| TABLE OF CONTENTS 
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| September 2015 Volume 8, Issue 9 | 
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 |  |  Editorial 
  Correspondence 
  Feature 
  News and Views 
  Progress Article 
  Review 
  Letters 
  Articles |  | 
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 	 	 	 	 	 	 	 	 	 	  	 	 	  	 	 	 	 	  	 | Editorial |  Top | 
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 | An icy past   p655doi:10.1038/ngeo2531
 During several intervals in Earth's history, ice sheets expanded to cover the globe. These glaciations may be intricately linked to the evolution of life.
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 | Correspondence |  Top | 
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 | Disintegration of Apollo lunar soil   pp657 - 658B. L. Cooper,  K. Thaisen,  B. C. Chang,  T. S. Lee &  D. S. McKay
 doi:10.1038/ngeo2527
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 | Feature |  Top | 
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 | Snowball cooling after algal rise   pp659 - 662Georg Feulner,  Christian Hallmann &  Hendrik Kienert
 doi:10.1038/ngeo2523
 The Earth underwent two snowball glaciation events between 720 and 635 million years ago. The preceding expansion of eukaryotic algae and a consequent rise in emissions of organic cloud condensation nuclei may have contributed to the dramatic cooling.
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 | News and Views |  Top | 
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 | Progress Article |  Top | 
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 | Robust global ocean cooling trend for the pre-industrial Common Era   pp671 - 677Helen V. McGregor,  Michael N. Evans,  Hugues Goosse,  Guillaume Leduc,  Belen Martrat et al.
 doi:10.1038/ngeo2510
 Sea surface temperatures have varied over the past 2,000 years. A synthesis of surface-temperature reconstructions shows ocean surface cooling from ad 1 to 1800, with much of the trend from 800 to 1800 driven by volcanic eruptions.
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 | Review |  Top | 
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 | Constraints from material properties on the dynamics and evolution of Earth's core   pp678 - 685Christopher Davies,  Monica Pozzo,  David Gubbins &  Dario Alfé
 doi:10.1038/ngeo2492
 The material properties of the Earth's core have been better constrained by recent technical and computational advances. The properties imply that the core was once hot, but is cooling quickly, and the inner core is young.
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 | Letters |  Top | 
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 | Saturn's F ring and shepherd satellites a natural outcome of satellite system formation   pp686 - 689Ryuki Hyodo &  Keiji Ohtsuki
 doi:10.1038/ngeo2508
 Lying beyond Saturn's main rings, the F ring is shepherded by two small satellites. Simulations suggest that this enigmatic configuration can result from the partial disruption of satellites in collisions at the edge of the main ring system.
 See also: News and Views by Crida
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 | Rapid increases in tropospheric ozone production and export from China   pp690 - 695Willem W. Verstraeten,  Jessica L. Neu,  Jason E. Williams,  Kevin W. Bowman,  John R. Worden et al.
 doi:10.1038/ngeo2493
 Tropospheric levels of ozone and its precursors have risen in Asia since 2000. Satellite observations and chemistry-transport simulations suggest that transport of these pollutants to North America partly offsets benefits from stricter regulation.
 See also: News and Views by Doherty
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 | Sources of and processes controlling CO2 emissions change with the size of streams and rivers   pp696 - 699E. R. Hotchkiss,  R. O. Hall Jr,  R. A. Sponseller,  D. Butman,  J. Klaminder et al.
 doi:10.1038/ngeo2507
 Rivers and streams are key sources of CO2. Estimated emissions and aquatic productivity from across the US show that small streams predominantly emit CO2 produced in soils, but the contribution from aquatic metabolism increases with river size.
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 | Braiding of submarine channels controlled by aspect ratio similar to rivers   pp700 - 703Brady Z. Foreman,  Steven Y. J. Lai,  Yuhei Komatsu &  Chris Paola
 doi:10.1038/ngeo2505
 Braided channels are rare in submarine environments, yet common in fluvial systems. Laboratory experiments suggest that the formation mechanisms are the same, but submarine channels are typically not wide enough to promote braiding.
 See also: News and Views by Peakall
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 | Orbitally forced ice sheet fluctuations during the Marinoan Snowball Earth glaciation   pp704 - 707Douglas I. Benn,  Guillaume Le Hir,  Huiming Bao,  Yannick Donnadieu,  Christophe Dumas et al.
 doi:10.1038/ngeo2502
 The presence of dynamic ice sheets during Snowball Earth glaciations is controversial. Geological evidence and ice sheet modelling suggest that ice sheets may have responded to orbital forcing when pCO2 reached a certain threshold.
 See also: News and Views by Allen
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 | Lower edge of locked Main Himalayan Thrust unzipped by the 2015 Gorkha earthquake   pp708 - 711Jean-Philippe Avouac,  Lingsen Meng,  Shengji Wei,  Teng Wang &  Jean-Paul Ampuero
 doi:10.1038/ngeo2518
 Faults are unlocked by earthquakes. Analysis of seismic data from the 2015 Nepal earthquake shows that only part of the Main Himalayan Thrust fault was unzipped by the quake, leaving much of the fault locked and ready to slip in a future event.
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 | Experimental demonstration of a semi-brittle origin for crustal strain transients   pp712 - 715Jacqueline E. Reber,  Luc L. Lavier &  Nicholas W. Hayman
 doi:10.1038/ngeo2496
 Plate tectonic motions cause faults to slip during earthquakes and through creep. Laboratory shear experiments on semi-brittle rock-analogue materials suggest that such slip could occur via growth of a series of fractures.
 Watch an audio-visual summary of the paper here
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 	 	 	 	 	  	 | Articles |  Top | 
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 | Substantial glacier mass loss in the Tien Shan over the past 50 years   pp716 - 722Daniel Farinotti,  Laurent Longuevergne,  Geir Moholdt,  Doris Duethmann,  Thomas Mölg et al.
 doi:10.1038/ngeo2513
 Long-term changes of the mountain glaciers in the Tien Shan, Central Asia, are not well constrained. Remote sensing data and glaciological models reveal a 27% decline of glacier mass from 1961 to 2012, linked to increased summer melting.
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 | Millennial changes in North American wildfire and soil activity over the last glacial cycle   pp723 - 727Hubertus Fischer,  Simon Schupbach,  Gideon Gfeller,  Matthias Bigler,  Regine Röthlisberger et al.
 doi:10.1038/ngeo2495
 Ammonium levels in Greenland ice cores track changes in soil emissions and wildfires, primarily in North America. Ice-core ammonium records show abrupt increases in wildfire activity during brief warmings in the last glacial period.
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 | A record of spontaneous subduction initiation in the Izu-Bonin-Mariana arc   pp728 - 733Richard J. Arculus,  Osamu Ishizuka,  Kara A. Bogus,  Michael Gurnis,  Rosemary Hickey-Vargas et al.
 doi:10.1038/ngeo2515
 How plate tectonic subduction is initiated is unclear. Analysis of sediments and rock cores taken from the Izu-Bonin-Mariana subduction zone trench suggests subduction started spontaneously in this region around 50 million years ago.
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