Percorrer por Objetivos de Desenvolvimento Sustentável (ODS) "15:Proteger a Vida Terrestre"
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- AfricaMaVal : Mineral Potential Mapping Study of European Critical Raw Materials (ECRM) of Africa [Resumo]Publication . Fullgraf, Thomas; Marques Prazeres, Cátia; Gonçalves, Pedro; Callec, Yannick; Fortes, Carla; Represas, Patricia; Vella, Alex; Guillaneau, Jean-Claude; de Oliveira, Daniel Pipa SoaresABSTRACT: The AfricaMaVal project, a 3.5-year initiative coordinated by the French Geological Survey (BRGM), fosters sustainable EU–Africa partnerships in the critical raw materials (CRM) sector. With 18 partners from 11 countries, it promotes responsible mineral sourcing for European industries while supporting Africa’s sustainable development. Work Package 1 (WP1), “Supply Potential,” led by the Portuguese Geological Survey (LNEG), assesses and maps African supply potential for European Critical Raw Materials (ECRM) through a harmonized, INSPIRE-compliant database. BRGM has developed machine learning (ML) algorithms for mineral resource assessment over the past 20 years, applied at scale since 2022. Within WP1, prospectivity maps for selected ECRMs were generated in ten countries, drawing on BRGM datasets, including 1:10M geological and structural maps and over 55,000 mineral occurrences.
- Análogos geoquímicos portugueses de rochas e solos marcianos (S. Saturnino – Fronteira vs Cratera de Gusev e Meridiani Planum)Publication . Rocha, Carla; Alves, Eduardo IvoRESUMO: Este trabalho resulta de estudos petrográficos e geoquímicos feitos sobre afloramentos de rochas filonianas básicas na região de S. Saturnino (Fronteira, Portalegre, Portugal) como análogos de rochas e solos marcianos das regiões da cratera Gusev e de Meridiani Planum analisados nas missões dos rovers Spirit (MER-A) e Opportunity (MER-B). Mostra-se que este é o primeiro local em Portugal Continental que pode ser reconhecido como análogo dos ambientes geológico, petrográfico e geoquímico marcianos.
- Aplicações da Deteção Remota à Geologia [Comunicação oral]Publication . Quental, Lídia
- Compositional heterogeneity of late to post-Variscan, mafic subvolcanic dykes from northern Portugal (Central Iberian Zone)Oliveira, António; Martins, Helena; Sant'Ovaia, H.ABSTRACT: This study is dedicated to the presentation and interpretation of whole-rock geochemical data concerning a few mafic subvolcanic dykes located in northern Portugal, related to the late to posttectonic stages of the Variscan orogeny. Overall, the analyzed rocks are reasonably fresh, ultrabasic to intermediate, metaluminous to moderately peraluminous, and calc-alkaline or alkaline. There is no evidence implying the occurrence of crustal contamination, but crystal fractionation is likely to have played either a minor or more meaningful role on the petrogenetic evolution. While most dykes were probably generated from subduction-modified, metasomatically-enriched lithospheric sources, others possibly derived from the asthenosphere. There are also important differences regarding the residual mineralogy of the sources, as well as the melting degrees.
- Copernicus Services and Geohazards Management: Lessons Learnt from Citizens’ ObservatoriesPublication . Montoya-Montes, Isabel; Quental, Lídia; Galindo, Inés; Holohan, Eoghan; Jaud, Marion; Parker, Kieran; Sanchez, Nieves; García Moreno, Inmaculada; Le Dantec, Nicolas; Lemon, Kirstin; Ramalho, Elsa; Machado, Susana; Le Berre, Iwan; Gouveia, Fátima; Pinto, Claúdia; Béjar Pizarro, Marta; Herrera, Gerardo; Gomes, Rui Carrilho; Rodrigues, Domingos; Gonçalves, PedroABSTRACT: With the AGEO Project focused on the assessment and management of geohazards, particular attention was paid to Copernicus EMS, as it supports all phases of the emergency management cycle: preparedness, prevention, disaster risk reduction, emergency response and recovery. The uptake of the Copernicus EMS in the EU Atlantic Region from 2012–2022 is reviewed. Surveys undertaken during the AGEO project highlighting the perception and awareness of stakeholders, as well as their suggestions for improvements or new requirements, are summarised. Uptake of Copernicus and Earth Observation (EO) products in the frame of the citizen observatories on geohazards is also addressed. Finally, strategic recommendations for strengthening the use of Copernicus products and services, and for new Copernicus products for the Atlantic Region are given.
