Publications by authors named "B Scheu"

The emergence of biopolymer building blocks is a crucial step during the origins of life. However, all known formation pathways rely on rare pure feedstocks and demand successive purification and mixing steps to suppress unwanted side reactions and enable high product yields. Here we show that heat flows through thin, crack-like geo-compartments could have provided a widely available yet selective mechanism that separates more than 50 prebiotically relevant building blocks from complex mixtures of amino acids, nucleobases, nucleotides, polyphosphates and 2-aminoazoles.

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Explosivity in erupting volcanoes is controlled by the degassing dynamics and the viscosity of the ascending magma in the conduit. Magma crystallisation enhances both heterogeneous bubble nucleation and increases in magma bulk viscosity. Nanolite crystallisation has been suggested to enhance such processes too, but in a noticeably higher extent.

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Article Synopsis
  • Explosive volcanic eruptions release large amounts of silicate ash, which undergoes surface changes while traveling through the atmosphere, affecting its interactions with the environment, including ice formation and toxicity to organisms.
  • Previous studies have not accurately characterized the original ash surface due to the assumption that the surfaces formed during fragmentation mirror the bulk composition of the ash particles.
  • Our research on andesite ash particles reveals significant differences in surface chemistry caused by the way fractures form in the magma, emphasizing the importance of these pre-eruptive features in influencing how ash behaves and interacts in various environmental contexts.
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The 15 January 2022 submarine eruption at Hunga volcano was the most explosive volcanic eruption in 140 years. It involved exceptional magma and seawater interaction throughout the entire submarine caldera collapse. The submarine volcanic jet breached the sea surface and formed a subaerial eruptive plume that transported volcanic ash, gas, sea salts and seawater up to ~ 57 km, reaching into the mesosphere.

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Unlabelled: Krafla central volcano in Iceland has experienced numerous basaltic fissure eruptions through its history, the most recent examples being the Mývatn (1724‒1729) and Krafla Fires (1975-1984). The Mývatn Fires opened with a steam-driven eruption that produced the Víti crater. A magmatic intrusion has been inferred as the trigger perturbing the geothermal field hosting Víti, but the cause(s) of the explosive response remain uncertain.

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