PDA

View Full Version : Scientists find regions of the Earths core may be melting



oceanz
22nd May 2011, 09:34
http://images.sciencedaily.com/2011/05/110518131421.jpg

http://theextinctionprotocol.wordpress.com/
Scientists find regions of the earth’s core may be melting
Posted on May 21, 2011 by The Extinction Protocol
May 21, 2011 – The inner core of the Earth may be melting, scientists now find. This melting could actually be linked to activity at the Earth’s surface, the researchers said, and added that the discovery could help explain how the core generates the planet’s magnetic field. The Earth’s inner core is a ball of solid iron about 1,500 miles wide, about the same size as the moon. This ball is surrounded by an outer core made up mostly of liquid iron- nickel alloy, a highly viscous mantle layer and, topping it off, a solid crust that forms the surface of the planet. As the Earth cools from the inside out, the molten outer core is slowly freezing. This is leading the solid inner core to grow at a rate of about 1 millimeter per year. However, scientists now find that the inner core might be melting at the same time. “The standard view has been that the inner core is freezing all over and growing out progressively, but it appears that there are regions where the core is actually melting,” said researcher Sebastian Rost, a seismologist at the University of Leeds in England. The roiling of material in the core, coupled with the spinning of the Earth, is what generates the planet’s magnetic field. For instance, when it comes to large regions under Africa and the Pacific where the lowermost mantle is hotter than average, the outer core below those areas can become hot enough to start melting the inner core. These findings suggest “that the whole dynamics of the Earth’s core are in some way linked to plate tectonics, which isn’t at all obvious from surface observations,” Mound said. To see if the core really is melting, “we would need larger arrays of seismometers spread more evenly around the world, particularly in the oceans, which is a technological hurdle,” Mound said. In addition, “we need to develop lab equipment that can explore the pressure and temperature conditions of the inner core — we are just on the edge of being able to do that reliably.” Mound, Rost and their colleagues David Gubbins and Binod Sreenivasan detail their findings in the May 19 issue of the journal Nature. –MSNBC

“Now if some unknown phenomenon or energy has altered the Sun’s rate of radioactive decay, we can assume something similar may have also occurred with the Earth and has set in motion a runaway heating trend that is now causing volcanoes to convulse, the Earth to tremble, the magnetic field to deteriorate, and the planet’s climate to simultaneously crash.” -The Extinction Protocol

Hmmm, some (un)known energy??

Etherios
22nd May 2011, 11:36
link for this?

witchy1
22nd May 2011, 11:44
The Earth’s inner core is a ball of solid iron about 1,500 miles wide, about the same size as the moon. This ball is surrounded by an outer core made up mostly of liquid iron- nickel alloy, a highly viscous mantle layer and, topping it off, a solid crust that forms the surface of the planet. As the Earth cools from the inside out, the molten outer core is slowly freezing.

When I read things like this I wonder - how do they actually know this! Have they put something down into the core to prove that this is a fact? If not its pure conjecture IMHO

oceanz
22nd May 2011, 11:56
link for this?

Sorry, here it is:
http://theextinctionprotocol.wordpress.com/

humanalien
23rd May 2011, 02:30
So for now, it's all just guess work.....

Karma Ninja
23rd May 2011, 02:39
This is the link that will take you directly to the article. http://theextinctionprotocol.wordpress.com/2011/05/21/scientists-find-regions-of-the-earths-core-may-be-melting/

It is interesting and slightly more than conjecture when the source is MSNBC news and the scientists who theorize this are publishing their work in Nature magazine. It would corroborate with another article I read about the rate of radioactive decay not being or no longer being constant. This has massive implications for our understanding of the planet and it's history.

Great find and thanks to the OP!

bluestflame
23rd May 2011, 02:41
so if it's hot enough to melt rock down there and all that contained heat for the most part not reaching us , here on the surface , and it doesn't melt the solid iron core , where does all that heat go
?

is the melting point of rock higher or lower than iron ?