Galapagos Islands’ Volcanic Plume Not Where It Should Be

January 21, 2014

Brett Smith for redOrbit.com Your Universe Online

A new analysis from a team of American researchers has found the volcanic plume that created the Galapagos Islands isnt where models have projected it. The study team said their findings could also explain volcanic activity around the islands.

According to the study, which was published on Sunday the journal Nature Geoscience, the Galapagos plume is at a depth of 155 miles, approximately 100 miles southeast of the westernmost island of the archipelago, where geologists and computer-generated mantle convection models had placed the plume. The study team reached their conclusions using seismic waves penetrating to a depth of nearly 200 miles.

Ocean islands have always been enigmatic, said study author Dennis J. Geist, a geologist at the University of Idaho. Why out in the middle of the ocean basins do you get these big volcanoes? The Galapagos, Hawaii, Tahiti, Iceland all the worlds great ocean islands theyre mysterious.

The plumes location according to the new study is closer to Isabella and Floreana islands, where the three most volatile volcanoes in the island chain are located. This new location adds support to the study teams other finding Earths interior convection doesnt always follow modeling efforts. The study also raises new queries about how ocean plates at the Earths surface referred to as the lithosphere relate to the hotter, more fluid asthenosphere that rests atop the mantle.

The teams paper describes the Galapagos plume rising up into shallower depths than previously described and streams both northward and perpendicular to plate motion. Mantle plumes, also found at Yellowstone and Hawaii, are generally believed to curve along with plate migration meaning the Galapagos plume may have decoupled from the plates involved.

Heres an archipelago of volcanic islands that are broadly active over a large region, and the plume is almost decoupled from the plate motion itself, said study author Douglas R. Toomey, a geology professor at the University of Oregon. It is going opposite than expected, and we dont know why.

The explanation for this finding may lie in the fluid dynamics of the viscous asthenosphere on which the Earths plates sit, Toomey said. In the papers conclusion, the study authors theorized that the plume material is dragged to the mid-ocean ridge by a deep return flow found in the middle of the asthenosphere, instead of along the base of the lithosphere as some modeling projections have shown.

The Galapagos archipelago covers over 3,000 square miles of ocean and sits around 580 miles west of Ecuador, which has dominion over the islands. Volcanic activity on the island chain has been particularly difficult to understand because theories and models have projected newer eruptions moving ahead of the plate, similar to activity seen at the hotspot around Yellowstone.

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Galapagos Islands' Volcanic Plume Not Where It Should Be

Future Islands Tip Hat to Cowboys With ‘Seasons (Waiting On You)’ Video

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Future Islands' lovelorn synth-pop has its origins in Baltimore, but the East Coast trio set their sights on America's heartland in the new video for "Seasons (Waiting On You)," the opening track from upcoming album Singles. The just-unveiled video once again pairs Future Islands with director Jay Buim, who previously helmed the band's "Tin Man," "Balance," and "Grease" clips. This time, Buim examines the idea of the modern cowboy, an archetype that takes part in rodeos, group prayer, and bar room games of pool, while still holding onto a certain kind of quiet, dignified romance that city slickers have let slip away.

"For us, sometimes, it's quite spellbinding how Jay can translate our sound into an image," Future Islands frontman Samuel T. Harring says in an official statement. "'Season (Waiting On You)' is a song about love, letting go, learning from your mistakes and always feeling that pull yearning for a certain love, as time goes by and seasons change. It is simply a song about the human experience."

Take part in the experience by pressing the play button above, and scroll down for Future Islands' tour dates. Singles, one of 50 Albums You Gotta Hear in 2014, is out on March 25, via the group's new label home, 4AD. Pre-orders are currently available through the 4AD store and iTunes.

Future Islands tour dates:

February 3 - Los Angeles, CA @ Center for the Arts, Eagle Rock February 6 - New York, NY @ Bowery Ballroom February 8 - Baltimore, MD @ Floristree February 11 - London, U.K. @ Hoxton Bar & Kitchen February 13 - Paris, France @ La Maroquinerie February 14 - Brussels, Belgium @ Beurschouwburg February 16 - Hamburg, Germany @ Ubel & Gefhrlich February 17 - Berlin, Germany @ C-Club March 3 - Charlottesville, VA @ The Southern * March 4 - Asheville, NC @ Orange Peel * March 5 - Saxapahaw, NC @ The Haw River Ballroom * March 7 - Chattanooga, TN @ JJ's Bohemia * March 8 - Oxford, MS @ Proud Larry's * March 9 - Baton Rouge, LA @ Spanish Moon * March 16 - Memphis, TN @ Hi-Tone Cafe * March 24 - Cleveland Heights, OH @ Grog Shop March 25 - Grand Rapids, MI @ Pyramid Scheme March 26 - Chicago, IL @ Lincoln Hall March 27 - Madison, WI @ High Noon Saloon March 28 - Minneapolis, MN @ Triple Rock Social Club March 29 - Fargo, ND @ The Aquarium March 31 - Billings, MT - The Railyard April 1 - Bozeman, MT @ The Filling Station April 2 - Spokane, WA - The Bartlett April 3 - Seattle, WA @ The Crocodile April 4 - Vancouver, BC @ Rickshaw Theatre April 5 - Portland, OR @ Doug Fir Lounge April 6 - Eugene, OR @ Cozmic Pizza April 7 - Arcata, CA @ Humboldt Brews April 8 - Reno, NV @ The Holland Project April 9 - Santa Cruz, CA @ The Catalyst April 10 - San Francisco, CA @ The Chapel April 21 - El Paso, TX @ Lowbrow Palace April 22 - Marfa, TX @ Padre's April 23 - Austin, TX @ The Mohawk April 24 - Dallas, TX @ Three Links April 25 - Little Rock, AR @ Stickyz Rock'n'Roll Chicken Shack April 26 - Birmingham, AL @ The Bottletree April 29 - Philadelphia, PA @ First Unitarian Church April 30 - New York, NY @ Webster Hall May 1 - Washington, D.C. @ 9:30 Club

