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Live Science on MSNHot blob beneath Appalachians formed when Greenland split from North America — and it's heading to New YorkA hot blob currently beneath the Appalachians may have peeled off from Greenland around 80 million years ago and moved to ...
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The Daily Galaxy on MSNScientists Discover Hidden Hot Blob Beneath Appalachians — And It’s Headed to New YorkThe Appalachian Mountains, with their ancient peaks and timeworn ridges, are a familiar sight in Eastern North America. But ...
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Daily Express US on MSNGeologists discover hot blob under Appalachians heading for New YorkAccording to the findings, these blobs may occasionally occur during continent-breakups, potentially affecting ice sheets, ...
A bold new theory reimagines the NAA as a "Rayleigh–Taylor instability"—a geological term for when heavy, cold rock begins to sink into the hot, soft rock below, like molasses dripping into honey.
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ExplorersWeb on MSNAncient Blob Beneath Appalachians Headed for New YorkAn ancient force long-buried beneath the Appalachians is heading for New York. Luckily for New York, it's a geological feature, not a horror-movie blob.
Roughly 124 miles (200 kilometers) beneath the Appalachian Mountains in New England lies the aptly named Northern Appalachian ...
A six-year study off California’s coast shows how marine heat waves and noise pollution are silencing the ocean’s largest ...
Heat will remain the major story again on Tuesday as Acadiana continues to bake. A Heat Advisory has been issued for all of ...
A large region of unusually hot rock deep beneath the Appalachian Mountains in the United States could be linked to Greenland ...
Scientists have identified mysterious 'blobs' about 1,200 miles under the Earth's surface that could cause massive volcanic eruptions.
Were these pictures selfies? This could be a private kink that your partner prefers to engage in alone. (Of course, if the ...
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