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New research confirms Venus has active mantle plumes shaping its crust, showing it's geologically alive like early Earth.
The research supports the argument that Venus’ tectonics are active today, he says. What’s more, the demonstrated ability of computer simulations to predict what spacecraft may observe will be a boon ...
14d
Live Science on MSNHuge Reservoirs of Clean Hydrogen Could Power Earth for 170,000 YearsRecent breakthroughs suggest that hydrogen reservoirs are buried in countless regions of the world, including at least 30 U.S ...
Earth's rocky crust is made up of massive plates ... processes like metamorphism and recycling are actively shaping the Venusian crust today—and reveal how such activity may be tied to volcanic ...
A new study suggests the planet’s iconic domes owe their strange shape to both thick lava and a flexible surface.
A reappraisal of decades-old data suggests that strange circular formations on Venus could be volcanic “rings of fire” ...
In the dry, sun-scorched deserts of Ethiopia, a slow but astonishing transformation has been unfolding since 2005. A ...
A detailed isotopic study of Hawaiian volcanic rocks reveals signatures of core‑derived material, suggesting the core and ...
Breakthrough discovery reveals gold and precious metals are slowly leaking from Earth's core through Hawaiian volcanoes.
7d
ZME Science on MSNScientists Found Traces of Gold Leaking from Earth’s CoreTraces of ruthenium in Hawaiian lava reveal long-suspected core–mantle leakage.
A new study of Venus suggests that the deeply inhospitable world may be more like Earth than we thought.
A security camera near Thazi, Myanmar, captured the earth cracking during a magnitude 7.7 earthquake in March.
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