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    From left, University of Wyoming students Shane Scoggin, Adam Trzinski and Jessie Shields are part of new research investigating crustal melting in western North America. Here, they examine igneous rocks in the Snake Range of Nevada. Credit: Jay Chapman

    Scientists probe mysterious melting of Earth’s crust in western North America

    April 24, 2021
    West Mato Volcano erupting in 2009, courtesy of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

    Energy unleashed by submarine volcanoes could power a continent

    April 24, 2021
    Over approximately 2.5 million years, North America likely hosted 2.5 billion Tyrannosaurus rexes, a minuscule proportion of which have been dug up and studied by paleontologists, according to a UC Berkeley study. (Image by Julius Csotonyi, courtesy of Science magazine)

    How many T. rexes were there? Billions

    April 19, 2021
    The world's smallest stegosaur footprint (less than 6 cm long), Xingjiang, China. Photo credit - Lida Xing.

    Tiny cat-sized stegosaur leaves its mark

    April 19, 2021
    Seismogram

    Study reveals the workings of nature’s own earthquake blocker

    April 19, 2021
    Viti Crater (formed in the 1724 event), where the Iceland Deep Drilling Project accidentally drilled into magma in 2009. They were drilling there originally to explore the potential for geothermal energy. Credit: Shane Rooyakkers.

    Hidden magma pools pose eruption risks that we can’t yet detect

    April 19, 2021
    The Xiamaling Formation in China, which contains fossilised algae from primeval times. Credit: © Don E. Canfield

    A new look at evolution in the oceans

    April 19, 2021
    DeMMO field team from left to right: Lily Momper, Brittany Kruger, and Caitlin Casar sampling fracture fluids from a DeMMO borehole installation. Credit: ©Matt Kapust

    Earth’s crust mineralogy drives hotspots for intraterrestrial life

    April 18, 2021
    The Atlantis II fracture zone in the southwestern Indian Ocean with a zoom on the northern corner. The greater water depth in the transform valley is clearly visible. As the plates move, magmatism in the corners refills the deep transform valleys so that the adjacent fracture zones are shallower. Graphic: Christoph Kersten/GEOMAR according to Grevemeyer et al., 2021

    A new view on plate tectonics

    March 19, 2021
    The research potentially has wide implications for the materials sector and industry. Credit: Monash University

    Rare earth unlocks copper, gold and silver secrets

    March 19, 2021
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