New Caledonia, SW Pacific. Carbonation of the ultramafic rocks is also indicated by abundant veins of magnesite (MgCO3) found along the serpentine sole of the nappe. In this study, exceptional outcrops recently exposed in the Koniambo Massif allow Benoit Quesnel and colleagues to document (1) the synkinematic character of many magnesite veins with respect to pervasive shear deformation of the sole, providing the first known example of syntectonic carbonation of an ultramafic nappe; and (2) the meteoric origin of the fluids from which the veins have been formed, by means of stable isotopic analyses, which indicates that carbonation and laterization represent complementary records of meteoric water infiltration. Taken together, these results suggest a scenario in which synlaterization tectonic activity has enhanced water infiltration through the nappe, leading to widespread carbonation of the serpentine sole. This calls for renewed examination of other magnesite-bearing ultramafic nappes worldwide in order to establish whether active tectonics is commonly a major agent for carbonation.


Testing the use of microfossils to reconstruct great earthquakes at Cascadia
S.E. Engelhart et al. -- B.P. Horton, corresponding: Sea Level Research, Institute of Marine and Coastal Sciences, School of Environmental and Biological Sciences, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey 08901, USA. Published online ahead of print 30 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34544.1.

In 1700, a massive earthquake struck the west coast of North America. Though it was powerful enough to cause a tsunami as far as Japan, a lack of local documentation has made studying this historic event challenging. In a study lead by S.E. Engelhart, Benjamin Horton, Professor in the Institute of Marine and Coastal Science at Rutgers University, and colleagues have helped unlock this geological mystery using a fossil-based technique. Their work provides a finer-grained portrait of this earthquake and the changes in coastal land level it produced, enabling modelers to better prepare for future events. The Cascadia Subduction Zone runs along the Pacific Northwest coast of the United States and up to Vancouver Island in Canada. This major fault line is capable of producing megathrust earthquakes 9.0 or higher, though this trait was only discovered within the last several decades from geology records due to a dearth of observations or historical records. The Lewis and Clark expedition would not make the first extensive surveys of the region for another 100 years, and contemporaneous aboriginal accounts were scarce and incomplete. To provide a clearer picture of how the earthquake occurred, Horton and his colleagues applied a technique they have used in assessing historic sea level rise. They traveled to various sites along the Cascadia Subduction Zone, taking core samples from up and down the coast and working with local researchers who donated preexisting data sets. The researchers' targets were microscopic fossils known as foraminifera. Through radiocarbon dating and an analysis of different species' positions within the cores over time, Horton and colleagues were able to piece together a historical picture of the changes in land and sea level along the coastline. This research revealed how much the coast suddenly subsided during the earthquake. This subsidence was used to infer how much the tectonic plates moved during the earthquake.


Synchronous Oligocene-Miocene metamorphism of the Pamir and the north Himalaya driven by plate-scale dynamics
Michael A. Stearns et al., Earth Science Department, University of California, Santa Barbara, California 93106, USA. Published online ahead of print 30 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34451.1.

The Pamir and Himalaya are both parts of the India-Asia continent collision, and both have exposed deep crustal rocks ideal for investigating processes operating deep within continent collisions. Mineral dates and chemistry provide both a time record and a petrologic record of the collision at both localities. Both locations experienced metamorphism from 28 to 15 million years ago. Mineral compositions indicate a transition from crustal thickening to thinning 20 million years ago at both places. These events coincide with two tearing events of the subducting Indian plate inferred from tomography.


Enigmatic, biogenically induced structures in Pleistocene marine deposits: A first record of fossil ambergris
Angela Baldanza et al., Department of Earth Sciences, University of Perugia, Piazza Universit, 06123 Perugia, Italy. Published 30 July 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34731.1.

This article deals to the discovery of unknown, enigmatic trace fossils in marine clay deposits about 1.75 million years ago in central Italy (Umbria Region). Some hypotheses about their origin are considered, but the most convincing explanation stands in the close similarity with large masses of present-day ambergris (known as "floating gold"), a solid, waxy, dull grey or blackish flammable substance usually associated with sperm whales. Preliminary chemical data reveal the presence of organic molecules compatible with mammalian gastric or intestinal activity. Squid beaks are also found. Most of the geological, paleontological, and chemical results allow the identification of these structures as intestinal products of sperm whales living about 1.75 million years ago. At this time, they represent the only known example worldwide of Pleistocene sperm whale "coprolites," and enhance the knowledge about the cetacean frequentation of the ancient Mediterranean Sea.

