- published: 30 Dec 2008
- views: 545
- author: OceanDrilling
2:19
Large Igneous Provinces Formation
Formation of Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs) Robert Duncan, College of Oceanic and Atmosphe...
published: 30 Dec 2008
author: OceanDrilling
Large Igneous Provinces Formation
Formation of Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs) Robert Duncan, College of Oceanic and Atmospheric Sciences at Oregon State University, discusses the formation of Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs), a subject Earth scientists know much about due to key advances made by ODP, an IODP legacy program. The IODP Initial Science Plan highlights LIPs as a high-priority initiative for IODP.*
- published: 30 Dec 2008
- views: 545
- author: OceanDrilling
46:08
Lecture - Large igneous provinces and mass extinctions
Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs) are regions on Earth containing large amounts of volcanic m...
published: 12 Jul 2012
author: pgpuio
Lecture - Large igneous provinces and mass extinctions
Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs) are regions on Earth containing large amounts of volcanic material supposedly formed in relatively short periods of time. Five of the largest mass extinctions in the Earth's history coincide with the eruptions of LIPs. Kirsten E. Fristad (PGP, University of Oslo) discusses the causal relationships between these two events.
- published: 12 Jul 2012
- views: 176
- author: pgpuio
4:12
RichardErnst For Precambrian Research Large Igneous Provinces Special Issue
...
published: 15 Mar 2011
author: ElsevierBooks
RichardErnst For Precambrian Research Large Igneous Provinces Special Issue
- published: 15 Mar 2011
- views: 136
- author: ElsevierBooks
31:19
Lecture - Calibrating Earth Palaeogeography with Large Igneous Provinces and Kimberlites
Professor Trond H. Torsvik (PGP, UiO) talks about the mantle dynamics and demonstrates how...
published: 25 Jun 2012
author: pgpuio
Lecture - Calibrating Earth Palaeogeography with Large Igneous Provinces and Kimberlites
Professor Trond H. Torsvik (PGP, UiO) talks about the mantle dynamics and demonstrates how tectonic processes occurring at the Earth's surface are linked to the processes at the core-mantle boundary, deep in the Earth.
- published: 25 Jun 2012
- views: 74
- author: pgpuio
0:46
Large Igneous Provinces
...
published: 21 Nov 2012
author: fulldomelibrary
Large Igneous Provinces
- published: 21 Nov 2012
- views: 45
- author: fulldomelibrary
3:52
New Study Explains Fast-Moving Magma
www.icr.org Charles Darwin's On the Origin of Species, published on 24 November 1859, is a...
published: 09 Feb 2012
author: Dave Flang
New Study Explains Fast-Moving Magma
www.icr.org Charles Darwin's On the Origin of Species, published on 24 November 1859, is a work of scientific literature [weasel words] which is considered to be the foundation [of sand] of evolutionary biology. Its full title was On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races [eugenics]in the Struggle for Life. For the sixth edition of 1872, the short title was changed to The Origin of Species. Darwin's book [science fiction] introduced the scientific theory [fiction] that populations evolve over the course of generations through a process of natural selection. It presented a body of evidence [Weasel Words] that the diversity of life arose by common descent through a branching pattern of evolution. Darwin included evidence [WW] that he had gathered on the Beagle expedition in the 1830s and his subsequent findings [inventions] from research, correspondence, and experimentation. Science Fiction: The Siberian Traps (Russian: Сибирские траппы Sibirskie trappi) form a large region of volcanic rock, known as a large igneous province, in the Russian region of Siberia. The massive eruptive event which formed the traps, one of the largest known volcanic events of the last 500 million years of Earth's geological history, continued for a million years and spanned the Permian--Triassic boundary, about 251 to 250 million years ago. The Deccan Traps are a large igneous province located on the Deccan Plateau of west-central India (between ...
- published: 09 Feb 2012
- views: 862
- author: Dave Flang
7:02
Reasons Young Earth Creationists are Wrong, Part 1
Claire explains why volcanoes prove that the Earth is more than a few thousand years old....
published: 09 Feb 2011
author: WildwoodClaire1
Reasons Young Earth Creationists are Wrong, Part 1
Claire explains why volcanoes prove that the Earth is more than a few thousand years old.
