Danish Research Center To Explore Mysteries of Earth's Interior 56
An anonymous reader writes "The DanSeis Centre at the University of Copenhagen has just received a grant of more than €3 million from the Danish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Higher Education to investigate and tackle one of geoscience's great mysteries: do mantle plumes, hypothetically buoyant regions of heated mantle material rising towards the earth's surface, actually exist?"
What "new methods and instruments" ? (Score:5, Interesting)
In the article, it is stated that
"Using new methods and instruments, we can take geologic measurements much deeper within the Earth than before. Now, down to 500 and 1000 kilometers! Methods in current use, by the oil industry among others, provide information for areas down to between 6 and 10 kilometers," explains Professor Thybo.
If the multi-trillion-dollar oil industry can only make geologic measurements to a depth of 6 to 10 kilometers, what make you think a research program that cost 3 million euro can measure down to 500 or even 100 kilometers?
Just what kind of "new methods" and "instruments" are they going to deploy??
Re:What "new methods and instruments" ? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:What "new methods and instruments" ? (Score:4, Insightful)
The oil industry won't spend money researching depths they can't drill to.
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Mantle plumes and mantle processes in general are integral to continental break-up and the development of sedimentary (rift) basins, within continents and along continental margins. Petroleum companies are very interested in mantle processes and basin development (it's a branch of geology called Basin Analysis); some of the worlds largest oil and gas fields are found in sedimentary basins along rifted continental margins.
Near me to the west of Ireland, there's the Corrib, Slyne, Porcupine & Rockall Basi
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The oil industry won't spend money researching depths they can't drill to.
However, diamond exploration companies will.
Torsvik et al., 2010. Diamonds sampled by plumes from the core-mantle boundary [geodynamics.no]. Nature 466(7304), 352–355.
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I would mod you up if I could
Many thanks for that link !!!!!!!!
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because the oil industry couldn't give a shit about what's down at 500km. They just want to know where oil is, and only the oil that is economically extractable in a reasonable time frame.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/At_the_Earth%27s_Core_%28film%29
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Iceland would be better than Denmark, I think.
"Descend into the crater of the Jokull of Sneffels,
Which the shadow of Scartaris falls upon before the calends of July,
Bold traveler, and you will reach the center of the Earth.
Which I have done, Arne Saknussem."
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Summoning Shudde M'ell isn't all that expensive - in monetary costs, anyway...
Foregone conclusion.... (Score:2)
Re:Foregone conclusion.... (Score:4, Funny)
If the planet is consuming too many plum filled danishes, I can certainly understand hot bubbles of materials rising up.
Oh, sorry, you said "plume," not "plum." Never mind. Also, for anyone who thought of hot grits and/or Natalie Portman while reading the above, you've got issues bro.
Great News (Score:5, Funny)
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Normally that would be "remonce" which is a mix of butter, sugar and often marcipan (or finely chopped almonds)
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Re:Onion and /. (Score:4, Insightful)
Slashdot is basically the techie equivalent of Fox News. We don't really come here to get information, we come here to get entertained and enraged by things that fit our point of view.
It's the Bagrols you have to worry about. (Score:2)
What about the discontinuity of gravity? (Score:5, Informative)
Why is the force of gravity at the core zero?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Earth-G-force.png [wikipedia.org]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Slice_earth.svg [wikipedia.org]
And why the hell is there a Gutenberg discontinuity where gravity increases the closer you get, then drops down to zero?
i.e.
The Gutenberg Discontinuity, is the boundary, as detected by changes in seismic waves, between the Earth's lower mantle and the outer core about 1800 miles below the surface. It is also called the core-mantle boundary.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mohorovi%C4%8Di%C4%87_discontinuity [wikipedia.org]
Re:What about the discontinuity of gravity? (Score:5, Informative)
"Why is the force of gravity at the core zero?"
Because the integral of the forces acting on some mass at the center of the Earth is zero. Or to put it differently: You are being pulled by (approximately) equal forces in all directions.
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IIRC no integral is needed; the vector sum of forces will do.
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"...the vector sum of forces will do."
Yes, assuming point masses. But that means that you are summing atoms. For practical purposes I would make an integral over the volume of the Earth.
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Re:What about the discontinuity of gravity? (Score:4, Informative)
None of these things are even slightly mysterious. None of them are really particularly difficult to calculate, or at least estimate. "Interesting" discoveries from the systematic study of near-Earth and inner-Earth gravity are entirely possible, but one would ordinarily consider the discover of a fifth force, or a short range modulation of the gravitational force, to be "interesting" in this context. In order to make such a discovery, however, one has to know the mass distribution and compute the net relative acceleration one should be observing to very high precision, as one is basically looking for an anomaly, and small deviations from a not-too-well-known or even well-defined base quantity are the most difficult to detect, see the entire (somewhat humorous) debate about global warming for an example).
rgb
P.S. -- Off-topic general query: Wordpress lets one embed latex in comments, and it isn't even particularly focussed on technical subject matters. Is there an equally simple way to embed latex in
It isn't zero (Score:2)
It is just a lot in any direction. Same reason you are not a stain on the ground from the massive pressure off all the air on top of you. Air pressure is all around and the same all around.
A funny thing is that in theory, if you could drill a hole through the planet and you could jump down it and there was no air resistance you would pop out at the other end at the same speed as you entered. first you accelerate and then you decelerate. Of course, it would never work in real life but it is a fun idea.
For a
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It isn't zero. It is just a lot in any direction.
My physics is rusty, but I'm pretty sure if there's zero acceleration, there's zero force.
Danish... (Score:2)
Crispy on the outside, soft and chewy in the middle?
Dinosaurs, giant diamonds and atomic bombs (Score:2)
It all sounds so cool! Sign me up!
Arne Saknussemm (Score:1)
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He was Icelandic as I recall. Of course, at the time of Jules Verne, Iceland was technically part of Denmark..
Didn't one of the old versions of... (Score:2)
Didn't one of the earlier versions of "Journey to the Center of the Earth" involve a Dane with a duck?
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Nope. I was thinking that there were Danes involved in that too, but a walk through Wikipedia reveals apparently not. The explorer in Verne's original novel was German. Arne Saknussemm, the (fictional) medieval alchemist whose lead they were following, was an Icelander. Other incarnations have varied things; in the movie (and later animated series) with the duck, the explorer was Scottish. There was one version with a Swede involved. But apparently no Danes.
There is nothing down there but dirt! (Score:1)
Seriously! Yet another gold digging expedition in the name of "Science"
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Danish (Score:3, Funny)
Same goes for your coffee, by the way.
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Waitress: "D'ya want some more coffee, Hon?"
Me: "NO, NO, I mean, eehhh, no thank you,"
Your large selection of weird brew-beers was a positive surprise, though.
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... Danish pastry over in the US, I wouldn't even feed to the pigs...
Well, DUH. Neither would I. Why would you give something so awesomely yummy to a pig?
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Just another remake (Score:1)
Pellucidar (Score:2)
The hollow-earthers were right! The GOP hopefuls should probably campaign on gaining ownership of the natural resources of Pellucidar; it'd fit right in with their anti-anthropomorphic climate change, sustainable fossil fuels, and creationism beliefs. :-D
Old News (Score:2)
I thought that these questions had been conclusively settled, as chronicled in that fine documentary The Core
Inferno? Jon Pertwee? Bueler? Bueler? (Score:2)
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Actually, after reading the headline my first thought was of Arne Saknussemm!
Investigatory team (Score:1)