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Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-07/gsoa-awc073113.php

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Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Bradley Manning's Not Guilty of Aiding the Enemy (But Otherwise Guilty)

Bradley Manning's Not Guilty of Aiding the Enemy (But Otherwise Guilty)

A military judge acquitted Bradley Manning of aiding the enemy and convicted him of multiple counts of violating the Espionage Act on Tuesday. The verdict marks the end of a three-year-long ordeal that began with Manning's arrest in Iraq and subsequent detainment in Kuwait and Quantico, Virginia.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/NI4edSHJbG4/bradley-mannings-not-guilty-of-aiding-the-enemy-but-o-963034954

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Justin Timberlake Takes Fans On Fantastic Voyage In 'Take Back The Night' Video

Clip will debut on Tuesday with interactive behind-the-scenes content on Twitter.
By Gil Kaufman

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1711391/justin-timberlake-take-back-night-music-video-interactive.jhtml

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Drugmaker Perrigo to buy Ireland's Elan for $8.6 billion

By Padraic Halpin and Sam Cage

DUBLIN (Reuters) - U.S. drugmaker Perrigo agreed to buy Elan for $8.6 billion in a deal that will hand it tax savings from being domiciled in Ireland and royalties from a blockbuster multiple sclerosis treatment.

The deal, agreed on Monday, ends a bitter takeover battle in which Elan rejected three lower bids from U.S. investment firm Royalty Pharma amid injunctions, court hearings and a war of words before putting itself up for sale last month.

Michigan-based Perrigo, which makes over-the-counter pharmaceuticals for the in-store brand market and has a market value of some $12 billion, will pay $6.25 per share in cash plus $10.25 per share in stock, a premium of about 10.5 percent over Elan's closing price on Friday.

Elan shares rose 3.8 percent on Monday to $15.5, close to a bid that analysts expect will be snapped up by shareholders who rejected Royalty's successive overtures. Perrigo shares dropped 6.7 percent to $125.3

"Elan has uncovered an excellent offer for its shareholders, substantially ahead of the level Royalty Pharma could achieve," Berenberg Biotech analysts said in a note to clients.

For Elan and Chief Executive Kelly Martin, who took over the firm in 2003 when its share price had sunk to $2, the Perrigo deal is vindication for rejecting Royalty's advances.

Martin, a low-key former Merrill Lynch banker, took a series of verbal attacks in a four-month saga that frequently turned ugly.

In an open letter to the Elan board last month, Royalty predicted that Elan was embarking on a lengthy and likely fruitless effort to find a buyer willing to better its offer.

Royalty's final bid was $13 in cash per share as well as a "contingent value right" that could have added a further $2.50 per share if Elan's blockbuster multiple sclerosis drug Tysabri hit certain sales milestones.

According to Deutsche Bank analysts, Perrigo's offer is a significant premium to their $12 per share valuation of Elan, reflecting the tax advantage, and worth about a fifth more than their calculation of the Royalty bid.

TAX ADVANTAGE

Reuters reported exclusively last week that Perrigo and New York-based Forest Laboratories Inc were preparing to bid.

Elan is especially appealing for companies like Perrigo that can easily move their headquarters abroad because of the very low 12.5 percent corporate tax rate in Ireland, compared with 35 percent in the United States.

Fellow generic drugmaker Actavis' $5 billion acquisition of Dublin-based Warner Chilcott in May allowed it lower its tax rate to 17 percent from 28 percent.

Hundreds of U.S. companies have subsidiaries in Ireland for the same purpose. That practice prompted international criticism after the U.S. Senate revealed that technology giant Apple paid little or no tax on tens of billions of dollars in profits channeled through the country.

The Elan deal buys Perrigo a full tax domicile in Ireland, bringing the bulk of its income under the Irish tax regime. It will use $4.35 billion in bridge financing from Barclays and HSBC plus cash to fund the deal, which also brings it Elan's $1.9 billion cash pile.

Perrigo Chief Executive Joe Papa said the acquisition would cut its effective tax rate to 17 percent in the first 12 to 18 months from around 30 percent now. Chief Financial Officer Judy Brown told an analyst call that it may go even lower over time.

