ORCID Profile
0000-0002-3566-5091
Current Organisations
U.S. Department of the Interior
,
Oregon State University
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Publisher: Volcanica
Date: 09-11-2022
DOI: 10.30909/VOL.05.02.349384
Abstract: We present Thermobar, a new open-source Python3 package for calculating pressures, temperatures, and melt compositions from mineral and mineral-melt equilibrium. Thermobar allows users to perform calculations with popular parametrizations involving liquid, olivine-liquid, olivine-spinel, pyroxene only, pyroxene-liquid, two pyroxene, feldspar-liquid, two feldspar, hibole only, hibole-liquid, and garnet equilibria. Thermobar is the first open-source tool which can match up all possible pairs of phases from a given region, and apply various equilibrium tests to identify pairs from which to calculate pressures and temperatures (e.g. pyroxene-liquid, two pyroxene, feldspar-liquid, two feldspar, hibole-liquid). Thermobar also contains functions allowing users to propagate analytical errors using Monte-Carlo methods, convert pressures to depths using different crustal density profiles, plot mineral classification and mineral-melt equilibrium diagrams, calculate liquid viscosities, and convert between oxygen fugacity values, buffer positions and Fe speciation in a silicate melt. Thermobar can be downloaded using pip and extensive documentation is available at thermobar.readthedocs.io/.
Publisher: American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)
Date: 31-03-2023
DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.22479843
Abstract: Supplementary Figure S4. Combination of the BET bromodomain inhibitor I-BET762 and chemotherapy agents, but not proteasome inhibitors, induces cytotoxicity to normal cells.
Publisher: Mineralogical Society of America
Date: 02-2023
DOI: 10.2138/AM-2022-8139
Abstract: Interpretation of chemical zoning within igneous minerals is critical to many petrologic studies. Zoning in minerals, however, is commonly observed in thin sections or grain mounts, which are random 2D slices of a 3D system. Use of these 2D sections to infer 3D geometries requires a set of assumptions, often not directly tested, introduces several issues, and results in partial loss of zoning information. Computed X-ray microtomography (microCT) offers a way to assess 3D zoning in minerals at high resolution. To observe 3D mineral zoning using microCT, however, requires that zoning is observable as differences in X-ray attenuation. Sanidine, with its affinity for Ba in the crystal lattice, can display large, abrupt variations in Ba that are related to various magma reservoir processes. These changes in Ba also significantly change the X-ray attenuation coefficient of sanidine, allowing for discrete mineral zones to be mapped in 3D using microCT. Here we utilize microCT to show 3D chemical zoning within natural sanidines from a suite of volcanic eruptions throughout the geologic record. We also show that changes in microCT grayscale in sanidine are largely controlled by changes in Ba. Starting with 3D mineral reconstructions, we simulate thin-section making by generating random 2D slices across a mineral zone to show that slicing orientation alone can drastically change the apparent width and slope of composition transitions between different zones. Furthermore, we find that chemical zoning in sanidine can commonly occur in more complex geometries than the commonly interpreted concentric zoning patterns. Together, these findings have important implications for methodologies that rely on the interpretation of chemical zoning within minerals and align with previously published numerical models that show how chemical gradient geometries are affected by random sectioning during common s le preparation methods (e.g., thin sections and round mounts).
No related grants have been discovered for Jordan Lubbers.