Scientists have uncovered a hidden geological process where fragments of continents are slowly stripped from below and swept deep into the oceanic mantle, sparking volcanic activity in unexpected ...
ZME Science on MSN
Breakup of Ancient Supercontinent Nuna 1.5 Billion Years Ago May Have Created Giant Incubators for Complex Life
From 1.8 billion to 800 million years ago, Earth was seemingly quite a boring place. Continents moved little, and life ...
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
Scientists Just Found a Lost Continent That Vanished 155 Million Years Ago
Roughly 155 million years ago, a continent called Argoland broke off from what is now Australia, and then vanished without a ...
Once inside the oceanic mantle, bits of continents become part of the magma factory that powers ocean volcanoes.
Earth scientists have discovered how continents are slowly peeled from beneath, fueling volcanic activity in an unexpected ...
An analysis of feldspar crystals within the oldest magmatic rocks in Australia has provided a unique insight into Earth's ...
Researchers discovered that continents don’t just split at the surface—they also peel from below, feeding volcanic activity in the oceans. Simulations reveal that slow mantle waves strip continental ...
An ancient slab of Earth's crust buried deep beneath the Midwest is sucking huge swatches of present-day's North American crust down into the mantle, researchers say. The slab's pull has created giant ...
Detached continental material travels into oceanic mantle, sustaining eruptions for tens of millions of years, researchers ...
The study also compared the results with measurements of lunar anorthosites, which are rare rocks on Earth but very common on ...
Rivers may have operated on a global scale around 3.5 billion years ago. The new find comes courtesy of ancient rocks in China and South Africa. A change in rock chemistry around that time provides ...
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