"We think it's financially compelling and when you put it together with an Irish domicile that has operational tax synergies, we think it's a really compelling story," Papa told Reuters in a telephone interview.

The Perrigo boss, for whom Elan is the largest of more than a dozen deals he has led since taking over in 2006, said the company remained committed to the United States where it employs over half of its 9,000 workers. It will remain listed in New York and Tel Aviv , he said.

Papa said Ireland would give Perrigo a gateway into the rest of Europe and saw the Tysabri royalty, worth of up to 25 percent on future sales, as a means to fund future opportunities.

Elan sold its 50 percent interest in Tysabri to U.S. partner Biogen Idec in February for $3.25 billion but retained royalties in the drug whose sales rose to $1.6 billion in 2012.

Elan, founded as a private company in 1969, also drew initial interest from Allergan Inc , Mylan International and Endo HealthSolutions Inc , several people familiar with the situation have said.

Barclays advised Perrigo on the deal, while Citigroup Global Markets, Davy and Davy Corporate Finance, Morgan Stanley & Co. International and Ondra LLP acted for Elan.

($1 = 0.7539 euros)

(Editing by Tom Pfeiffer and Erica Billingham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-drugmaker-perrigo-buy-irelands-elan-8-6-060547747.html

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Sunday, July 28, 2013

Sri Lanka v South Africa

SA 182/6 (40.1 ov, RJ Peterson 5*, JP Duminy 60*, TM Dilshan 2/33) | Live Scorecard | ESPN Cricinfo We see you have Google Chrome installed. Try out Cricinfo's free extension: show me no thanks South Africa tour of Sri Lanka, 4th ODI: Sri Lanka v South Africa at Pallekele, Jul 28, 2013

Source: http://www.cricinfo.com/ci/engine/match/635656.html?CMP=OTC-RSS

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Saturday, July 27, 2013

University Village foreclosure filing against ex-County Commissioner Joseph Moreno

University Village Foreclosure Filing Against Ex-County Commissioner Joseph Moreno

Ex-county commissioner, Joseph Moreno's home at 1443 S Emerald in University Village was just relisted as a pre-foreclosure with a reduced price of $1.18 MM. Moreno has been trying to sell his home since November 4, 2012, shortly after his indictment for corruption. The home, which he purchased in September 2007 for $1,482,000, was originally listed at $1,399,000 in November.

After the initial listing the following sequence of events unfolded:

  • ?November 19: Moreno enters plea talks on bribery charges
  • Original listing cancelled and replaced with an identical listing at the same price in February 2013 - the Haily Mary of real estate.
  • Two weeks later the price dropped to $1.349 MM
  • Five weeks later the price dropped to $1.299 MM
  • About four weeks later on April 22 another Hail Mary
  • April 26: a foreclosure was filed against the home by Capital One
  • July 1: Moreno pleads guilty to bribery charges
  • July 9: Another foreclosure was recorded against the home - this time by the United States of America
  • On July 10 the listing was cancelled. I'm speculating 1) the agent was blamed for not being able to sell an overpriced listing 2) they had a disagreement - probably about price 3) the agent, who is pretty savvy, saw that the United States of America had just filed a foreclosure and didn't want anything to do with the listing.
  • On July 24 a new agent was brought in to sell the home at a significantly lower price - $1.18 MM. Life's not fair.

Joseph Moreno's home is one of 36 single family residences on Emerald on the very eastern edge of University Village, right next to the Dan Ryan. I've always liked that community and the homes in it. In fact, several years ago my wife and I made a halfhearted attempt to buy one of the foreclosed homes on the west side of Emerald. However, the homes on the eastern side of Emerald back up the Dan Ryan overpass and the Moreno home is on the east side of the street.

Over the last several years a few of the homeowners have attempted to sell with varying degrees of success - all a function of the price at which they listed it. The last home sold on the block was 1420 S Emerald, a foreclosure with 4300 square feet and on the west side of the street, which sold for $1.12 MM in July 2011. Prior to that a home sold on the east side of the block at 1401 S Emerald in September 2010 for $1,125,000. That one was 4300 square feet and new construction. Since it was listed at $1,325,000 I'm sure the buyers thought they got a good deal but frankly I thought they overpaid, given the location on the block and the fact that 1454 S Emerald, a foreclosure, had just closed in August for $801,000 and was on the west side of the block. That is the one that my wife and I were interested in. We probably should have bid more for it but it needed a bit of work and, although it would have been a good investment, it was more than we wanted to spend on a house.

