
Hydrothermal Fluids, December 2020, Vol. 16, No. 6
June 28, 2024
Heavy Stable Isotopes: From Crystals To Planets, December 2021, Vol. 17, No. 6
June 28, 2024Speleothems, April 2021, Vol. 17, No. 2
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Growing slowly drip by drip through the millennia, stalagmites, stalactites, and flowstone—collectively known as speleothems—are some of the most fantastic mineral features in nature. Speleothems are also critical archives of past environments, and their study incorporates expertise from groundwater hydrogeology and geochemistry, atmospheric chemistry, climate science, geobiology, and even geophysics.
Speleothems
April 2021, Vol. 17, No. 2
Growing slowly drip by drip through the millennia, stalagmites, stalactites, and flowstone—collectively known as speleothems—are some of the most fantastic mineral features in nature. Speleothems are also critical archives of past environments, and their study incorporates expertise from groundwater hydrogeology and geochemistry, atmospheric chemistry, climate science, geobiology, and even geophysics. Research on speleothem trace element and isotopic geochemistry, constituent organic compounds, noncarbonate minerals, and morphology can help illuminate paleoenvironmental conditions and document historical anthropogenic land-use changes. This issue of Elements introduces the many ways that speleothems are used within the geoscience community to learn about natural Earth processes and our role in modifying them.
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Order your copy of the April 2021 issue of Elements magazine today and explore speleothems.
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