The nice folk over at popular science (SciPop) just discovered remnants of the pillars of the earth.
Ancient Microscopic Mineral Excavation Deepens Mystery of the Origins of Earth’s Magnetic Field
The Earth's magnetic field began on the 2nd day when the inception of gravity initiated the core accretion model.
Expanding universe: We may be in a vast bubble
SciPop is finally getting up to speed on the idea that there's a sphere of rigid crystal on the edge of space: the firmament.
Ask Ethan: It’s Absurd To Think Dark Matter Might Be Made Of Hexaquarks, Right?
It's an undeniable scientific fact that dark matter must exist in order to explain the full suite of observations we have about the Universe. That is, if you have a priori rejected the truth.
3 billion-year-old Earth had water everywhere, but not one continent, study suggests
Guess what? Scientists just discovered the Matty's Paradigm core accretion model of planet formation.
NASA detects glowing ‘hydrogen wall’ at edge of our solar system
Nearly 4 billion miles from Earth, NASA's New Horizons spacecraft has detected evidence of a glowing wall of hydrogen at the edge of the solar system.
Apocalyptic volcanic super eruption that could DESTROY civilisation is much closer than we thought, say experts
By Joseph Pinkstone For Mailonline Original Article An eruption would be capable of returning humanity to a pre-civilisation stateThe mammoth explosions could release over 1,000 gigatons of ash into the airSuper eruptions may occur as regularly as once every 17,000 yearsThe window between super-eruptions could be as short as every 5,200 years The next volcanic 'super eruption' with …
Volcano Super-Eruptions: How Long Before The Next One Wipes Out Civilization?
Earth might be due for its next volcanic super-eruption, an event that would devastate the planet and wipe out civilization.
Let’s All Calm Down and Make Sense of That Antarctic Mantle Plume
Three decades ago, scientists began to study the possibility that there was a plume of hot rock coming up from the mantle, heating parts of Western Antarctica.
Earth’s mantle and crust are in a fiery battle to the death … of supercontinents
By Stephanie Pappas | LiveScience Original Article Earth's hot, gooey center and its cold, hard outer shell are both responsible for the creeping (and sometimes catastrophic) movement of tectonic plates. But now new research reveals an intriguing balance of power — the oozing mantle creates supercontinents while the crust tears them apart. To come to …
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