Anahita Ani Tikku
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
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Featured researches published by Anahita Ani Tikku.
Science | 2006
Douglas S. Wilson; Damon A. H. Teagle; Jeffrey C. Alt; Neil R. Banerjee; Susumu Umino; Sumio Miyashita; Gary D Acton; Ryo Anma; Samantha R Barr; Akram Belghoul; Julie Carlut; David M. Christie; Rosalind M. Coggon; Kari M. Cooper; Carole Cordier; Laura Crispini; Sedelia Rodriguez Durand; Florence Einaudi; Laura Galli; Yongjun Gao; Jörg Geldmacher; Lisa A. Gilbert; Nicholas W. Hayman; Emilio Herrero-Bervera; Nobuo Hirano; Sara Holter; Stephanie Ingle; Shijun Jiang; Ulrich Kalberkamp; Marcie Kerneklian
Sampling an intact sequence of oceanic crust through lavas, dikes, and gabbros is necessary to advance the understanding of the formation and evolution of crust formed at mid-ocean ridges, but it has been an elusive goal of scientific ocean drilling for decades. Recent drilling in the eastern Pacific Ocean in Hole 1256D reached gabbro within seismic layer 2, 1157 meters into crust formed at a superfast spreading rate. The gabbros are the crystallized melt lenses that formed beneath a mid-ocean ridge. The depth at which gabbro was reached confirms predictions extrapolated from seismic experiments at modern mid-ocean ridges: Melt lenses occur at shallower depths at faster spreading rates. The gabbros intrude metamorphosed sheeted dikes and have compositions similar to the overlying lavas, precluding formation of the cumulate lower oceanic crust from melt lenses so far penetrated by Hole 1256D.
Nature | 2002
Robin E. Bell; Michael Studinger; Anahita Ani Tikku; Garry K. C. Clarke; Michael M. Gutner; Chuck Meertens
The subglacial Lake Vostok may be a unique reservoir of genetic material and it may contain organisms with distinct adaptations, but it has yet to be explored directly. The lake and the overlying ice sheet are closely linked, as the ice-sheet thickness drives the lake circulation, while melting and freezing at the ice-sheet base will control the flux of water, biota and sediment through the lake. Here we present a reconstruction of the ice flow trajectories for the Vostok core site, using ice-penetrating radar data and Global Positioning System (GPS) measurements of surface ice velocity. We find that the ice sheet has a significant along-lake flow component, persistent since the Last Glacial Maximum. The rates at which ice is frozen (accreted) to the base of the ice sheet are greatest at the shorelines, and the accreted ice layer is subsequently transported out of the lake. Using these new flow field and velocity measurements, we estimate the time for ice to traverse Lake Vostok to be 16,000–20,000 years. We infer that most Vostok ice analysed to date was accreted to the ice sheet close to the western shoreline, and is therefore not representative of open lake conditions. From the amount of accreted lake water we estimate to be exported along the southern shoreline, the lake water residence time is about 13,300 years.
Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2003
Michael Studinger; Robin E. Bell; Garry D. Karner; Anahita Ani Tikku; J. W. Holt; David Leroy Morse; Thomas G. Richter; Scott D. Kempf; Matthew E. Peters; Donald D. Blankenship; Ronald E. Sweeney; Victoria L. Rystrom
Abstract Lake Vostok, located beneath more than 4 km of ice in the middle of East Antarctica, is a unique subglacial habitat and may contain microorganisms with distinct adaptations to such an extreme environment. Melting and freezing at the base of the ice sheet, which slowly flows across the lake, controls the flux of water, biota and sediment particles through the lake. The influx of thermal energy, however, is limited to contributions from below. Thus the geological origin of Lake Vostok is a critical boundary condition for the subglacial ecosystem. We present the first comprehensive maps of ice surface, ice thickness and subglacial topography around Lake Vostok. The ice flow across the lake and the landscape setting are closely linked to the geological origin of Lake Vostok. Our data show that Lake Vostok is located along a major geological boundary. Magnetic and gravity data are distinct east and west of the lake, as is the roughness of the subglacial topography. The physiographic setting of the lake has important consequences for the ice flow and thus the melting and freezing pattern and the lake’s circulation. Lake Vostok is a tectonically controlled subglacial lake. The tectonic processes provided the space for a unique habitat and recent minor tectonic activity could have the potential to introduce small, but significant amounts of thermal energy into the lake.
Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2003
Michael Studinger; Garry D. Karner; Robin E. Bell; Vadim Levin; C.A. Raymond; Anahita Ani Tikku
Abstract Aerogeophysical and seismological data from a geophysical survey in the interior of East Antarctica were used to develop a conceptual tectonic model for the Lake Vostok region. The model is constrained using three independent data sets: magnetic, seismic, and gravimetric. A distinct change in the aeromagnetic anomaly character across Lake Vostok defines a crustal boundary. Depth to magnetic basement estimates image a 400-km-wide and more than 10-km-deep sedimentary basin west of the lake. Analysis of teleseismic earthquakes suggests a relatively thin crust beneath Lake Vostok consistent with predictions from kinematic and flexural gravity modelling. Magnetic, gravity, and subglacial topography data reveal a tectonic boundary within East Antarctica. Based on our kinematic and flexural gravity modelling, this tectonic boundary appears to be the result of thrust sheet emplacement onto an earlier passive continental margin. No data presently exist to date directly either the timing of passive margin formation or the subsequent shortening phase. The preserved thrust sheet thickness is related to the thickness of the passive margin crust. Because a significant amount of time is required to erode the thrust sheet topography, we suggest that these tectonic events are Proterozoic in age. Minor normal reactivation of the thrust sheet offers a simple mechanism to explain the formation of the Lake Vostok Basin. A low level of seismicity exists in the vicinity of this tectonic boundary. The existence of a crustal boundary in the Antarctic interior provides new constraints on the Proterozoic architecture of the East Antarctic craton.
Journal of Glaciology | 2005
Anahita Ani Tikku; Robin E. Bell; Michael Studinger; Garry K. C. Clarke; I. E. Tabacco; Fausto Ferraccioli
We present evidence for melting at the base of the ice that overlies Lake Concordia, an 800 km2 subglacial lake near Dome Concordia, East Antarctica, via a combination of glaciohydraulic melting (associated with the tilted ice ceiling and its influence on lake circulation/melting temperature) and melting by extreme strain heating (where the ice sheet is grounded). An influx of water is necessary to provide nutrients, material and biota to support subglacial lake ecosystems but has not been detected previously. Freezing is the dominant observed basal process at over 60% of the surface area above the lake. The total volume of accreted ice above the lake surface is estimated as 50-60 km3, roughly 25-30% of the 200 ± 40 km3 estimated lake volume. Estimated rates of melting and freezing are very similar, ±2-6 mm a−1. The apparent net freezing may reflect the present-day response of Lake Concordia to cooling associated with the Last Glacial Maximum, or a large influx of water either via a subglacial hydrological system or from additional melting of the ice sheet. Lake Concordia is an excellent candidate for subglacial exploration given active basal processes, proximity to the Dome Concordia ice core and traverse resupply route.
Geophysical Research Letters | 2004
Michael Studinger; Robin E. Bell; Anahita Ani Tikku
Geophysical Research Letters | 2006
Anahita Ani Tikku; David C. McAdoo; M. S. Schenewerk; E. C. Willoughby
Archive | 2003
Michael Studinger; Robin Elizabeth Bell; Anahita Ani Tikku
Archive | 2002
Anahita Ani Tikku; Robin Elizabeth Bell; Michael Studinger
Archive | 2005
Robin Elizabeth Bell; Michael Studinger; Anahita Ani Tikku; John D. Castello; Scott O. Rogers