- published: 09 Feb 2011
- views: 4627
- author: WildwoodClaire1
29:17
Lecture -- Fluid venting and climate effects on LIPs
Henrik Svensen (PGP, University of Oslo) present some of the key climate and extinction ev...
published: 19 Sep 2011
author: pgpuio
Lecture -- Fluid venting and climate effects on LIPs
Henrik Svensen (PGP, University of Oslo) present some of the key climate and extinction events of the last 250 million years and the main hypotheses to explain the environmental changes. There is increasing evidence that the global carbon cycle has been perturbed due to natural carbon gas release during periods of Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs). 24th Kongsberg seminar, Norway. The Kongsberg seminar is an annual, international, cross-disciplinary, process oriented, mini-conference in Earth Sciences arranged by the research center "Physics of Geological Processes" (PGP). The Kongsberg seminar is topical and focuses every year on a different subject. This year's topic is "Earth Systems Challenges" and the speakers have their background from earth sciences and physics.
- published: 19 Sep 2011
- views: 52
- author: pgpuio
13:41
لصوص من الطبيعة
Episode 5: We went to the beautiful legendary Mountain Emei in Sichuan Province in China, ...
published: 25 Jan 2011
author: rosilazawi
لصوص من الطبيعة
Episode 5: We went to the beautiful legendary Mountain Emei in Sichuan Province in China, on our way we were attacked by a group of little theives or the bobtail monkeys. below you'll find brief information about the trip Mount Emei (Chinese: 峨嵋山) is a mountain in Sichuan province of Western China. Mount Emei is often written as 峨眉山and occasionally 峩嵋山or 峩眉山but all three are translated as Mount Emei or Mount Emeishan: the word 峨can mean high or lofty, but the mountain's name is merely a toponym that carries no additional meaning. At 3099 metres (10167 ft), Mt. Emei is the highest of the Four Sacred Buddhist Mountains of China. The patron bodhisattva of Emei is Samantabhadra, known in Chinese as Puxian (普贤菩萨). 16th and 17th century sources allude to the practice of martial arts in the monasteries of Mount Emei made the earliest extant reference to the Shaolin Monastery as Chinese boxing's place of origin. Orographically, Mt Emei sits at the western rim of the Sichuan Basin. The mountains west of it are known as Daxiangling. A large surrounding area of countryside is geologically known as the Permian Emeishan Large Igneous Province, a large igneous province generated by the Emeishan Traps volcanic eruptions during the Permian Period. Administratively, Mt Emei (Emeishan) is located near the county-level city city of the same name (Emeishan City), which is part of the prefecture-level city of Leshan. Mt. Emei was made a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1996. The ...
- published: 25 Jan 2011
- views: 1393
- author: rosilazawi
42:36
Lecture - Lost Continents in the Indian Ocean
Trond Trosvik (PGP, University of Oslo) talks about paleomagnetic reconstructions, plate t...
published: 07 Mar 2012
author: pgpuio
Lecture - Lost Continents in the Indian Ocean
Trond Trosvik (PGP, University of Oslo) talks about paleomagnetic reconstructions, plate tectonics and geology fieldwork in exotic places in Indian Ocean. Zircon data obtained by his research group suggest that flood basalts in India, Seychelles and Madagascara covers fragments of a broken Proterozoic microcontinent.
- published: 07 Mar 2012
- views: 216
- author: pgpuio
2:28
3D Model of the Amphitheater Mountains
Three-dimensional model of an ultramafic feeder system to the Nikolai Greenstone Mafic Lar...
published: 05 Mar 2012
author: EarthExplorerTV
3D Model of the Amphitheater Mountains
Three-dimensional model of an ultramafic feeder system to the Nikolai Greenstone Mafic Large Igneous Province answers some important academic questions while revealing mining potential. This is part of a study conducted by Jonathan Glen, a geoscientist with the United States Geological Survey (USGS) who has been studying the Nikolai and other flood basalts for some time and his colleagues Jeanine Schmidt and Gerry Connard. Read the full article on www.earthexplorer.com.
