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- No chatbots please, we’re scientists
- Golden spike or no golden spike – we are living in the Anthropocene
- We are late bending the climate change curve – but bending it still matters
- The changing picture of the Martian core
- Rivers might not need plants to meander
- Has Earth’s mantle always worked like it does today?
- How the UK’s tectonic past is key to its seismic present
- A new recipe for Large Igneous Provinces: just add BIF, then wait a couple of hundred million years
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For lot's more videos on soil moisture topics, see Drs Selker and Or's text-book support videos https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCoMb5YOZuaGtn8pZyQMSLuQ/playlists
[…] Announcing STORMS | Highly Allochthonous on Recent News […]
Category Archives: geology
Where the Moon was at, 3.2 billion years ago
It may not look particularly cosmic, but the rock below not only tells us that the Moon was present back in the Archean, but also that it was orbiting the Earth at a much closer distance than it is today.
What is a greenstone belt?
The Barberton greenstone belt – one of the oldest bits of crust on the planet
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A paradigm nudge in paleontology
Apparently, if a handful of dinosaurs survive the KT extinction it ceases to be important.
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Namibia: the stromatolites’ last hurrah
Some of the more massive limestone beds in the Nama group are chock full of stromatolites, the remnants of sizeable Precambrian algal reefs. Technically, stromatolites are not true fossils, because the mineralised layers are not directly precipitated by the photosynthetic … Continue reading
Namibia: Precambrian fossils
The base of the Cambrian is traditionally thought of as the point at which large, mineralised body fossils first appear in the geological record, giving us a much-improved record of the development of life up to the present day. However, … Continue reading
Nice plan for content warnings on Mastodon and the Fediverse. Now you need a Mastodon/Fediverse button on this blog.