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Volume 21 Issue 9 (September 2011)

GSA Today

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Article, pp. 5-7 | Full Text | PDF (468KB)

Learning from failure: The SPREE Mid-Continent Rift Experiment

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Seth Stein1*, Suzan van der Lee1, Donna Jurdy1, Carol Stein2, Douglas Wiens3, Michael Wysession3, Justin Revenaugh4, Andrew Frederiksen5, Fiona Darbyshire6, Trevor Bollmann7, Jessica Lodewyk7, Emily Wolin7, Miguel Merino7, and Karen Tekverk7

1 Earth and Planetary Sciences, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois 60208, USA
2 Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Illinois, Chicago, Illinois 60607-7059, USA
3 Earth and Planetary Sciences, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri 63130, USA
4 Geology and Geophysics, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455, USA
5 Geological Sciences, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba R3T 2N2, Canada
6 GEOTOP, University of Québec, Montreal, Québec H3C3P8, Canada
7 Earth and Planetary Sciences, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois 60208, USA

PREFACE: (open/close)
Special 2011 Annual Meeting–Themed Science Article Section

In a departure from GSA Today’s usual single lead science article format, the following four articles are meant to familiarize you with the span of geologic time represented in the Upper Midwest and the expertise of its geoscience community as we prepare to assemble at the Annual Meeting in Minneapolis. These articles also emphasize the critical role geologists are being asked to play in a society that is increasingly focused on sustainable resource use and the long-term resilience of the planet.

The first two papers treat geologic events from opposite ends of the timeline as a controlled experiment that can be studied to help understand, and thereby forecast, system responses. The latter two speak directly to our role in society.

The EarthScope USArray is currently deployed in Minnesota. Seth Stein and colleagues describe how the information coming in regarding the failed, 1.1-Ga midcontinent rift, frozen in time, will provide a way to test the two leading theories about the fundamental cause of rifting.

Next, Karen Gran and colleagues describe Holocene valley evolution. A well-constrained downcutting event is driving continuing adjustment on tributaries to the Minnesota River, the history of which has a strong influence on modern sediment loads and direct resource-management implications.

Ken Bradbury and Tony Runkel, geologists with two state surveys, partnered up for the third article, which examines how the mechanical behavior of Paleozoic rocks affects groundwater flow systems. This information is critical for sustainable groundwater use in the face of challenges ranging from the presence of live viruses deep beneath Madison, Wisconsin, USA, to evolving cones of depression that change hydraulic gradients.

Finally, Cathy Manduca introduces readers to the process of producing an educated citizenry (and a well-prepared geoscience community) that understands the ways that Earth and society are linked. The article also illustrates the need to act collectively to share experiences, develop them into classroom activities, and accurately diagnose student challenges.

Carrie Jennings, Minnesota Geological Survey
Vice Chair, 2011 Annual Meeting Organizing Committee

Engineers have long realized that much can be learned about how complicated systems like aircraft or nuclear reactors really—as opposed to ideally—work by studying their failures. The same is likely to be true for the rifting phase of the Wilson cycle, in which continents drift apart to form new oceans that may grow to the size of the Atlantic and Pacific before closing and vanishing.

However, many continental rifts fail to develop into seafloor spreading centers. Such failed rifts become an important part of the fabric of the continents.

Rifting—successful or failed—shapes the continents and has crucial effects for society. It provides conditions for the deposition of hydrocarbons and other mineral resources. Moreover, some earthquakes within generally stable continents occur on failed rifts.

Manuscript received 27 Feb. 2011; accepted 17 Apr. 2011.

DOI: 10.1130/G120A.1

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