DONT RE-ELECT ANY POLITICIAN

political

2009/11/4

Create Science to fit the Facts ?

@ 04:21 PM (17 days, 6 hours ago)

LiveScience.com

(Nov. 3) - A 35-mile rift in the desert of Ethiopia will likely become a new ocean eventually, researchers now confirm.
The crack, 20 feet wide in spots, opened in 2005 and some geologists believed then that it would spawn a new ocean. But that view was controversial, and the rift had not been well studied.

Skip over this content

Ethiopian rift

A new study says that a 35-mile-long rift in the Ethiopian desert will eventually become an ocean, connecting the Red Sea with the Arabian Sea. The crack, which is 20 feet wide in spots, first opened in 2005 after a volcanic eruption. Scientists estimate it will take a million years for the new ocean to form.

A new study involving an international team of scientists and reported in the journal Geophysical Research Letters finds the processes creating the rift are nearly identical to what goes on at the bottom of oceans, further indication a sea is in the region's future.
The same rift activity is slowly parting the Red Sea, too.
Using newly gathered seismic data from 2005, researchers reconstructed the event to show the rift tore open along its entire 35-mile length in just days. Dabbahu, a volcano at the northern end of the rift, erupted first, then magma pushed up through the middle of the rift area and began "unzipping" the rift in both directions, the researchers explained in a statement today.
"We know that seafloor ridges are created by a similar intrusion of magma into a rift, but we never knew that a huge length of the ridge could break open at once like this," said Cindy Ebinger, professor of earth and environmental sciences at the University of Rochester and co-author of the study.

» Leave a comment


To prevent spam, please type in the exact word you see in this image: CAPTCHA
To refresh the image, click here. Otherwise, contact us.

  • Your E-mail address is never displayed. If you enter it, it will only be visible to the blog author
  • The line and paragraph breaks automatically