A massive week for earth science
A massive week for earth science
Barely a week on from last Saturday's 7.1 magnitude earthquake in Canterbury, scientists have paused to outline what they have learned about the quake from examining the previously undiscovered fault and seismographic and GPS data that has been gathered in the region.
Dr Ken Gledhill, Duty Seismologist at GNS Science and the GeoNet platform and Professor Martha Savage from Victoria University held a public lecture in Wellington today which can be listened to on the SMC website.
Scientists from GNS Science and several of the countries universities mobilised this week to gather data on the quake, deploying seismometers in Canterbury to measure more accurately the size and location of aftershocks. Around 200 seismometers from Stanford University are also being deployed, in some cases in people's houses.
Among the big questions raised by the quake, the scientists speaking in Wellington today identified the following:
- How can we find
other unknown faults in New Zealand?
- Can earthquakes
interact and have an impact on each other? If so, how?
-
What can we learn about the emotional impact of people in
the wake of disasters like this? Can we better predict
earthquakes?
- What can we learn to improve building
standards?
Check out the Sciblogs
highlights section below to see the extensive
analysis of the earthquake our science bloggers provided
during the week.
Food safety under the
spotlight
An international line-up of food
safety experts will be in Auckland next week for the New
Zealand Food Safety Authority's conference.
Among the international speakers is Professor Gordon Robertson from the University of Queensland who will be looking at how food contact materials can leach chemicals into food and discuss recent incidents that have made headlines around the world including printing inks, recycled content, plasticisers, heavy metals and Bisphenol-A.
The SMC will be on hand at
the conference recording keynote speeches and issuing
updates - check out the SMC website, Sciblogs and Twitter
for updates. Journalists who want to find out more can
contact Gary Bowering at
NZFSA.
Prof Tim Flannery coming to
town
Outspoken Australian scientist and
conservationist Professor Tim Flannery will be in New
Zealand next week as one of the headline speakers at a
conference in Wellington on soil carbon and climate
change.
Among the issues that will be discussed at
the conference, being held from September 15 - 16 at Te Papa
in Wellington:
- The science behind climate
change and soil carbon
- The on-farm benefits of
biological farming
- How research can support innovative
farmers
- An overview of the new biological economy and
market opportunities
- Practical tips to build soil
carbon, humus and soil biology
- Future directions for
NZ agriculture and extension services
Full conference details are available here. The SMC recently held a briefing for journalists on soil carbon and featuring scientists involved in the New Zealand Agricultural Greenhouse Gas Research Centre. You can listen to the briefing here.
On the
science radar
Understanding Shakespeare, sneaky (boy) birds, early extinction indicators, new dinosaur, how much is left?, cockroach-derived antibiotics, and
the smallest world map
Research
highlights
NOTE: All links point to
the research article/abstract in the relevant
journal.
Some of the articles in this
week's edition of the New Zealand Medical Journal,
themed around public health:
Editorials
• On
male occupation mortality
• Driving disease emergence:
will land-use changes beat climate change to the
punch?
Original Articles
• Occupation
mortality in New Zealand males: 2005
• Classification
of 'healthier' and 'less healthy' supermarket foods by two
Australasian nutrient profiling
models
Viewpoint
• Land-use change and
emerging public health risks in New Zealand: assessing
Giardia risks
Cooling North may have warmed South
- The Younger Dryas (a period of cooling in the
Northern Hemisphere which happened in just a few years, over
12,000 years ago) may not have been a global event, suggests
research published in Nature. A team of scientists,
including researchers from New Zealand, has found that New
Zealand glaciers in the Southern Alps retreated during that
time period, suggesting that a series of climate feedbacks
(including atmospheric carbon dioxide changes) caused
warming in the Southern Hemisphere.
Engineering soil to solve multiple problems - By treating soil as the living ecosystem it is, and then engineering it appropriately in vivo (i.e. outside of the lab), scientists propose that it could be used to solve a multitude of problems - examples include carbon sequestration, hazardous waste disposal, global warming, and brownfields cleanup - simultaneously. A paper in Journal of the Royal Society Interface looks at the potential, opportunities and challenges which would accompany the field.
Fast decisions less likely to be good, even
for mould - Scientists researching speed-accuracy
tradeoffs - seen in both humans and animals, decisions which
are made fast are less accurate - have discovered that slime
mould also make mistakes if making decisions fast. The
research, published in Proceedings of the Royal Society
B, suggests that such trade-offs must be dealt
with even by organisms which lack brains.