- Detailed in-depth mapping of the world largest anorthositic complex: Magnetic anomalies, 2.5-3D modelling and emplacement constraints of the Kunene Complex (KC), SW AngolaPublication . Merino-Martínez, E.; Rey-Moral, Carmen; Machadinho, Ana; Carvalho, João; Represas, Patricia; García-Lobón, J. L.; Feria, María Carmen; Martín-Banda, Raquel; López-Bahut, T.; Alves, Daniela; Ramalho, Elsa; Manuel, José; Cordeiro, DomingosABSTRACT: The Kunene Complex (KC) represents a very large Mesoproterozoic igneous body, mainly composed of anorthosites and gabbroic rocks that extends from SW Angola to NW Namibia (outcropping 18,000 km2 , NE-SW trend, and ca. 350 km long and up to 50 km wide). Little is known about its structure at depth. Here, we use recently acquired aerogeophysical data to accurately determine its hidden extent and to unravel its morphology at depth. These data have been interpreted and modelled to investigate the unexposed KC boundaries, reconstructing the upper crustal structure (between 0 and 15 km depth) overlain by the thin sedimentary cover of the Kalahari Basin. The modelling reveals that the KC was emplaced in the upper crust and extends in depth up to ca. 5 km, showing a lobular geometry and following a large NE-SW to NNE-SSW linear trend, presumably inherited from older Paleoproterozoic structures. The lateral continuation of the KC to the east (between 50 and 125 km) beneath the Kalahari Cenozoic sediments suggests an overall size three times the outcropping dimension (about 53,500 km2 ). This affirmation clearly reinforces the economic potential of this massif, related to the prospecting of raw materials and certain types of economic mineralization (Fe-Ti oxides, metallic sulphides or platinum group minerals). Up to 11 lobes have been isolated with dimensions ranging from 135.5 to 37.3 km in length and 81.9 to 20.7 km in width according to remanent bodies revealed by TMI mapping. A total volume of 65,184 km3 was calculated only for the magnetically remanent bodies of the KC. A long-lasting complex contractional regime, where large strike-slip fault systems were involved, occurred in three kinematic pulses potentially related to a change of velocity or convergence angle acting on previous Paleoproterozoic inherited sutures. The coalescent magmatic pulses can be recognized by means of magnetic anomalies, age of the bodies as well as the lineations inferred in this work: (i) Emplacement of the eastern mafic bodies and granites in a stage of significant lateral extension in a transtensional context between 1500 Ma and 1420 Ma; (ii) Migration of the mantle derived magmas westwards with deformation in a complex contractional setting with shearing structures involving western KC bodies and basement from 1415 Ma to 1340 Ma; (iii) NNW-SSE extensional structures are relocated westwards, involving mantle magmas, negative flower structures and depression that led to the formation of late Mesoproterozoic basins from 1325 Ma to 1170 Ma. Additionally, we detect several first and second order structures to place the structuring of the KC in a craton-scale context in relation to the crustal structures detected in NW Namibia. (c) 2025 China University of Geosciences (Beijing) and Peking University. Published by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of China University of Geosciences (Beijing).
- Ediacaran and early-palaeozoic bimodal volcanism in the Ossa-Morena Zone, SW Iberian Massif: New clues for intraplate rifting shortly after the Cadomian OrogenyPublication . Cachapuz, P.; Chichorro, Martim Afonso; Bento dos Santos, Telmo; Carvalho, D.; Linnemann, Ulf; Zieger-Hofmann, M.; Zieger, J.; Dantas, E.; Santos, R. V.; Moita, Patrícia; Beltrame, M.; Solá, A. Rita; Díaz-Azpíroz, M.; Fernández, C.ABSTRACT: This study focuses on bimodal meta-volcanic rocks present in the Iberian Massif, in the Evora-Aracena Metamorphic Belt of the Ossa-Morena Zone (OMZ), near the boundary with the South Portuguese Zone. New petrological, geochemical (whole-rock and Sr-Nd isotopes) and LA-ICP-MS U-Pb zircon geochronology data are presented to track the magmatic evolution of both felsic and mafic rocks and their respective geodynamic setting during the transition between the Cadomian Orogeny and subsequent Palaeozoic rifting events. Our research shows that the Evora-Aracena Metamorphic Belt (EAMB) in the southwestern OMZ possesses a significant record of the transition between the Cadomian and Variscan cycles. U-Pb geochronological data confirm the existence of both felsic and mafic Ediacaran igneous rocks (546 and 556 Ma, respectively), a novelty in the region. The Cadomian-related felsic rocks show geochemical similarities to meta-felsic rocks formed during the initial phases of the Cambrian rifting