Showing posts with label australia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label australia. Show all posts

Saturday, February 18, 2017

The discovery that overturns all knowledge of geography. It was found a new continent Called 'Zealandia'

Topography of Zealandia. The linear ridges running north-northeast and southwest away from New Zealand are not considered part of the continental fragment, nor are Australia (upper left), Fiji or Vanuatu (top centre). Credit: wikipedia

Kids are frequently taught that seven continents exist: Africa, Asia, Antarctica, Australia, Europe, North America, and South America.

Geologists, who look at the rocks (and tend to ignore the humans), group Europe and Asia into its own supercontinent - Eurasia - making for a total of six geologic continents.

But according to a new study of Earth's crust, there's a seventh geologic continent called 'Zealandia', and it has been hiding under our figurative noses for millennia.



Make-up of the 4.9 M km 2 continent of Zealandia in the SW Pacific

The 11 researchers behind the study argue that New Zealand and New Caledonia aren't merely an island chain.

Instead, they're both part of a single, 4.9-million-square kilometre (1.89 million-square-mile) slab of continental crust that's distinct from Australia.




"This is not a sudden discovery but a gradual realisation; as recently as 10 years ago we would not have had the accumulated data or confidence in interpretation to write this paper," they wrote in GSA Today, a Geological Society of America journal.

Ten of the researchers work for organisations or companies within the new continent; one works for a university in Australia.


Zealandia: Earth's Hidden ContinentThis City Knows  Urban Trekkers


But other geologists are almost certain to accept the research team's continent-size conclusions, says Bruce Luyendyk, a geophysicist at the University of California, Santa Barbara (he wasn't involved in the study).


"These people here are A-list earth scientists," Luyendyk tells Business Insider.


"I think they have put together a solid collection of evidence that's really thorough. I don't see that there's going to be a lot of pushback, except maybe around the edges."


Why Zealandia is almost certainly a new continent
N. Mortimer et al./GSA Today




















The concept of Zealandia isn't new. In fact, Luyendyk coined the word in 1995.

But Luyendyk says it was never intended to describe a new continent. Rather, the name was used to describe New Zealand, New Caledonia, and a collection of submerged pieces and slices of crust that broke off a region of Gondwana, a 200 million-year-old supercontinent.

"The reason I came up with this term is out of convenience," Luyendyk says.

"They're pieces of the same thing when you look at Gondwana. So I thought, 'why do you keep naming this collection of pieces as different things?'"

Researchers behind the new study took Luyendyk's idea a huge step further, re-examining known evidence under four criteria that geologists use to deem a slab of rock a continent:

Land that pokes up relatively high from the ocean floor

  • A diversity of three types of rocks: igneous (spewed by volcanoes), metamorphic (altered by heat/pressure), and sedimentary (made by erosion)
  • A thicker, less-dense section of crust compared to surrounding ocean floor
  • "Well-defined limits around a large enough area to be considered a continent rather than a microcontinent or continental fragment"

Over the past few decades, geologists had already determined that New Zealand and New Caledonia fit the bill for items 1, 2, and 3.

After all, they're large islands that poke up from the sea floor, are geologically diverse, and are made of thicker, less-dense crust.

This eventually led to Luyendyk's coining of Zealandia, and the description of the region as 'continental', since it was considered a collection of microcontinents, or bits and pieces of former continents.

The authors say the last item on the list - a question of "is it big enough and unified enough to be its own thing?" - is one that other researchers skipped over in the past, though by no fault of their own.

Journey to Zealandia, Earth's Hidden 8th Continent



At a glance, Zealandia seemed broken-up. But the new study used recent and detailed satellite-based elevation and gravity maps of the ancient seafloor to show that Zealandia is indeed part of one unified region.

The data also suggests Zealandia spans "approximately the area of greater India", or larger than Madagascar, New Guinea, Greenland, or other microcontinents and provinces.

"If the elevation of Earth's solid surface had first been mapped in the same way as those of Mars and Venus (which lack […] opaque liquid oceans)," they wrote.

"We contend that Zealandia would, much earlier, have been investigated and identified as one of Earth's continents."


The geologic devils in the details

The study's authors point out that while India is big enough to be a continent, and probably used to be, it's now part of Eurasia because it collided and stuck to that continent millions of years ago.

Zealandia, meanwhile, has not yet smashed into Australia; a piece of seafloor called the Cato Trough still separates the two continents by 25 kilometres (15.5 miles).

N. Mortimer et al./GSA Today
One thing that makes the case for Zealandia tricky is its division into northern and southern segments by two tectonic plates: the Australian Plate and the Pacific Plate.

This split makes the region seem more like a bunch of continental fragments than a unified slab.

But the researchers point out that Arabia, India, and parts of Central America have similar divisions, yet are still considered parts of larger continents.

"I'm from California, and it has a plate boundary going through it," Luyendyk says.

"In millions of years, the western part will be up near Alaska. Does that make it not part of North America? No."

