2008 Volume 4 – Store Elementsmagazine https://store.elementsmagazine.org Fri, 28 Jun 2024 12:41:40 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://store.elementsmagazine.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/cropped-favicon-32x32-1.jpg 2008 Volume 4 – Store Elementsmagazine https://store.elementsmagazine.org 32 32 Platinum-Group Elements, August 2008, Vol. 4, No. 4 https://store.elementsmagazine.org/platinum-group-elements-august-2008-vol-4-no-4/ Fri, 28 Jun 2024 12:41:40 +0000 http://storeelements2.local/product/platinum-group-elements-august-2008-vol-4-no-4/ Platinum-Group Elements

August 2008, Vol. 4, No. 4

The geoscientific and economic significance of the PGE is immense. Due to their extreme siderophile and chalcophile behaviour, the PGE are highly sensitive tracers of geological processes involving metal and sulfide phases. Furthermore, there are two radioactive decay series involving PGE, which combine both lithophile and chalcophile characteristics in various parent or daughter elements. PGE consequently offer insight into a wide range of geological processes that no other group of elements can provide. The PGE are also very important economically, primarily due to their “noble” character in common applications such as jewelry, electrodes, catalysts, and fuel cell technology. Unfortunately, the PGE are also bioavailable as potential toxins to organisms in the natural environment. Their widespread use, particularly in automotive catalytic converters, makes their environmental behavior a matter of increasing concern. This issue of Elements provides an overview of our current understanding of the distribution of PGE and their isotopes in the Earth and solar system, and what this knowledge tells us about the workings of our planet, about extraction of PGE resources, and about the environmental risks attendant on their use.

Why You’ll Love Elements Magazine:

  • Expert Contributors: Articles written by renowned researchers in the field of geoscience.
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  • Exceptional Quality: Each issue is printed on high-quality paper with stunning visuals and detailed illustrations that bring complex scientific concepts to life.

Order your copy of the August 2008 issue of Elements magazine today and learn about platinum-group elements.

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Carbon Dioxide Sequestration, October 2008, Vol. 4, No. 5 https://store.elementsmagazine.org/carbon-dioxide-sequestration-october-2008-vol-4-no-5/ Fri, 28 Jun 2024 12:41:40 +0000 http://storeelements2.local/product/carbon-dioxide-sequestration-october-2008-vol-4-no-5/ Carbon Dioxide Sequestration

October 2008, Vol. 4, No. 5

Storage of carbon in the subsurface involves introduction of supercritical CO2 into rock formations beneath the surface of the Earth, typically at depths of 1000 to 4000 meters. Although CO2 is a relatively benign substance, the volume being considered is large. If developed to its envisaged potential, geologic sequestration will entail the pumping of CO2 into the ground at roughly the rate we are extracting petroleum today. To have the desired impact on the atmospheric carbon budget, CO2 must be efficiently retained underground for hundreds of years. Any underground storage system will have to account for the natural characteristics of subsurface formations; some are advantageous for storage while others are not. When foreign materials are emplaced in subsurface rock formations, they change the chemical and physical environment. Understanding and predicting these changes are essential for determining how the subsurface will perform as a storage container. The specific scientific issues that underlie sequestration technology involve the effects of fluid flow combined with chemical, thermal, mechanical, and biological interactions between fluids and surrounding geologic formations. Complex and coupled interactions occur both rapidly as the stored material is emplaced underground, and gradually over hundreds to thousands of years. The long sequestration times needed for effective storage and the intrinsic spatial variability of subsurface formations provide challenges to both geoscientists and engineers. A fundamental understanding of mineralogical and geochemical processes is integral to this success.

Why You’ll Love Elements Magazine:

  • Expert Contributors: Articles written by renowned researchers in the field of geoscience.
  • Engaging Content: Join a community of readers who are passionate about Elements.
  • Exceptional Quality: Each issue is printed on high-quality paper with stunning visuals and detailed illustrations that bring complex scientific concepts to life.

Order your copy of the October 2008 issue of Elements magazine today and delve into carbon dioxide sequestration.

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Nanogeoscience, December 2008, Vol. 4, No. 6 https://store.elementsmagazine.org/nanogeoscience-december-2008-vol-4-no-6/ Fri, 28 Jun 2024 12:41:40 +0000 http://storeelements2.local/product/nanogeoscience-december-2008-vol-4-no-6/ Nanogeoscience

December 2008, Vol. 4, No. 6

At first glance, nano and Earth seem about as far apart as one can imagine. Nanogeoscience seems to be a word connecting opposites. More specifically, a nanometer relative to a meter is the same as a marble relative to the size of this planet. But to a growing number of Earth scientists, the term nanogeoscience makes perfect sense. Nanomaterials can be manufactured, but they are also naturally occurring. In fact, we now think that nanomaterials are essentially ubiquitous in nature. Importantly, nanomaterials often have dramatically different properties from those of the same material with larger grain size. By understanding these property changes as a function of size and shape in the nano-range, we will acquire another perspective from which to view Earth chemistry. This issue of Elements explores our current knowledge of nanogeoscience using numerous examples from the “critical zone” of the Earth, as well as from the oceans and the atmosphere. Important insights into local, regional, and even global phenomena await our understanding of processes that are relevant at the smallest scales of Earth science studies. Nanogeoscience is at a relatively early stage of development. Therefore, large gaps in our knowledge in this area exist, making the next few years and decades an exciting time of new realizations, discovery, and change. This issue of Elements helps promote and energize this field in its early adolescence.

