Skip to main content

Thank you for visiting nature.com. You are using a browser version with limited support for CSS. To obtain the best experience, we recommend you use a more up to date browser (or turn off compatibility mode in Internet Explorer). In the meantime, to ensure continued support, we are displaying the site without styles and JavaScript.

3.8-billion-year-old metamorphosed igneous rocks of the Innuksuac Complex on Hudson Bay's eastern shore

Read our May issue

Including content on transient Archean oxygenation, monsoon extremes and marine productivity, North Atlantic Deep Water during glacial times, volatile cycling in early subduction zones, and more.

Announcements

  • graphic showing people collaborating on science

    Collections open for submissions

    Nature Geoscience welcomes submissions to curated open collections, including:

    * Progress towards the Sustainable Development Goals

    * Fire impacts and management

    * Wind, water and dust on Mars

    * Peatlands and wetlands

    * Change in the Amazon

    * Flood risk

    * Marine heatwaves

  • Bubbles in water

    Focus on transient Archaean oxygenation

    Episodes of transient oxygenation preceded the pronounced rise in atmospheric oxygen that occurred between 2.4 and 2.1 billion years ago. Here we collate recent Nature Geoscience content that explores the mechanisms and extent of these first steps towards global oxygenation.

Advertisement

  • First breaths of a hospitable Earth

    The oxygenation of the atmosphere was a pivotal point in Earth’s evolution. Punctuated environmental perturbations in its run-up laid the foundations for this event.

    Editorial
  • Galactic messages carried by moissanite

    Presolar moissanite grains are stellar fossils that act as messengers from the cosmos. Nan Liu explores the ways moissanite enables cosmochemists to investigate the origin and evolution of our Solar System and beyond.

    • Nan Liu
    All Minerals Considered
  • Davemaoite’s deep mantle disruption

    Davemaoite is the least abundant of the lower mantle rock-forming minerals. Despite this, it is a maverick that exerts a big influence on geochemical cycling, as Oliver Tschauner explains.

    • Oliver Tschauner
    All Minerals Considered
  • Quasicrystalline shifting in natural orders

    Quasicrystals have structural properties intermediate between crystalline and amorphous materials. They can be synthesized in the lab but, as Luca Bindi explains, they may also be present in natural materials formed under extreme conditions.

    • Luca Bindi
    All Minerals Considered
Oxygenated bubbles rising to the service in a liquid

Transient Archaean oxygenation

Episodes of transient oxygenation preceded the pronounced rise in atmospheric oxygen that occurred between 2.4 and 2.1 billion years ago.
Focus

Advertisement

Search

Quick links

Morty Proxy This is a proxified and sanitized view of the page, visit original site.