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Gary Pearse says:
Undersea volcanoes have been known by geologists for well over a century. Iceland, Hawaii and a host of other islands and terrains are born of undersea vulcanism. I mapped pillowed basalts in the Archean of the Canadian Shield over 50 years ago myself and these are 2.5-3.0 billion years old.
http://bing.search.sympatico.ca/?q=Archean%20age&mkt=en-ca&setLang=en-CA
Click on the images on the right for modern Hawaiian pillows and for ancient precambrian pillows in the Canadian Shield. It is a common thing among scientists these days to be rediscovering well known phenomena and finding them much more prevalent than thought (by themselves). Thought seems to be of declining interest. If they go for the Nobel Prize, I might try to horn in on it for my prior work but of course there will be another 20,000 geologist in line.
Oh, and Alan the Brit:
I dont suppose they just happen to lie around the West Antarctic Penninsula or could possibly affect the ocean temperatures locally at all,
Yes they are:
http://iceagenow.com/Underwater_volcanoes_heating_Antarctic_waters.htm
They were also reported by WUWT some time ago. Indeed the most common rocks on the Western Peninsula are volcanic rocks.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geology_of_Antarctica
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John F. Hultquist says:
A says:
August 11, 2011 at 4:02 am
Image of bubbles of liquid carbon dioxide
Liquid CO2? am i missing something????
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Yes you are. I missed it with respect to salt water so am returning the favor. Here is the link you need:
http://www.standnes.no/chemix/english/phase-diagram-co2.htm