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Keyword: johntarduno

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  • Africa PHENOMENON threatens to FLIP Earth's magnetic field, taking the poles with it

    03/08/2018 10:41:30 AM PST · by SunkenCiv · 101 replies
    Express.co.uk ^ | Wednesday, March 7, 2018 | Sakura Evans
    New research shows the most significant weakening is happening under Africa which has been dubbed the 'South Atlantic Anomaly' (SAA). As well as giving us our north and south poles, the magnetic field blankets the Earth, protecting it from solar winds and cosmic radiation. The forcefield has weakened significantly over the past 160 years and scientists now suggest it could be in the process of flipping. Such a change would be a switch in magnetic polarity and would see compasses point south rather than north. Scientists believe such an occurrence has actually happened several times in the history of our...
  • Earth's Magnetic Shield Is Much Older Than Thought

    07/31/2015 9:55:30 AM PDT · by JimSEA · 21 replies
    Science Daily ^ | 07/30/2015 | J. A. Tarduno, R. D. Cottrell, W. J. Davis, F. Nimmo, R. K. Bono.
    Since 2010, the best estimate of the age of Earth's magnetic field has been 3.45 billion years. But now a researcher responsible for that finding has new data showing the magnetic field is far older. John Tarduno, a geophysicist at the University of Rochester and a leading expert on Earth's magnetic field, and his team of researchers say they believe the Earth's magnetic field is at least four billion years old.
  • How long have the Scientists Known?

    02/03/2006 4:08:01 AM PST · by nextage · 25 replies · 627+ views
    Nextage Mission ^ | 3.02.2006 | nextage
    How long have the scientists known about the predicted pole-shift, expected date and likely causes, outcomes?
  • Earth Raised Magnetic Shield Earlier than Thought

    03/07/2010 7:44:00 PM PST · by SunkenCiv · 22 replies · 168+ views
    Discovery News ^ | Thursday, March 4, 2010 | Irene Klotz
    Young Earth was cocooned in a protective shield that magnetically deflected killer solar radiation 200 million years earlier than previously thought, a key factor that allowed life to take hold, according to a new study published this week in the journal Science. The research, based on analysis of ancient silicate crystals from South Africa, has implications for the search for life beyond Earth, which to date has focused on finding planets where liquid water can exist. The study by University of Rochester geophysicist John Tarduno and colleagues suggests that the ability of a planet to generate a large magnetic field...
  • Earth's Magnetic Field Weakens 10 Percent (and some other stuff)

    12/12/2003 6:26:01 PM PST · by NormsRevenge · 20 replies · 588+ views
    Yahoo News ^ | 12/12/03 | Andrew Bridges - AP
    SAN FRANCISCO - The strength of the Earth's magnetic field has decreased 10 percent over the past 150 years, raising the remote possibility that it may collapse and later reverse, flipping the planet's poles for the first time in nearly a million years, scientists said Thursday.   At that rate of decline, the field could vanish altogether in 1,500 to 2,000 years, said Jeremy Bloxham of Harvard University. Hundreds of years could pass before a flip-flopped field returned to where it was 780,000 years ago. But scientists at a meeting of the American Geophysical Union cautioned that scenario is an...
  • Textbook Case of Tectonic Movement is Wrong, Says New Study

    08/22/2003 6:43:59 AM PDT · by forsnax5 · 14 replies · 6+ views
    University of Rochester ^ | August 22, 2003 | John Tarduno, Rory Cottrell
    Textbook Case of Tectonic Movement is Wrong, Says New Study Results from an expedition to the sea floor near the Hawaiian Islands show evidence that the deep Earth is more unsettled than geologists have long believed. A new University of Rochester study suggests that the long chain of islands and seamounts, which is deemed a "textbook" example of tectonic plate motion, was formed in part by a moving plume of magma, upsetting the prevailing theory that plumes have been unmoving fixtures in Earth's history. The research will be published in the August 22 issue of Science. "Mobile magma plumes force...