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Monthly Archives: January 2015
Tibetan Mountain Mystery
Tibet’s mysterious plateau – part of the largest and thickest bit of earth crust anywhere on the planet – was recently subjected to the scrutiny of a group of Kansas University scientists. They flew into Lhasa, capital of Tibet, then … Continue reading
Posted in History, How Geophysics Works, Non-drift Theories
Tagged drift, geophysics, GPS, history, India, Meyerhoff, mountains, plate tectonics, Tibet
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Riding the Moho
Today is the anniversary of the birth (January 23, 1857) of a brilliant geophysicist with an unpronounceable name (unless you are Croatian) – Andrija Mohorovičić. (You may say On-Dree-Ya Mow-Hoe-Row-Vitch-Itch. Or, like many a grad student, you could simply … Continue reading
Ben Franklin: Geophysicist
It’s a stretch to claim Benjamin Franklin as a fellow geophysicist. But I think we have more claim to him than the optometrists who consider Franklin a fellow glasses-maker. (Franklin invented bifocals.) Franklin, whose birthday is today, studied lightning and … Continue reading
Posted in Biography, Culture, History, Plate Tectonics
Tagged Ben Franklin, geophysics, Gulf Stream, kite experiment, plate tectonics
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Tonga Shakes. Again.
Tonga. It’s an archipelago for the seismic history books. Tonga is in the news again, this time the submarine volcano Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai was spotted by NASA satellites because the eruptions discoloured the Pacific waters amidst the island kingdom’s 176 … Continue reading
Posted in Geology, History, How Geophysics Works, Oceans, Plate Tectonics
Tagged earthquakes, geophysics, Jack Oliver, plate tectonics, seismic recording, subduction, Tonga, volcanoes
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Ethical De-extinction
A South Korean biotech firm pulled blood from a frozen female Siberian wooly mammoth. Found on an arctic island in the East Siberian Sea, the creature is the best preserved mammoth ever discovered. When she was dug out of the … Continue reading
Posted in Climate, Culture, Philosophy
Tagged clone, cloning, extinction, mammoth, Tori Herridge, Wollemia nobilis, woolly mammoth
2 Comments