'Lost Continent' Rises Again With New Expedition (smithsonianmag.com) 62
Tens of millions of years after it disappeared under the waters of the Pacific Ocean, scientists have completed the first explorations of what some scientists are calling a hidden continent. From a report: During a two-month ocean voyage this summer, a team of more than 30 scientists from 12 countries explored the submerged landmass of Zealandia on an advanced research vessel and collected samples from the seabed. Scientists were able to drill into the ocean floor at depths of more than 4,000 feet, collecting more than 8,000 feet of sediment cores that provides a window into 70 million years of geologic history, reports Georgie Burgess for ABC News. More than 8,000 fossils from hundreds of species were also collected in the drilling, giving scientists a glimpse at terrestrial life that lived tens of millions of years ago in the area. "The discovery of microscopic shells of organisms that lived in warm shallow seas, and of spores and pollen from land plants, reveal that the geography and climate of Zealandia were dramatically different in the past," expedition leader Gerald Dickens said in a statement. While more than 90 percent of Zealandia is now submerged under more than a kilometer (two-thirds of a mile) of water, when it was above the surface, it likely provided a path that many land animals and plants could have used to spread across the South Pacific, notes Naaman Zhou of the Guardian.
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Re: For all my friends browsing at -1... (Score:2)
Re: For all my friends browsing at -1... (Score:4, Funny)
where's the fucking auto bans?
Germany?
Obviously, there was an advanced civilization (Score:1)
It was called Atlantis.
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More like Pacificus.
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no wrong area if this was Atlantis then Acheron would have gotten involved of course whatever DarkHunters were in that area would be PISSED since what was learned might be used in the Correct area.
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You need to understand...
I blame cat parasites for his lack of understanding. Treat him with compassion, he has to live the rest of his life like that.
Re: Hockey stick? (Score:1)
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Everything is reversible given time, whether we are still alive after it reverses well thats an entirely different story. Perhaps that is the 'subtle' point you are missing.
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Neither of your links answers the questions I posted:
Fail. As expected...
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You should really read at least the entire first paragraph before you quote something...
The Maunder Minimum roughly coincided with the middle part of the Little Ice Age, during which Europe and North America experienced colder than average temperatures. Whether there is a causal relationship, however, is still controversial, as no convincing mechanism for the solar activity to produce cold temperatures has been proposed, and the current best hypothesis for the cause of the Little Ice Age is that it was the result of volcanic action. The onset of the Little Ice Age also occurred well before the beginning of the Maunder minimum.
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It's not just the change, it's the rate of change.
If the Earth's mean temperature changes by 2 degrees over 70 million years (the timescale TFA is talking about), it's a lot different than if happens over 200 years. That's over 5 orders of magnitude.
So yeah, if in 70 million years we've evolved into mer-people, then the ocean levels rising won't be a big deal. Since it only took 65 million years to go from dinosaurs to somewhat intelligent apes who invented the internet so idiots can post ridiculous crap on
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Oh OK, so I guess it's only 3-4 orders of magnitude then.
Also, "checkmate" is one word, not hyphenated.
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Your entire argument demolished, all you have left is arguing over spelling? Seriously? Not even semantics?
Something tells me, you were among those, who believed the ancient shamans in Tasmania, who explained the sea-rise by the sins of their flock. Lit too many fires you did, fools, and the snows melted! Let's kill these criminals [theguardian.com], or else we all drown!
A friendly recommendation. (Score:5, Insightful)
which continent was this? (Score:1)
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Considered the greatest sci-fi flick ending by some [youtube.com]
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No. That would be 'A Boy and His Dog'. Greatest movie ending of all time.
It already had a name.. (Score:4, Interesting)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
this is a re-discovery!
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I watched the first two episodes and now I'm afraid of anything with "Discovery" in its name.
I mean, what the hell did they do to the Klingons? They look like constipated fish!
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I watched the first two episodes and now I'm afraid of anything with "Discovery" in its name.
I mean, what the hell did they do to the Klingons? They look like constipated fish!
Klingons always had constipation problems. Why do you think Whorf drank so much prune juice?
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uppity Kivis (Score:5, Funny)
So the Kivis think they can promote their tiny piece of land to a continent just by declaring it one? Whom they think they are, Europe?
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Oceania?
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There's a good few smaller tectonic plates underwater. It is also suspected that a couple other continental sized plates ended up being crumpled up inside the mantle layers.
https://www.theguardian.com/sc... [theguardian.com]
https://confit.atlas.jp/guide/... [atlas.jp]
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Kivis? It's Kiwis actually.
Need better inventory control. (Score:3)
We must spare no expense in finding out who is responsible for the loss of the continent, and take measures to garner salary and benefits to compensate for the loss.
Rock climbing, Joel (Score:2)
Rock climbing.
Once more, with feeling (Score:1)
Also known as... (Score:2)
Also known in Oceanic mythology by names like Kavai, Havai, Kavaiki, Havaiki, Kavaiki, or Hawaiki, after which Hawai'i was named (its discoverers believing they had found the mythical lost land where all their peoples descend from).
Or as I like to call it, Auei [geekofalltrades.org].
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Of course the pretty clear lesson of global warming today and rising sea levels, pretty much a demonstration of what the lost lands were. Coastal plains flooded underneath the end of the ice age sea level rise of around 120m https://www.giss.nasa.gov/rese... [nasa.gov] (look they are finally using metric, good on you NASA). This substantiated by underwater caves with stalagmites and stalactites and well as cores of all major coral reefs proving that they were totally destroyed as marine biospheres when they were somet
Not the eighth continent (Score:2)
This article avoids the trap, but I've seen other news coverage calling Zealandia the eighth continent. This can't be right. For Zealandia to count as a continent, your definition of continent has to be something like a sizeable region of continental crust separated from other such regions. With this in mind, the count of continents would be Eurasia/Africa, the Americas, Antarctica, Australia. If you think it big enough to be continental, Zealandia would come in at number five. (Even the Eurasia/Africa sepa
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As compared to Europe ; a much better case for being a continent is India.
Its large, its separated by natural Geographic boundaries which have prevented cultural and linguistic mixing (Himalayas and Thar Desert) and it sits on its own tectonic plate.
Yet we call Indians Asians even though they dont look the same, dont speak similar languages, dont wear similar clothes, dont eat similar food as Asians.
What is defined as a continent is a matter of politics than Geology or Geography.