For most of human history, the creation of new ocean floor has been something inferred rather than witnessed. Geologists ...
Scientists have witnessed the birth of new oceanic crust for the first time, capturing a rare seafloor spreading event that offers fresh insights into Earth's tectonic processes.
Water may have been shaping Earth’s deep interior far earlier than many geologists thought. In rocks more than 3 billion years old from Western Australia, a research team found chemical signs that ...
Ninetyeast Ridge, the long, pale-blue line slicing through the Indian Ocean near 90 degrees east, is the largest underwater mountain ridge in the world. Image via Wiki Commons. The deep oceans are far ...
The first-known direct observations of a seafloor spreading event at a mid-ocean ridge in the Indian Ocean are presented in ...
The spread of the ocean floor, as tectonic plates spread apart, is known but hard to observe. Scientists have now documented ...
Most of our planet's crust is forged in a thalassic factory human eyes never see. Across 65,000 kilometers (40,400 miles) of ...
Earlier study of the region had shown that the spreading in the area occurs at an average rate of a bit over 60 millimeters a ...
Scientists have discovered 73 previously unknown volcanoes hidden across the ocean floors.
Scientists have discovered new evidence that water was already helping shape Earth’s interior more than 3 billion years ago.
Major clues to the origins of our planet—and life itself—are locked inside some three billion-year-old volcanic rocks from ...
Geologists studying some of the planet's oldest volcanic rocks have uncovered new evidence that water was playing a major ...