News

Deep heat beneath the Appalachian Mountains may be linked to an ancient rift with Greenland, helping explain why the range is ...
A bold new theory reimagines the NAA as a "Rayleigh–Taylor instability"—a geological term for when heavy, cold rock begins to ...
Map showing the origin of the Northern Appalachian Anomaly when Greenland and North America split, and its journey more than ...
According to the findings, these blobs may occasionally occur during continent-breakups, potentially affecting ice sheets, ...
A hot blob currently beneath the Appalachians may have peeled off from Greenland around 80 million years ago and moved to ...
It sounds like a bottom of the barrel B-movie sequel along the lines of Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan, but ...
Scientists studying a puzzling hot zone beneath America, called the North Atlantic Anomaly, have proposed a mantle wave ...
A large region of unusually hot rock deep beneath the Appalachian Mountains in the United States could be linked to Greenland ...
Roughly 124 miles (200 kilometers) beneath the Appalachian Mountains in New England lies the aptly named Northern Appalachian ...
A massive, slow-moving heat anomaly is rising beneath the surface of New England, and it’s challenging long-held assumptions ...
A n area of anomalously hot rocks 200 kilometers (120 miles) beneath the northern Appalachian Mountains could be the product ...
Scientists reckon they've solved a 180-million-year deep-Earth mystery that could explain why the Appalachian Mountains are still standing. For a long time, it's thought a huge area of hot rock buried ...