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X-WR-CALNAME;VALUE=TEXT:ClimaTea Journal Club
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SUMMARY:ClimaTea Journal Club
DESCRIPTION:<p>	<strong>Speaker: </strong>Jake Seeley</p><p>	<span>Jake will lead the discussion<strong> </strong>on the paper titled <strong>‘Arc-continent collisions in the tropics set Earth’s climate state’ </strong>by <strong>Macdonald et al. </strong> (</span><a href="https://eps.harvard.edu/files/eps/files/macdonald2019.pdf">Attached</a><span>)</span></p><p>	<span>Jake’s blurb is below, adapted from the abstract:</span></p><p>	<span>On multimillion-year time scales, Earth has alternated between warm, ice-free climates and cold, glacial climates. What causes these transitions in climate state? Macdonald et al. argue that Earth’s climate state is set primarily by the latitudinal distribution of a particular type of tectonic collision. In particular, they hypothesize that low-latitude arc-continent collisions drive global cooling by exhuming highly weatherable rocks in the warm, wet tropics, thereby increasing Earth’s potential to sequester carbon (i.e., strengthening the silicate-weathering carbon dioxide sink). The authors make their case by reconstructing the paleogeographic position of all major Phanerozoic arc-continent collisions, and comparing to the latitudinal distribution of ice sheets. This analysis reveals a strong correlation between the extent of glaciation and arc-continent collisions in the tropics.</span></p>
LOCATION:Faculty Lounge room 409, Hoffman
STATUS:CONFIRMED
DTSTART:20190416T190000Z
DTEND:20190416T190000Z
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