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Keyword: galpagos

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  • 'Wind' from Earth's middle layer blows through a secret passage beneath Panama

    01/02/2022 10:06:59 AM PST · by SunkenCiv · 23 replies
    Live Science ^ | published 15 days ago | Stephanie Pappas
    A geological secret passage beneath Panama may explain why rocks from Earth's mantle are found more than 1,000 miles (1,609 kilometers) from where they originated.This opening, located some 62 miles (100 km) below Earth's surface, may allow a flow of mantle materials to travel all the way from beneath the Galápagos Islands to beneath Panama.This never-before-discovered form of transport may also help explain why Panama has very few active volcanoes. On the west coast of Central America, the Cocos tectonic plate is diving down and pushes oceanic crust under the continental crust of the North American, Caribbean and Panama tectonic...
  • PHOTO : Pink Iguana Species Discovered

    01/06/2009 2:53:33 AM PST · by JoeProBono · 21 replies · 1,677+ views
    nationalgeographic ^ | January 5, 2009
    A new species of Galápagos iguana has scientists tickled pink. The pink iguana, named after its salmon-colored skin, lives only on the Wolf volcano on the island of Isabela. Charles Darwin did not visit the volcano on his travels to the Ecuadorian island chains in the 1830s, so the creature remained undiscovered until 1986, when it was spotted by park rangers. Only now has it been recognized as its own species.
  • Invasive Plants in Galápagos May Really Be Native

    11/21/2008 9:48:04 AM PST · by BGHater · 9 replies · 321+ views
    NY Times ^ | 20 Nov 2008 | Henry Fountain
    For years, conservationists have been concerned about the impact of invasive plant species in the Galápagos Islands. Hundreds of species have been identified as being nonnative, introduced through human contact. The idea is to remove these plants to help keep the archipelago ecologically pristine. That’s a worthy goal. But there’s just one problem, according to a study in Science: some of these pariah plants turn out to be native after all. They predate humans in the Galápagos by thousands of years. The evidence for this is in the form of fossilized pollen grains found in sediment cores from bogs on...