- published: 05 Mar 2012
- views: 90
- author: EarthExplorerTV
4:04
Today in Itanagar, India
Volcanic eruptions release gases and particulates into the atmosphere. Eruptions large eno...
published: 05 Sep 2011
author: MrCyberjeet
Today in Itanagar, India
Volcanic eruptions release gases and particulates into the atmosphere. Eruptions large enough to affect climate occur on average several times per century, and cause cooling (by partially blocking the transmission of solar radiation to the Earth's surface) for a period of a few years. The eruption of Mount Pinatubo in 1991, the second largest terrestrial eruption of the 20th century[26] (after the 1912 eruption of Novarupta[27]) affected the climate substantially. Global temperatures decreased by about 0.5 °C (0.9 °F). The eruption of Mount Tambora in 1815 caused the Year Without a Summer.[28] Much larger eruptions, known as large igneous provinces, occur only a few times every hundred million years, but may cause global warming and mass extinctions.[
- published: 05 Sep 2011
- views: 281
- author: MrCyberjeet
1:03
Dolerite
This Dolerite specimen formed from the cooling of a shallow intrusion of magma within rock...
published: 27 Mar 2012
author: CranbrookScience
Dolerite
This Dolerite specimen formed from the cooling of a shallow intrusion of magma within rocks below a massive outpouring of basaltic lava in Antarctica around 183 million years ago. It was part of a massive set of eruptions, called a Large Igneous Province, that covered a huge area of Antarctica, South Africa, South America and Australia during the rifting of the supercontinent of Gondwana and the formation of the South Atlantic Ocean basin. Vast quantities of carbon gases released by this event have been linked with changes in ocean chemistry coinciding with a major extinction of marine life during the Mid-Jurassic called the Toracian event. The pits on the surface of this Antarctic specimen come from abrasive wind erosion - very similar to the features seen on the surface of rocks on Mars today -- a category of meteorite from Mars called a Shergottite is also very similar to the chemical composition of this rock.
- published: 27 Mar 2012
- views: 115
- author: CranbrookScience
109:01
Geology and Deep Time (strong evidence for a global flood) by Dr. Emil Silvestru
Dr. Emil Silvestru has published over 40 peer reviewed papers, a book, & worked as a profe...
published: 26 Aug 2011
author: dotoree
Geology and Deep Time (strong evidence for a global flood) by Dr. Emil Silvestru
Dr. Emil Silvestru has published over 40 peer reviewed papers, a book, & worked as a professor & scientist in secular institutions. He explains the evidence for a global flood, including some very interesting new research..very strong evidence that only a global flood can answer. It gets better & better as it goes on..the best evidence is in the last 1/2 or so. In history, Lyell & Cuvier were opponents & Lyell's concepts of uniformitarianism triumphed over catastrophism for some decades & those who advocated catastrophism were ridiculed. When Harlan Bretz proposed a flood in the Missoula area, it was ridiculed due to people accepting Lyell's uniformitarianism & evolution. But now we know Bretsz was right. This area was for certain made by a flood. Loius Agassiz predicted massive ice sheets in the USA...Darwin didn't believe him...Agassiz came to America & found evidence of massive ice sheets causing many features on the continent. He stayed as Harvard Professor. In the grand Canyon, we have the coconino sandstone lying on top of the hermit shale. But, there are 10 million years missing between them (A paraconformity). So for 10 million years, the Hermite shale was exposed to erosion, but has hardly a scratch of evidence of this & yet the prevailing evolutionary wisdom is that the whole Grand Canyon was cut out of rock in 1 million years? How does that work logically? People often ask how the flood could lay down layers of rock. Well, flumes of water have demonstrated that ...
- published: 26 Aug 2011
- views: 4090
- author: dotoree
Youtube results:
2:01
Paleocene Eocene Thermal Max
This video was created for Penn State's EARTH 103 course (www.e-education.psu.edu with the...
published: 06 Aug 2012
author: duttoninstitute
Paleocene Eocene Thermal Max
This video was created for Penn State's EARTH 103 course (www.e-education.psu.edu with the assistance of Timothy J. Bralower, David M. Bice and the John A. Dutton e-Education Institute (www.e-education.psu.edu
- published: 06 Aug 2012
- views: 181
- author: duttoninstitute
7:44
Ireland
Surrealistic Perspectives*. Video Conceptualized and Edited By Aloke Mukerjee. Music provi...