Here are the key stats on the Moreno home:

  • 6 bedrooms
  • 3 1/2 baths
  • 4500 square feet
  • 2 fireplaces
  • 3 car garage
  • Oversized 35 x 125 lot
  • Monthly assessments of $350
  • Listing shows 2011 property taxes of $13,609 but the 2012 property taxes were actually $17,025

Check out the photo gallery at the bottom of this post. The description from the listing reads

PRE-FORECLOSURE?35?WIDE CRNR HOME OVERLOOKING PARK! These originally sold for $1.5-1.7M! Highly upgraded, cust millwork thru-out. Open layout w/ tons of wndws/light, 2 fireplaces, lush bckyrd &huge porch! CHEFS Kitch w/giant pantry, granite, wolf&Subzero. Mstr w/seating area&spa bth w/mosaic tile, split vanity, terrazzo shwr&soaking tub! 4 bed on 1 flr w/skyline views! Cust Amphion whole-house sound system, 3 car gar

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There Was Always Something Suspicious About This Guy

The interesting thing about Moreno (no relation to Proco Joe Moreno who is my Alderman) is that he actually lived across the street from me in University Village for several years at 832 W Village Ct. (which I later helped some clients buy). They always struck me as a bit ostentatious with over the top birthday parties and expensive cars - so much so that I once even looked up his salary because I was suspicious that he was involved in some kind of corruption. His county salary did not fit with their lifestyle but I thought that maybe they had family money.

Well, apparently I was on to something - and this was more than 6 years ago. When I saw what he paid for 1443 S Emerald I got really suspicious. Well, apparently one of the charges against him was that one of the subcontractors that he helped get city business loaned him $100,000 to buy that home and later forgave the loan. You know...that's taxable income. Gee, I wonder if he declared that income on his tax return.

Well it's good to know that crime doesn't pay in the long run - for some at least. Moreno will be sentenced on October 17.

If you want to keep up to date on the Chicago real estate market, get an insider's view of the seamy underbelly of the real estate industry, or you just think I'm the next Kurt Vonnegut you can Subscribe to Getting Real by Email.

Source: http://www.chicagonow.com/2013/07/university-village-foreclosure-filing-against-ex-county-commissioner-joseph-moreno/

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Friday, July 26, 2013

Global oil demand to rise 32 per cent by 2040: EIA

Global oil consumption will rise 32 per cent through 2040 and fossil fuels will continue to supply the vast majority of energy needs even as use of renewable and nuclear fuels grows, the U.S. Energy Information Administration forecast on Thursday.

China and India are expected to account for nearly half of a 56 per cent surge in total world energy use in the period from 2010 to 2040, according to the EIA's International Energy Outlook 2013.

"These two countries combined account for half the world's total increase in energy use through 2040," said EIA Administrator Adam Sieminski.

"This will have a profound effect on the development of world energy markets."

Demand growth for decades been focused on the OECD member countries, but emerging economies have seen consumption surge in recent years and become increasing more influential on global prices.

Consumption of petroleum and other liquid fuels should jump from 87 million barrels per day in 2010 to 97 million barrels per day in 2020, the EIA forecast, and reach 115 million bpd by 2040.

In 2011, the last time the EIA released its International Energy Outlook, oil demand was forecast to hit 98 million bpd by 2020 and 112 million bpd in 2035.

While fossil fuels overall were seen continuing to supply 80 per cent of overall world energy use through 2040, the liquid fuels share was seen falling 6 per cent to 28 per cent over the period, to 28 per cent of global consumption.

Natural gas consumption was seen rising 1.7 per cent per year, the fastest growing segment of fossil fuel demand. In 2011, the EIA forecast 1.6 per cent per year growth in natural gas use from 2008 to 2035.

Energy consumption from nuclear power and renewables was seen rising by 2.5 per cent over the period, the most rapidly expanding sector of overall world energy demand.