* = with Wye Oak

50 Albums You Gotta Hear in 2014

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Future Islands Tip Hat to Cowboys With 'Seasons (Waiting On You)' Video

Hope Diminishes for N.C. Diver Missing Off Cayman Islands

The search to rescue a North Carolina tourist who disappeared while scuba diving in the Cayman Islands was changed today to "recovery" phase because officials no longer believe he could be alive.

David Byles, 57, of Pinehurst, N.C., was scuba diving with his wife as part of an organized group dive off Seven Mile Beach on Sunday when he disappeared between the time he surfaced around 10:20 a.m. and the 100 yard swim to the party's awaiting boat, according to Royal Cayman Islands Police Service.

"We're now in our third day of searching and it's extremely unlikely that Mr. Byles will be found alive," Inspector Ian Yearwood, commander for the Police Marine unit, told ABC News while on board one of the search and recovery boats. "We've informed his wife, but obviously as each day goes by the chances grow slimmer."

"We do not see any suspicious circumstances in this case," Yearwood added.

Byles' diving equipment including tank and buoyancy control device along with an article of clothing have been recovered by police near Barracuda Reef.

None of the 14 other people in the diving party including two instructors had noticed Byles was missing until they had re-boarded the boat. Byles' wife, Rita, thought he had boarded ahead of her but raised the alarm after discovering he was no longer with the group, officials said.

After the boat crew failed to find any trace of Byles in the immediate area, police launched a search and rescue operation which turned into a search and recovery operation this afternoon.

Twenty-eight people are currently involved in the search, including 13 divers and 15 police personnel.

Sunset House, a resort that operates dives where David and Rita Byles were staying, told ABC News that there was no indication that Byles was in distress when he surfaced, and that all reports from family and friends indicated he was in "great health."

"This is just completely unexpected," Sunset House General Manager Keith Sahm said. "The thing that's really aggravating is that it's not like anything happened to him under the water... He surfaced and then he was gone,"

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Hope Diminishes for N.C. Diver Missing Off Cayman Islands

North Carolina man goes missing in waters off Cayman Islands during diving excursion

GEORGE TOWN, Cayman Islands Rescuers in the Cayman Islands searched Monday for a North Carolina man who went missing during a diving excursion off a popular beach in the British Caribbean territory.

The Royal Cayman Islands Police Service said 57-year-old David Byles of Pinehurst, North Carolina, was last seen Sunday morning during an organized dive at Barracuda Wall off Grand Cayman's Seven Mile Beach.

Byles had surfaced with his wife after a dive and they were swimming about 100 yards (90 meters) back to the boat when he vanished from view, police said. An immediate search of the area by the boat's crew failed to find him.

Since then, police divers and various other personnel have conducted marine and air searches. The missing man's scuba tank, buoyancy control device and an article of his clothing were found in the water Monday, but there was no sign of Byles, authorities said.

Cayman Police Inspector Ian Yearwood appealed for specialist divers experienced in depths of at least 135 feet (41 meters) to join the search Tuesday.

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North Carolina man goes missing in waters off Cayman Islands during diving excursion

North Carolina man missing after Cayman Islands dive

GEORGE TOWN, Cayman Islands Rescuers in the Cayman Islands searched Monday for a North Carolina man who went missing during a diving excursion off a popular beach in the British Caribbean territory.

The Royal Cayman Islands Police Service said 57-year-old David Byles of Pinehurst, North Carolina, was last seen Sunday morning during an organized dive at Barracuda Wall off Grand Cayman's Seven Mile Beach.

Byles had surfaced with his wife after a dive and they were swimming about 100 yards back to the boat when he vanished from view, police said. An immediate search of the area by the boat's crew failed to find him.

Since then, police divers and various other personnel have conducted marine and air searches. The missing man's scuba tank, buoyancy control device and an article of his clothing were found in the water Monday, but there was no sign of Byles, authorities said.

Cayman Police Inspector Ian Yearwood appealed for specialist divers experienced in depths of at least 135 feet (41 meters) to join the search Tuesday.