published: 06 Sep 2011
author: aloke mukerjee
Ireland
Surrealistic Perspectives*. Video Conceptualized and Edited By Aloke Mukerjee. Music provided by The Cinematic Orchestra, from the album Ma Fleur, titled To Build A Home and composed by Jason Swinscoe. Posted on September 6, 2011. *Surrealism is a cultural movement that began in the early 1920s, and is best known for the visual artworks and writings of the group members. Surrealist works feature the element of surprise, unexpected juxtapositions and non sequitur; however, many Surrealist artists and writers regard their work as an expression of the philosophical movement first and foremost, with the works being an artifact. Leader André Breton was explicit in his assertion that surrealism was above all a revolutionary movement. Ireland Ireland (pronounced [ˈaɪɾlənd]; Irish: Éire [ˈeːɾʲə]; Ulster Scots: Airlann or Airlan) is an island to the northwest of continental Europe. It is the third-largest island in Europe and the twentieth-largest island in the world. To its east is the larger island of Great Britain, from which it is separated by the Irish Sea. Politically, the island is divided between the Republic of Ireland, which covers just under five-sixths of the island, and Northern Ireland, a part of the United Kingdom, which covers the remainder and is located in the northeast of the island. The population of Ireland is approximately 6.2 million people. Just fewer than 4.5 million live in the Republic of Ireland and just fewer than 1.8 million live in Northern Ireland ...
- published: 06 Sep 2011
- views: 4413
- author: aloke mukerjee
3:07
ABN Newswire Australian Market Report of August 31, 2010: Transit Iron Ore Assets
(ABN Newswire) - This morning the Australian shares dropped, led by energy and metals & mi...
published: 31 Aug 2010
author: ABNNewswire
ABN Newswire Australian Market Report of August 31, 2010: Transit Iron Ore Assets
(ABN Newswire) - This morning the Australian shares dropped, led by energy and metals & mining stocks, after the US and European markets overnight closed lowered in quiet trade. Both the S&P;/ASX200 Index and the broader All Ordinaries Index fell by approximately 0.7 per cent. Economic data due today include retail sales, building approvals and data on private sector credit, all for July. The Australian Bureau of Statistics also releases current account data for June quarter. The Australian dollar on Tuesday opened lower over a weaker than expected US consumer spending report, which weighed on the worries of a slow economy recovery. Earlier this morning the Aussie dollar was trading at 89.16 US cents, down from yesterday's close of 89.79 US cents. Company News Transit Holding (ASX:TRH) is to commence a formal programme to review the commercial opportunity presented by Transit's large and prospective iron ore assets in the Johnston Range, West Australia. Transit holds over 200km2 of Exploration Licences at Johnston Range containing a 35 kilometre long sequence hosting multiple banded iron formations. Increasing activity in the Yilgarn Iron Ore Province ("YIOP") has lead to the recognition that the region is an emerging iron ore province. This factor, along with recent corporate and exploration successes in the YIOP combined with continuing strong appetite for iron ore feed for the Chinese steel industry, has encouraged the Board to investigate strategies to unlock ...
- published: 31 Aug 2010
- views: 230
- author: ABNNewswire
1:03
Masouleh Gilan ماسوله گیلان Iran Beautiful
Village of Kesheh This is the beautiful high air quality and mountains of KESHEH ... keshe...
published: 03 Apr 2012
author: MirzaRiazati
Masouleh Gilan ماسوله گیلان Iran Beautiful
Village of Kesheh This is the beautiful high air quality and mountains of KESHEH ... kesheh is a village located thirty five kilometers from the town of natanz and one hundred kilometers from the city of isfahan. the village was initially called 'kesh kooh' or 'pakesheh kooh', in local tongue meaning 'stretched beneath ... ******* The Karkas mountain chain (Persian Reshteh kuh-e Karkas) is located in Central Iran. It ranges from Kashan to Ardestan over more than 100 km and is mainly composed of igneous (plutonic and volcanic), pyroclastic and somewhat sedimentary Tertiary rocks. In the central part, this mountain chain consists of a Precambrian-Paleozoic basement. The highest peak of the Karkas Mountains is 3895m which is close to Natanz. The Karkas Mountain Chain is not only located in the center of Iran, but also has been the center of emergence of many ancient industries in Iran. The Karkas area encompasses parts of the Orumieh-Dokhtar magmatic belt and the northern part of the Qom-Ardakan depression belt (the area between Dagh-e Sorkh playa and the salt lake). Different geological and natural features such as diversity of rock types, existence of two structural and accumulative units in the area, a 3000m elevation difference in an area within only 30km2 width, diversity of sediments and vegetation, presence of abundant faults, and geographic location (location in the crossroad of the south and north of the country) have facilitated forming and settlement of different ...
- published: 03 Apr 2012
- views: 245
- author: MirzaRiazati