Source: http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/international-business/global-oil-demand-to-rise-32-per-cent-by-2040-eia/articleshow/21336649.cms

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Thursday, July 25, 2013

Cablevision expands cloud DVR storage, list of supported Android devices

DNP Cablevision Optimum Android app expands availability, multiroom DVR triples storage

Are you a Cablevision subscriber with a Galaxy S III (T-Mobile, US Cellular or unlocked), Galaxy S IV or Galaxy Express (AT&T) handset? Awesome, because now you can watch live and on-demand TV from your phone via the company's Optimum app. More than that, Optimum can do double duty as a clicker for your screen as well as manage recording schedules and content. The cable provider also announced that its cloud-based Multi-Room DVR would triple the storage capacity for recorded video -- jumping to 300 hours of standard-def, 75 hours of high-def or some combination of the two. Maybe what's most exciting is that now you can record 10 shows or movies at once. This should give even the most avid time-shifted TV-watcher a ton of freedom and eliminate a potential Sophie's Choice between Law & Order: SVU, 2 Broke Girls and Antiques Roadshow. Yeah, our tastes are what you might call "diverse."

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Via: Optimum (Twitter)

Source: Google Play

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/Qze3cwlZheM/

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Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Lots of life in the exclusive ex-presidents club

FILE - In this April 25, 2013, file photo, former presidents, from left, George W. Bush, Bill Clinton, George H.W. Bush, and Jimmy Carter gather for a ceremony in Dallas, Texas. In the first 200 years of the republic, just three ex-presidents survived more than two decades after leaving office: John Adams, Martin Van Buren and Herbert Hoover. The odds have improved since then: Jimmy Carter, the longest-serving ex-president, has blown past 32 years out of office and shows no signs of stopping at age 88. George H.W. Bush, 89, passed the two-decade mark this year. The two most recent former presidents, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, both are going strong. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak, File)

FILE - In this April 25, 2013, file photo, former presidents, from left, George W. Bush, Bill Clinton, George H.W. Bush, and Jimmy Carter gather for a ceremony in Dallas, Texas. In the first 200 years of the republic, just three ex-presidents survived more than two decades after leaving office: John Adams, Martin Van Buren and Herbert Hoover. The odds have improved since then: Jimmy Carter, the longest-serving ex-president, has blown past 32 years out of office and shows no signs of stopping at age 88. George H.W. Bush, 89, passed the two-decade mark this year. The two most recent former presidents, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, both are going strong. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak, File)

FILE - In this April 25, 2013, file photo President Barack Obama, from left, and four former presidents, George W. Bush, Bill Clinton, George H.W. Bush and Jimmy Carter appear together at a dedication ceremony in Dallas, Texas. In the first 200 years of the republic, just three ex-presidents survived more than two decades after leaving office: John Adams, Martin Van Buren and Herbert Hoover. The odds have improved since then: Jimmy Carter, the longest-serving ex-president, has blown past 32 years out of office and shows no signs of stopping at age 88. George H.W. Bush, 89, passed the two-decade mark this year. The two most recent former presidents, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, both are going strong. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip, File)

FILE - In this July 2, 2013, file photo President Barack Obama, right, and former president George W. Bush shake hands with family members of victims of the U.S. Embassy bombing in Tanzania during a wreath laying ceremony at the U.S. Embassy in Dar es Salaam. In the first 200 years of the republic, just three ex-presidents survived more than two decades after leaving office: John Adams, Martin Van Buren and Herbert Hoover. The odds have improved since then: Jimmy Carter, the longest-serving ex-president, has blown past 32 years out of office and shows no signs of stopping at age 88. George H.W. Bush, 89, passed the two-decade mark this year. The two most recent former presidents, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, both are going strong. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File)

WASHINGTON (AP) ? In the first 200 years of the republic, just three presidents survived more than two decades after leaving office John Adams, Martin Van Buren and Herbert Hoover. The odds for ex-presidents have improved considerably since then.

Jimmy Carter, who raised the bar for active post-presidential years, is 88 now, and 32 years out of office. No one has survived longer after leaving the White House. George H.W. Bush, 89, passed the two-decade mark this year. The two most recent former presidents, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, both are going strong. Gerald Ford lived nearly 30 years after leaving office.

There's a lot happening in the ex-presidents club these days ? thanks to increasing longevity, the personalities of the current members and expanding opportunities for influence.

After a relatively quiet start to his post-presidency, George W. Bush in recent weeks has made headlines by speaking out for immigration reform and popping up in Africa at a wreath-laying with President Barack Obama to remember victims of terrorism. Clinton, with his philanthropic work and a wife who's a potential presidential candidate, is never far from the news.

