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Page 7 - நிறுவனம் ஆஃப் பூமி அறிவியல் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Oldest carbonates in the solar system

 E-Mail IMAGE: Flensburg meteorite with black fusion crust: Parts of the fusion crust were lost during the flight through the atmosphere. The small fragment, weighing 24,5 grams, is about 4.5 billion years. view more  Credit: A. Bischoff / M. Patzek, University of Münster A meteorite that fell in northern Germany in 2019 contains carbonates which are among the oldest in the solar system; it also evidences the earliest presence of liquid water on a minor planet. The high-resolution Ion Probe - a research instrument at the Institute of Earth Sciences at Heidelberg University - provided the measurements. The investigation by the Cosmochemistry Research Group led by Prof. Dr Mario Trieloff was part of a consortium study coordinated by the University of Münster with participating scientists from Europe, Australia and the USA.

23 08 2014 – Bardarbunga – Information from The Icelandic National Coordination Media Centre | IceNews

A small lava-eruption has been detected under the Dyngjujökull glacier. The Icelandic Coast Guard airplane TF-SIF is flying over the area with representatives from the Civil Protection and  experts from the Icelandic Met Office and the Institute of Earth Sciences. Data from the equipment on board is expected later today. Data from radars and webcameras are being received, showing no signs of changes at the surface. The estimate is that 150-400 meters of ice  is above the area. The aviation color code for the Bárðarbunga volcano has been changed from orange to red. Scientists at the Icelandic Met Office believe that a small sub-glacial volcanic eruption has now started under the icecap of Dyngjujökull glacier in the Northern part of Vatnajökull glacier. Because of this the National Commissioner of the Icelandic Police has raised the alert phase to emergency phase.

A devastating earthquake in Israel is imminent, study shows

A devastating earthquake in Israel is imminent, study shows According to the research, which reviewed 220,000 years of Dead-Sea geology by drilling and studying the seabed, a major seismic event is expected to hit the region within the next few decades Attila Somfalvi | Published: 12.24.20 , 23:32 A recent study conducted at the bottom of the Dead Sea revealed that a potentially devastating earthquake measured 6.5 on the Richter Scale is expected to hit our region in the coming years. The study, conducted by researchers from Tel Aviv University and published in the Science Advances journal, revealed that earthquakes of such magnitude tend to hit the region once every 130 to 150 years, though a smaller gap of only a few decades is also possible.

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