Why You’ll Love Elements Magazine:

  • Expert Contributors: Articles written by renowned researchers in the field of geoscience.
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  • Exceptional Quality: Each issue is printed on high-quality paper with stunning visuals and detailed illustrations that bring complex scientific concepts to life.

Order your copy of the December 2008 issue of Elements magazine today and explore the field of nanogeoscience.

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Supervolcanoes, February 2008, Vol. 4, No. 1 https://store.elementsmagazine.org/supervolcanoes-february-2008-vol-4-no-1/ Fri, 28 Jun 2024 12:41:39 +0000 http://storeelements2.local/product/supervolcanoes-february-2008-vol-4-no-1/ Supervolcanoes

February 2008, Vol. 4, No. 1

Explosive super-eruptions from large volume, shallow magma systems lead to enormous and devastating pyroclastic flows, the formation of gigantic collapse calderas, and deposition of volcanic ash over continent-sized areas. Recognition that future eruptions from these “supervolcanoes” will undoubtedly have severe impacts on society—and perhaps on life itself—has led to recent public and media interest. Should we be concerned about an imminent super-eruption? The answer to this question requires an understanding of past eruption events. In this issue, geoscientists investigating ancient supervolcanoes provide insight into the processes and the time required to generate large volumes of eruptible magma, the monitoring of a youthful system, and supereruption processes and consequences.

Why You’ll Love Elements Magazine:

  • Expert Contributors: Articles written by renowned researchers in the field of geoscience.
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  • Exceptional Quality: Each issue is printed on high-quality paper with stunning visuals and detailed illustrations that bring complex scientific concepts to life.

Order your copy of the February 2008 issue of Elements magazine today and uncover the science of supervolcanoes.

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Phosphates And Global Sustainability, April 2008, Vol. 4, No. 2 https://store.elementsmagazine.org/phosphates-and-global-sustainability-april-2008-vol-4-no-2/ Fri, 28 Jun 2024 12:41:39 +0000 http://storeelements2.local/product/phosphates-and-global-sustainability-april-2008-vol-4-no-2/ Phosphates And Global Sustainability

April 2008, Vol. 4, No. 2

Phosphorus is a unique element: it is essential to the existence of all living forms, and as such controls biological productivity in many terrestrial and marine environments; but when in excess, it leads to uncontrollable biological growth and water-quality problems. This has become a common environmental issue, resulting from our careless use of phosphorus in agriculture, yet phosphate ore deposits, from which fertilizers are produced, are a finite natural resource. Understanding the properties of phosphate minerals may hold the key to protecting the future of this resource. Phosphate minerals are also of extreme importance in biomineralization and could be the future hosts of nuclear waste. Despite all this, mineralogists and geochemists have invested little time understanding phosphate mineral stability, reactivity, and transformations, and this issue attempts to bring phosphates to the forefront of our scientific endeavors.

Why You’ll Love Elements Magazine:

  • Expert Contributors: Articles written by renowned researchers in the field of geoscience.
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  • Exceptional Quality: Each issue is printed on high-quality paper with stunning visuals and detailed illustrations that bring complex scientific concepts to life.

Order your copy of the April 2008 issue of Elements magazine today and investigate phosphates and global sustainability.

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Deep Earth And Mineral Physics, June 2008, Vol. 4, No. 3 https://store.elementsmagazine.org/deep-earth-and-mineral-physics-june-2008-vol-4-no-3/ Fri, 28 Jun 2024 12:41:39 +0000 http://storeelements2.local/product/deep-earth-and-mineral-physics-june-2008-vol-4-no-3/ Deep Earth And Mineral Physics

June 2008, Vol. 4, No. 3

The field of high-pressure mineral physics is central to our understanding of the Earth’s interior and its evolution. It is also a field that is rapidly advancing. Recent major discoveries, such as the post-perovskite phase transition that may explain some of the properties of the core–mantle boundary, speak to the continued importance of high-pressure mineral physics experiments. The results from experimental mineral physics along with seismological data are used to construct compositional and thermal models of the Earth and its heterogeneity, including inferences of deep geochemical reservoirs. These results are also key to understanding all planetary bodies in the solar system. This issue of Elements highlights several key areas of high-pressure mineral physics in a form that is accessible to a broad mineralogical audience.

Why You’ll Love Elements Magazine:

  • Expert Contributors: Articles written by renowned researchers in the field of geoscience.
  • Engaging Content: Join a community of readers who are passionate about Elements.
  • Exceptional Quality: Each issue is printed on high-quality paper with stunning visuals and detailed illustrations that bring complex scientific concepts to life.

Order your copy of the June 2008 issue of Elements magazine today and explore deep Earth and mineral physics.

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