The elder Bush, although frail, was at the White House last week (in jaunty red-and-white striped socks) for a ceremony promoting the volunteerism program he started as president. And Carter, noted for his years of globe-trotting work to advance human rights, spoke out last week against "legal bribery of candidates" at home in the form of unchecked political contributions by outside groups.

Is all this activity the new model for ex-presidents? It turns out they've got plenty of examples to draw on from earlier centuries.

"There's a whole class of people who leave the White House and continue to take a hyperactive role in American life," says presidential historian Douglas Brinkley of Rice University. He points to Andrew Johnson, who was elected to the Senate after a presidency that included impeachment; William Howard Taft, who became a Supreme Court justice; John Quincy Adams, who was an outspoken opponent of slavery as a member of the House; Theodore Roosevelt, who created the Bull Moose Party and tried to regain the presidency, and many more.

"There is no rule of thumb," says Brinkley. "Each man is just different."

For all their differences, though, recent chief executives have tended to start their post-presidential years relatively quietly, taking time to regroup, to heal in some cases, and give the new guy space to operate. They focus on raising money for their presidential libraries/centers. They write memoirs. Their poll numbers improve as time passes and memories of hard-fought presidential battles soften.

Call that phase one.

Bush, whose presidential center in Dallas was dedicated in April and whose 2010 memoir, "Decision Points," was a best-seller, has seen his poll numbers rebound, and he seems to be entering phase two: He says he wants to make a difference in the world, but steer clear of politics and avoid meddling in Obama's business.

His recent activities have demonstrated both the possibilities and limitations of an ex-president's influence.

Bush's presence in Africa during Obama's visit to the continent offered a reminder of his efforts to fight HIV and AIDS there. But his entreaty to bring a "benevolent spirit" to the debate over immigration reform seemed to have zero impact on House Republicans. GOP legislators said Bush's comments never even came up in their closed-door meeting about immigration on the day he spoke out.

"We care what people back home say, not what some former president says," said Rep. Tim Huelskamp, R-Kan.

Still, recent ex-presidents seem to be assuming a higher profile in public affairs and politics, says Thomas F. Schaller, a political scientist at the University of Maryland-Baltimore County who has written a study of postmodern ex-presidents.

"The opportunities are greater," says Schaller, pointing to the bigger role of electronic media, the globalization of politics and the tendency of ex-presidents to work more cooperatively with one another and with the current occupant of the White House.

After Clinton and the elder Bush worked closely on humanitarian aid for victims of Hurricane Katrina and the tsunami in Indonesia, Clinton quipped, "People began to joke that I was getting so close to the Bush family, I had become the black sheep son."

A number of earlier ex-presidents also played on the global stage ? but with a smaller megaphone.

Herbert Hoover, who lived nearly 32 years after his presidency, traveled the world and took on significant relief efforts in Europe during and after World War II. He later served on government reform commissions during the Truman and Eisenhower administrations, and declared he had "outlived the bastards" who blamed him for the Great Depression, according to Schaller.

Brinkley says Carter, who left office with disastrous job approval ratings, "game-changed" the ex-president's role with his vigorous public policy activity and freelance diplomacy.

The joke is that Carter, who left office in 1981, used the presidency as a stepping stone to his ex-presidency. He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2002.

Clinton, with his foundation work, seems intent on following Carter's model, although the two have had prickly relations over the years, in part because of Carter's unbidden forays into diplomacy while Clinton was president and his criticism during the Monica Lewinsky scandal.

Obama will exit the White House at age 54, some 15 years younger than when Ronald Reagan took office. He'll soon need to consider how his next act will play out over what most likely will be decades.

"Who wants to think their better days are behind them when you're in your mid-50s?" asks Brinkley. "You try to say, 'How can I make a bigger impact?' You're seeing Clinton do that, and you'll see George W. Bush do it, but in his own Texas-style way."

At his library dedication, the younger Bush related that Alexander Hamilton had once worried about ex-presidents "wandering among the people like discontented ghosts."

"Actually," he added, "I think we seem pretty happy."

___

AP researcher Rhonda Shafner in New York contributed to this report.

___

Follow Nancy Benac on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/nbenac

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-07-22-US-Ex-Presidents-Club/id-db8b7eb19328497d97f1246d156c8816

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