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North Carolina man missing after Cayman Islands dive

Ex-Argentine Soccer Star In Falklands Car Crash

STANLEY (Falkland Islands), Jan 21 (BERNAMA-NNN-MERCOPRESS) -- Falkland Islands Government sources have confirmed reports that former Argentine and Tottenham Hotspur star, Osvaldo Ardiles, was among those injured when a vehicle left the road between Darwin and the military base at Mount Pleasant on Monday evening.

Ardiles, who was thought to be the driver of the rented vehicle, is in the Falkland Islands with former team mate Ricardo Villa to make a documentary for ESPN. Five other people were reportedly in the vehicle, including Ardiles's British-born son,who is leading the TV production team involved.

The accident is believed to have happened around 9pm and prompt action by local emergency services and the British Military led to those involved being flown by helicopter from the accident site to the King Edward Memorial hospital in Stanley, arriving around 9.15pm.

According to information given to MercoPress by a government source, four of the passengers have been released after treatment for minor injuries and another three have been kept at the hospital for further observation.

There has been as yet no statement about the extent of injuries received or confirmation of reports that Osvaldo Ardiles was among those detained.

While the exact location of the accident has not yet been confirmed, the road between Darwin and Mount Pleasant is unsurfaced and unfenced. Early, and also as yet unconfirmed reports, suggest that Ardiles over-turned after hitting some loose gravel while on a descent.

-- BERNAMA-NNN-MERCOPRESS

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Ex-Argentine Soccer Star In Falklands Car Crash

Landfill on the Toronto Islands

Concrete slabs and rebar are regularly dumped along the Toronto Island beaches to curb erosion

I took this photo of Gibraltar Point Beach on a long walk around Toronto Islands during the citys most recent cold snap. Because parts of the Island are exceedingly untamed, especially in the isolated winter, I was surprised to see Leslie Street Spit-style slabs of concrete and twisted rebar landfill breaking the otherwise undomesticated landscape of the Islands south-west beach.

As past postshave explored, the Toronto Islands were formed when land from the dramatic erosion of the Scarborough Bluffs dropped into Lake Ontario and was pushed by the lakes current to form a peninsular sand bar. Though always referred to as The Islands, a powerful storm in 1858 pierced its thin connection to mainland Toronto, rendering them islands in the true sense.

Looking at a few historical Toronto maps (courtesy of the fantastic Historical Maps of Toronto blog), the shape of the sand bar changes dramatically. For its first hundreds of years, the form of the Toronto Islands changed every year and after every storm.

Toronto Island, 1818

Toronto Island, 1834

Toronto Island, 1860

When the Leslie Street Spit peninsula made its final extension into the lake in the 1970s, the flow of sand from the Scarborough Bluffs was effectively blocked. Consequently, the Islands have been eroding, their sand pushed away by the lapping waves of Lake Ontario without the replenishing effect of the Bluffs accumulative currents of land.

The citys response has been to dump landfill along the Islands south shore to curb erosion. In fact, the City has been doing this for more than a hundred years. In 1885, with the vision of Central Park style forests, lawns and meadows,the City decided to parkify the Islands and began dumping soil and infill to landscape and tame the wild, constantly changing landform (picture the French-style geometric gardens that lead from Centre Island to the pier, and the constantly mown fields just to their west). More recently, the City has embraced Michael Hough style natural processes, and native plants are reclaiming their habitats.

In both cases the historical parkification, and the current attempts to curb erosion I can vividly see how this wild place is slowly being taken over by the deep urbanity across the Bay. As the Toronto Islands remain untamed in many senses, I hope that a delicate balance is maintained between the urbanity and wildness that characterizes Torontos frontier shoreline as we continue to negotiate the Islands role in our cityscape.

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Landfill on the Toronto Islands

Islands to draw more tourists

20 January 2014| last updated at 10:38PM

MERSING: ISLANDS around here are set to be major crowd-pullers among locals and foreign tourists during the Visit Malaysia Year 2014 (VMY2014).

Mersing District Council (MDM) president Zainal Eran said among the favourite tourist destinations of island getaways are Pulau Rawa, Pulau Besar, Pulau Pemanggil, Pulau Aur, Pulau Tengah and Pulau Sibu which are accessible via the Sungai Mersing jetty.

"We are expecting an increase in the number of visitors compared with the 200,000 people recorded last year," he said.

"Throughout last year, there were 68,788 overseas visitors including those from Europe, Japan, Korea and China. The rest were local visitors," he said.

"We will woo the tourists with various promotions as carried out by the government in conjunction with VMY2014," he said.

"MDM has also beautified several places in the district including having a beach cleanup. We believe a pristine, litter-free beach will make tourists feel more welcome," he said.

Zainal said he hoped the locals will play their part in ensuring the cleanliness of tourist spots.

He said MDM has also placed several centralised waste containers for residents living in rural areas outside its jurisdiction.

"With the facilities, it is hoped that the locals will enjoy a better garbage disposal system. Previously, the locals will dispose of garbage by the roadside for the garbage collectors," he said.

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Islands to draw more tourists