Causal links between the rise of a large mountain range and climate have often been considered to work in one direction, with significant uplift provoking climate change. Here we propose a mechanism by which Cenozoic climate change could have caused the rise of the Andes. Based on considerations of the force balance in the South American lithosphere, we suggest that the height of, and tectonics in, the Andes are strongly controlled both by shear stresses along the plate interface in the subduction zone and by buoyancy stress contrasts between the trench and highlands, and shear stresses in the subduction zone depend on the amount of subducted sediments. We propose that the dynamics of subduction and mountain-building in this region are controlled by the processes of erosion and sediment deposition, and ultimately climate. In central South America, climate-controlled sediment starvation would then cause high shear stress, focusing the plate boundary stresses that support the high Andes.
The oil spill resulting from the explosion of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform initiated immediate concern for marine wildlife, including common bottlenose dolphins in sensitive coastal habitats. To evaluate potential sublethal effects on dolphins, health assessments were conducted in Barataria Bay, Louisiana, an area that received heavy and prolonged oiling, and in a reference site, Sarasota Bay, Florida, where oil was not observed. Dolphins were temporarily captured, received a veterinary examination, and were then released. Dolphins sampled in Barataria Bay showed evidence of hypoadrenocorticism, consistent with adrenal toxicity as previously reported for laboratory mammals exposed to oil. Barataria Bay dolphins were 5 times more likely to have moderate-severe lung disease, generally characterized by significant alveolar interstitial syndrome, lung masses, and pulmonary consolidation. Of 29 dolphins evaluated from Barataria Bay, 48% were given a guarded or worse prognosis, and 17% were considered poor or grave, indicating that they were not expected to survive. Disease conditions in Barataria Bay dolphins were significantly greater in prevalence and severity than those in Sarasota Bay dolphins, as well as those previously reported in other wild dolphin populations. Many disease conditions observed in Barataria Bay dolphins are uncommon but consistent with petroleum hydrocarbon exposure and toxicity.
[1] Shear stresses t on a subduction megathrust play an important role in determining the forces available for mountain building adjacent to a subduction zone. In this study, the temperatures and shear stresses on megathrusts in 11 subduction zones around the Pacific rim (Hikurangi, Tonga, Izu-Ogasawara, western Nankai, northeastern Japan, Aleutians, western Alaska, Cascadia, northern Chile, southern Chile) and SE Asia (northern Sumatra) have been determined. The main constraint is that vertical normal stresses beneath the highlands behind the subduction zone are nearly equal to horizontal normal stresses, in the plane of a trench-or arc-normal section. For a typical brittle and ductile megathrust rheology, frictional shear stress t = mrgz, for depth z, and ductile shear stress t = A exp (B/RT) at temperature T, where m, A, B are rheological parameters treated as constants. Rheological constants common to all the megathrusts (m crust , m mantle , B) are determined by simultaneously solving for the force balance in the overlying wedge and megathrust thermal structure, using a simplex minimization algorithm, taking account of the induced mantle corner flow at depth (65 ± 15 km (2s)) and constant radiogenic heating (0.65 ± 0.3 mW m À3 (2s)) throughout the crust. The A constants are solved individually for each subduction zone, assuming that the maximum depth of interplate slip earthquakes marks the brittle-ductile transition. The best fit solution shows two groupings of megathrusts, with most subduction zones having a low mean shear stress in the range 7-15 MPa (m crust = 0.032 ± 0.006, m mantle = 0.019 ± 0.004) and unable to support elevations >2.5 km. For a typical frictional sliding coefficient $0.5, the low effective coefficients of friction suggest high pore fluid pressures at $95% lithostatic pressure. Tonga and northern Chile require higher shear stresses with m crust = 0.095 ± 0.024, m mantle = 0.026 ± 0.007, suggesting slightly lower pore fluid pressures, at $81% lithostatic. Ductile shear in the crust is poorly resolved but in the mantle appears to show a strong power law dependency, with B = 36 ± 18 kJ mol À1 . A mantle values are sensitive to the precise value of B but are in the range 1-20 kPa. The power law exponent n for mantle flow is poorly constrained but is likely to be large (n > 4). The brittle-ductile transition in the crust occurs at temperatures in the range 370°C-512°C, usually close to the base of the crust and in the mantle at much lower temperatures (180°C-300°C), possibly reflecting a marked change in pore fluid pressure or quasi ductile and subfrictional properties. In subduction zones where the subducted slab is older than 50 Ma, a significant proportion of the integrated shear force on the megathrust is taken up where it cuts the mantle and temperatures are 300°C. In much younger subduction zones, the stress transmission is confined mainly to the crust. The shear stresses, particularly in the crust, may be kept low by some sort of lubricant such as abundant water-rich trench fill, wh...
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