The Earth we know generally moves in nonmysterious ways, but the latest evidence from an international team of
geoscientists shows that about 800 million years ago, our planet executed a tricky balancing act that changed the course of the continents.
Not exact matches
«The results
show that evaporation at high temperatures, similar to those at the beginning of planet formation, leads to the loss of volatile elements and to enrichment in heavy isotopes in the left over materials from the event,» said Day, a Scripps
geoscientist and lead author of the study.
«Oxidized iron deep within Earth's interior: Unexpected finding
shows surprises
geoscientists around the world.»
The map also
shows that
geoscientists gravitate toward Texas, physicists congregate in California, and epidemiologists go to Washington (the state, not the nation's capital).
A recent research report about one of the largest lithium brine and salt deposits in the world in Chile's Atacama Desert by
geoscientists from the University of Massachusetts Amherst is the first to
show that water and solutes flowing into the basin originate from a much larger than expected portion of the Andean Plateau.
New investigations by
geoscientists of the University of Cologne in cooperation with the University of Bonn and the Jacobs University Bremen have
shown that large land masses did indeed exist on Earth 2.7 billion years ago
Franck Lavigne, a
geoscientist at Panthéon - Sorbonne University's Laboratory of Physical Geography in Meudon, France,
showed data and close - up photographs of the remains of the perpetrator volcano on June 14 at an American Geophysica
«We clearly
show the evidence that the two systems are connected at depth,» said Adriano Mazzini, a
geoscientist at CEED — University of Oslo and lead author of the new study in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, a journal of the American Geophysical Union.
The new finding
shows that overfishing is not the sole reason for the decline in the lake's fisheries, says study leader Andrew Cohen, a UA
geoscientist.
I always thought collecting thousands of
geoscientists on a famous fault line
showed a certain amount of chutzpah so, in these days of concern about climate change, moving the meeting to New Orleans seems like a good idea... ummm.
Dr. Willie Wei - Hock Soon (
shown) is an astrophysicist and
geoscientist at the Solar and Stellar Physics (SSP) Division of the Harvard - Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, as well as an astronomer at the Mount Wilson Observatory in southern California.