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Vanishing lakes in Tibet may have triggered earthquakes by awakening faults in Earth's crust
Shrinking lakes in Tibet likely woke up long-dormant tectonic faults, a new study finds. The findings strengthen the link ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Earth’s moving crust may be supercharging climate change more than we thought
For decades, climate science has treated Earth’s shifting crust as a slow, distant backdrop to the drama of global warming.
First global map of mantle earthquakes reveals seismic activity far beneath continents, challenging old ideas about Earth’s ...
Learn how seismic waves helped identify rare mantle earthquakes deep below Earth’s crust, offering new insight into the ...
Tiny zircon crystals are revealing that Earth’s earliest history may have included surprisingly complex tectonic activity.
PCWorld reports that scientists discovered Earth’s inner core has slowed its rotation relative to the crust, even appearing to stop moving in a phenomenon that occurs every 35 years. This iron-nickel ...
Fresh evidence suggests early Earth wasn’t locked under a rigid stagnant lid but was already experiencing intense subduction. Ancient melt inclusions and advanced simulations point to continents ...
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Hadean zircons reveal crust recycling and continent formation more than 4 billion years ago
Parts of ancient Earth may have formed continents and recycled crust through subduction far earlier than previously thought. New research led by scientists at the University of Wisconsin–Madison has ...
For most of deep time, spreading ridges released more carbon than volcano chains, changing how we interpret Earth’s climate history.
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