Computing hotly -
Heat is often seen as the enemy of computing,
slowing down calculation speed. Now, however, researchers
have developed tiny (nanoscale) electronic switches which
are able to operate well at very high temperatures (500 deg
C). The switches could be useful in electronics which need
to work under heat stress, for example propulsion or
geothermal systems. Published in Science.
New dinosaur: a very strange-looking carnivore - Scientists have unearthed the skeleton of a previously unknown dinosaur in Spain. The animal was 6 metres long, with a hum-like structure on its back (something not seen before in dinosaurs), a strange spine and, possibly, quill knobs on its forearms. The find could shed further light on the early evolution of therapods. Published in Nature.
Magic mushrooms a valid treatment for some conditions - Moderate doses of psilocybin, the hallucinogenic compound found in 'magic mushrooms' could be a valid, safe treatment for people suffering from advanced-stage cancer and anxiety, according to research published in Archives of General Psychiatry. Researchers are urging more study into the field.
Fossil fuels: if we stop now, we might be ok - Researchers publishing in Science have found that carbon dioxide levels could stabilise at 430 ppm (and a 1.3 deg C rise) if we stopped production of any new carbon-emitting structures and devices (like cars and power plants). However, they also believe that the most carbon-emitting devices have still be built, and 30 terrawatts of carbon-neutral energy will be needed by 2050 if economies are to continue growing while still keeping under the two degree rise threshold necessary to prevent major climate change.
Urban people more likely to suffer
psychosis - Psychotic disorders such as
schizophrenia are more prevalent amongst urban than rural
people, finds a study published in Archives of General Psychiatry.
Furthermore, neighbourhood-based factors such as population
and ethnic density, deprivation, social
fragmentation/reduced social cohension were associated with
an increased risk of developing such disorders. The study
highlights the importance of feelings of safety, cohesion
and community spirit for the mental health of a population.
New from the SMC
Expert on
psychological impacts on Canterbury quake victims -
Tony Taylor, emeritus professor at Victoria
University's School of Psychology, provided some comments on
the short and potentially long-term psychological impacts of the
Canterbury earthquake on the people who experienced it and
its numerous aftershocks.
Professor Euan Smith on lessons from the quake - Euan Smith, Professor of Geophysics, Institute of Geophysics Victoria University of Wellington, provided comments on various aspects of the earthquake, including liquefaction, the fault being unknown, multiple quakes and lessons learnt.
GNS: The Christchurch quake in context - GNS Science created a useful graphic comparing the 7.1 magnitude Christchurch earthquake to other strong earthquakes in New Zealand.
Stories of note:
NZ
Herald: Climate expert tells NZ to cut the carbon -
British economist Lord Stern is warning that New
Zealand needs to cut its carbon emissionsor face the
risk of being excluded from trade markets, or falling behind
technologically. Waikato Times: Ancient history
and the age when dinosaurs roamed - Dom Post: The pursuit of science before
happiness - NZ Herald/NZPA: Male moa stayed at home
to sit on eggs - 7.4 magnitude
quake hits Christchurch - AusSMC: Vitamin B and
Alzheimer's disease -
Media Coverage: The Canterbury
Earthquake - Since the magnitude 7.1 earthquake hit the
Canterbury region a little before 5am on Saturday, 4
September, the media has been covering events
closely.
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Sciblogs
highlights
Some of the latest blog
posts include:
Not surprisingly,
many of this week's blog posts have been earthquake-related,
with two of our newest bloggers, Jesse Dykstra and Chris
McDowall, heavily involved. Here are the posts (oldest
first):
• Earthquake, South Island,
New Zealand - Code for
Life
• Canterbury Earthquake -
Genetics Otago
• New fault surprises
scientists - Griffin's
Gadgets
• Mapping quakes in Canterbury
- seeing data
• What happened under
Canterbury yesterday morning - The
Atavism
• Haiti: 230,000 Deaths.
Canterbury: 0 Deaths. Why? Canterbury Earthquake (Pt I) -
Shaken Not Stirred
• Initial Thoughts
on the Canterbury Earthquake - The Science of
Architecture
• Christchurch's
liquefaction (infographic) - Visibly
Shaken
• Hand drawn chart of
aftershock intensity - seeing
data
• Earthquakes and Polarized light
- Marcus Wilson
• What Lies Beneath
the Canterbury Plains? A Fault Revealed - Shaken Not
Stirred
• Two Christchurch quake
animations - seeing
data
• Liquefaction Explained - Shaken
Not Stirred
• What's With Those
Aftershocks?! - Shaken Not
Stirred
• Six months of seismic
activity in under a minute - seeing
data
• Canterbury Earthquake - first
flyover of fault trace -
Videos
ENDS