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U.S. News and World Report reported on research by Linda Ivany (Earth Sciences) about the effect of global warming on El Nino.
America Magazine profiled Mary Karr, Jesse Truesdell Peck Professor of Literature (Creative Writing)
Religion News Service quoted Gustav Niebuhr (religion and media) on interfaith understanding.
A Success magazine feature on primatologist Jane Goodall extensively quotes Dean Emerita Cathryn R. Newton.
Research on the formation of biofilms led by Anthony Garza (biology), is featured on Science 360, Medtech Pulse/Qmed and Bioscience Technology.
Christopher DeCorse (anthropology) is quoted in an Agence France Presse story on slave trade relics found on Bunce Island, Sierre Leone.
National Public Radio interviewed Dana Spiotta (Creative Writing) about her recent book, Stone Arabia.
Astrobiology Magazine, United Press International, and others reported on research by Suzanne Baldwin and Joseph Kula (Earth Sciences) about water on Mars.
Scientists discover new way to determine when water was present on Mars and Earth
A record of the past may be locked inside a mineral common to both planets

The SU scientists have done just that. In a recent study published in the October 15 (v. 310) issue of Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Suzanne Baldwin, professor of Earth Sciences in SU’s College of Arts and Sciences; and Joseph Kula, research associate and corresponding author for the study, established the “diffusion parameters” for argon in jarosite. In simpler terms, they discovered a way to use the noble gas argon, which accumulates in jarosite over time, to determine the age of the mineral and the surface conditions under which it formed.
The new study is the first in a series of experiments designed to provide a roadmap of sorts for scientists who may someday study Martian samples brought back to Earth. “Our experiments indicate that over billion-year timescales and at surface temperatures of 20 degrees Celsius (68 degrees Fahrenheit) or colder, jarosite will preserve the amount of argon that has accumulated since the crystal formed,” Kula says, “which simply means that jarosite is a good marker for measuring the amount of time that has passed since water was present on Mars.”
Moreover, since the development of life requires water, knowing when and for how long water was present on the Martian surface has implications for the search for potential habitats harboring life, the scientists say. “Jarosite requires water for its formation, but dry conditions for its preservation,” Baldwin says. “We’d like to know when water formed on the surface of Mars and how long it was there. Studying jarosite may help answer some of these questions.”

However, because argon is a gas, it can potentially escape rapidly from the crystals under hot conditions or slowly over long durations at cold conditions. In order to determine the reliability of the “argon clock” in jarosite, the scientists had to determine the temperature limits to which the crystals could be subjected and still retain the argon. Using a combination of experiments and computer modeling, the team found that argon remains trapped inside the crystals for long periods of time over a range of planetary surface temperatures.
“Our results suggest that 4 billion-year-old jarosite will preserve its argon and, along with it, a record of the climate conditions that existed at the time it formed,” Baldwin says. The scientists are in the process of conducting further studies on jarosite that formed less than 50 million years ago in the Big Horn Basin in Wyoming, which they hope will reveal when the minerals formed and how fast environmental conditions changed from water-saturated to dry. The results can be used as a context for interpreting findings on other planets.
Baldwin and Kula are members of the NASA-funded New York Center for Astrobiology at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, N.Y. The center is one of 10 such centers nationally that are part of the NASA Astrobiology Institute, located at NASA’s Ames Research Center at Moffett Field, California. Their jarosite research is funded by NASA.
---------------------------------------------Contact InformationJudy Holmes |
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