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Deep heat beneath the Appalachian Mountains may be linked to an ancient rift with Greenland, helping explain why the range is ...
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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, ...
Map showing the origin of the Northern Appalachian Anomaly when Greenland and North America split, and its journey more than ...
A bold new theory reimagines the NAA as a "Rayleigh–Taylor instability"—a geological term for when heavy, cold rock begins to ...
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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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Explorersweb on MSNAncient Blob Beneath Appalachians Headed for New YorkIt sounds like a bottom of the barrel B-movie sequel along the lines of Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan, but ...
A large region of unusually hot rock deep beneath the Appalachian Mountains in the United States could be linked to Greenland ...
Scientists studying a puzzling hot zone beneath America, called the North Atlantic Anomaly, have proposed a mantle wave ...
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 ...
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 ...
Large region of unusually hot rock beneath the Appalachian Mountains in teh USA is linked to the splitting of Greenland and ...
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