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What 'bad science' looks like in the 21st century.

 
Wayfaring Stranger
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01/16/2020 08:25 AM
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What 'bad science' looks like in the 21st century.
The map used for the 1st vid was created about 1950. No exploration of the concept below has been explored as it destroys the Pangea lie.

The 2nd vid shows what bogus science looks like in the 21st century.
I will add more info, this is a primer.

[link to www.ngdc.noaa.gov (secure)]
Age, spreading rates and spreading symmetry
of the world's ocean crust
(Version 3, September 2008)





[link to www.quantamagazine.org (secure)]
Core of the Matter

If an omnipotent scientific illustrator halved the Earth, they would first need to cut through the thin crust we live on, which is broken into shifting tectonic plates. Then they’d pass through the rocky mantle. Only at 2,900 kilometers down, about halfway to the very center, would they hit the core-mantle boundary.

To map that part of the Earth, seismologists use the waves released by earthquakes. As the waves rattle outward, they change speed depending on what material they pass through. That causes them to arrive at different monitoring stations at different times. In 1984, the Harvard researcher Adam Dziewonski first integrated data from many different earthquakes into a global map. The two blobs showed up immediately, attached to the core on either side like Princess Leia side buns.

In these regions, earthquake waves seem to slow down, suggesting that the blobs are hotter than the surrounding mantle. How do we know this? Rock expands when heated. That causes waves to travel sluggishly through warm regions, said Garnero, like the slower vibrations moving through a loose guitar string.

The slowing waves gave these features their formal name: large low-shear-velocity provinces, or LLSVPs — an unmagical abbreviation that may have contributed to the topic’s low profile. “We are also to blame,” said Sanne Cottaar, a seismologist at the University of Cambridge, “for misnaming this feature so badly.”

This concept is utter bullshit, plain and simple. Be back in a few hours to update (text edition so it will be boring as hell)
Wayfaring Stranger  (OP)

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01/16/2020 03:07 PM
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Re: What 'bad science' looks like in the 21st century.
I'm going to try a few vids to show what the alternative is as it is actually following the Laws of Physics rather than 'artistic freedom laws'.

This one is pretty good. The same theme applies to all 40,000 miles of Oceanic Rifts. One part not mentioned is in the center of all the floating plates there is a zone where the magma that meets ends up going down towards the core again. Hawaii sits above a descending 'plume' of magma. The volcano is a small one due to a slight increase in pressure. The seafloor actually dips about a km where it should be bulging upwards. The descending magma pulls the crust down due to 'suction'. Mt. Kilimanjaro is Africa's site of a volcano above a zone of descending magma.

The mantle also has several zones where density increases a lot so each zone has it's own convection current that is passing heat from the core to the crust and to the air and to outer space. (I'll try to find some decent pics) Magma just below the crust would be diamonds in liquid form and it gets even harder as you go down.
If the magma has iron in solid form and the outer core has iron in liquid form then the inner core has iron as a gas. That is how matter behaves as you heat it up. solid-liquid-gas.








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