event, namely very negative epsilon Nd values (-10.1 to -11.8), depleted HREE patterns and orogenic signatures. Such similarities imply that meta-felsic rocks formed in the earliest stages of the Cambrian Rift-to-Drift event resulted from a shallower melting. Moreover, meta-felsic rocks formed in the early stages of the Cambrian rifting (525 Ma) present a significant amount of Ediacaran aged zircons, whereas the Cadomian-related counterparts display a few discordant Cambrian ages, likely a consequence of Pb-loss. This indicates that the convergent, subduction-related regime that prevailed during most of the Cryogenian-Ediacaran times along the boundaries of NW Gondwana was swiftly supplanted by a rift-dominated regime during the Cambrian, with no substantial gap between these two thermal events. Meanwhile, meta-felsic rocks formed during the Rift-to-Drift (525-480 Ma) event exhibit progressively higher epsilon Nd values (-5.0 to +3.0), HREE-enrichment, as well as anorogenic signatures, denoting an increasing contribution of mantle-derived melts. This increasing mantle contribution eventually led to the occurrence of bimodal magmatism in the Middle Cambrian Main Rift event. Such Cambrian mafic rocks, unlike the Ediacaran mafic rocks that present flat REE patterns and continental arc signatures, display varying degrees of LREE enrichment and N-MORB to E-MORB signatures.
- Effects of application of eucalyptus leaf biomass on soil quality: a field trialPublication . Teixeira, Tiago; Cachada, Anabela; Pato, Pedro; Patinha, CarlaABSTRACT: Approximately 30% of Portuguese forests are occupied by eucalyptus (Eucalyptus globulus). As this is a highly flammable invasive species, it is essential to control its proliferation. Thus, the PEST(bio) CIDE project, based on a circular economy perspective, aims to explore the phytotoxic potential of eucalyptus leaves, using its leaf biomass as an effective and environmentally safe biocide, and its use as a corrective to improve soil properties. It is also expected that the introduction of biomass into the soil will contribute to increase carbon reserves and soil fertility. Thus, it is possible to associate an economic benefit with better management of post-fire regenerated eucalyptus areas. Due to this, a field trial was carried out to test the effect of biomass application on the soil’s physico-chemical properties. The results indicate that incorporating leaves has a positive effect on some soil properties, mainly in terms of increasing organic matter and available macronutrients.
- Empowering Citizen Science Through Stakeholder EngagementPublication . Correia, Vítor; Romão, José; Tyrologou, Pavlos; Gomes, Rui Carrilho; Correia, Vítor; Bodó, BalazsABSTRACT: The chapter examines how citizen science projects, particularly in geohazard monitoring, can be strengthened through systematic stakeholder engagement. Using the AGEO project as a case study, with five established Citizen Observatories across Europe, it details how stakeholders were identified, classified, and engaged across political, economic, knowledge and socio-cultural systems. The paper identifies five crucial factors for successful engagement: relevance, accessibility, trust, recognition/incentives, and sustainability. It concludes that citizen science, supported by technological advances and proper stakeholder engagement, can make significant contributions to disaster preparedness and risk reduction, particularly in the context of climate change, by fostering collaboration between experts and communities.
- Granitos estaníferos da região de Santa Comba de Rossas, norte de PortugalPublication . Teixeira, Rui; Gomes, Maria Elisa Preto; Silva, Paulo; Pinto de Meireles, Carlos AugustoRESUMO: Na região de Santa Comba de Rossas aflora um complexo granítico (G1-G3) que se instalou durante os estágios sin-cinemáticos da Orogenia Varisca, há 317,9 ± 8,7 Ma (datação Rb-Sr de rocha total). Os granitos são intrusivos em metassedimentos de idade silúrica, do Domínio Parautóctone da Zona da Galiza – Trás-os-Montes, instalando-se no núcleo de uma antiforma NW-SE, resultante das fases de deformação D1 e D3, apresentando evidências de uma deformação em regime dúctil e frágil. Os dados geoquímicos e isotópicos sugerem que o granito G1, com biotite > moscovite e o granito G3, com biotite ≈ moscovite, correspondem a pulsos magmáticos distintos, que terão resultado da fusão parcial de materiais metassedimentares e sofrido uma diferenciação por cristalização fraccionada. Este processo foi responsável pelo aumento do teor de Sn naqueles granitos e, muito provavelmente, pela ocorrência do granito moscovítico G2, o mais rico em Sn (77 ppm), no exocontacto do plutão granítico G1.
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