What's more, the researchers wrote, rock samples suggest Zealandia is made of the same continental crust that used to be part of Gondwana, and that it migrated in ways similar to the continents Antarctica and Australia.

The samples and satellite data also show Zealandia is not broken up as a collection of microcontinents, but a unified slab.

Instead, plate tectonics has thinned, stretched, and submerged Zealandia over of millions of years. Today, only about 5 percent of it is visible as the islands of New Zealand and New Caledonia - which is part of the reason it took so long to discover.

"The scientific value of classifying Zealandia as a continent is much more than just an extra name on a list," the scientists wrote.

"That a continent can be so submerged yet unfragmented makes it a useful and thought-provoking geodynamic end member in exploring the cohesion and breakup of continental crust."

Luyendyk believes the distinction won't likely end up as a scientific curiosity, however, and speculated that it may eventually have larger consequences.

"The economic implications are clear and come into play: What's part of New Zealand and what's not part of New Zealand?" he says.

Indeed, United Nations agreements make specific mentions of continental shelves as boundaries that determine where resources can be extracted - and New Zealand may have tens of billions of dollars' worth of fossil fuels and minerals lurking off its shores.

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The above post is reprinted from materials provided by Sciencealert . Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.

Saturday, February 4, 2017

The Biggest Bird in History. It was bigger than a horse and weighed 650 kilograms

Dromornis Credit: thevintagenews
Measuring 3 meters in height and weighing up to 65kg, Dromornis is a genus of prehistoric giant birds. Dromornis  belonged to Dromornithidae,  a family of giant birds that lived 8 million years ago until less than  30,000 years ago. Since millions of years by this time, Australia had been separated from the big southern landmass of Gondwana. Typical for animals in Australia is the fact that they had evolved slowly, completely isolated from the animals of the other continents.


A fossil (cast) of the extinct Dromornis stirtoni from Australia. Photographed at Dinoday 2009 By Kevmin – Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0
Because of the very poor fossil record of  D. australis (the type species of the genus) and a huge time gap between the  two Dromornis species, D. stirtoni may ultimately be reassigned to the genus of Bullockornis.

Sometimes referred to as  “Stirton’s thunder birds” or Mihirung birds, Dromornis stirtoni  was around 3 meters (9.8 ft) tall and weighed up to 650kg. With a long neck and stub-like wings, the giant birds were taller then Aepyornis and heavier than the Moa. Even though Dromornis stirtoni  had really strong and powerful legs it is not believed to have been a fast runner.The bird’s beak was large and immensely strong, leading some researchers to hypothesize that it was a herbivore that used its beak to shear through tough plant stalks.  However, others  theories suggest that the bird was a carnivore, due to the size of the bird’s beak.


D. stirtoni, artist’s impression Photo Credit


Dromornis was sexually dimorphic. Males were more robust and heavier, though not necessarily taller, than females.It inhabited subtropical open woodlands in Australia during the Late Miocene to the early Pliocene. There were forests and a constant water supply at Alcoota, one area where the Dromornis birds lived, albeit the climate was very changeable.


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Tuesday, January 24, 2017

In Australia, bees and wasps are more dangerous than spiders and snakes

Australia has a reputation for being a hotbed of deadly spiders, snakes, and jellyfish, but a new study shows that bees and wasps are not to be trifled with either, because they're actually Australia's most dangerous stingers.

The country's first national analysis of data on bites and stings reveals that bees and wasps send the most people to hospital each year, and contribute to the equal highest number of sting-related deaths.

A team led by public health researcher Ronelle Welton from the University of Melbourne analysed national coronial data from 2000 to 2013, when bites and stings resulted in almost 42,000 hospitalisations, including fatalities.

Among this, stings from bees, wasps, and hornets were responsible for 31 percent of hospital admissions, edging out bites from Australia's more infamous venomous predators – spiders (30 percent) and snakes (15 percent).

But while snake bites requiring hospitalisation may be significantly less common than stings and bites from bees, wasps, and spiders, they're no less deadly when it comes to causing fatalities – and in fact are the most lethal proportionally.

Between 2000 and 2013, 64 people were killed by a venomous sting or bite, with 27 fatalities due to snakes, and an equal number attributable to bees and wasps.

Even more remarkable, despite popular fears of Australian spiders – which are pretty well-warranted, given they sent almost 12,000 people to hospital during 2000 to 2013 – they're not ultimately as deadly as we might think they are.


During the study period, spider bites didn't cause a single fatality, which the researchers attribute to the success and availability of anti-venom treatments.

According to the team, the last documented death from a spider in Australia was a redback spider bite in 1999.

A 2016 fatality was also reportedly due to a redback bite, but the cause of death wasn't conclusive.

In terms of non-venomous animals causing death, again the perception of Australia's dangers doesn't meet up with reality.

While the coronial data shows that 19 deaths between 2000 and 2013 were due to crocodiles, and 26 deaths caused by sharks, the leading animal-related cause of death was a much less fearsome creature: horses.

In the period, 74 deaths were caused by horses trampling or throwing people – and encounters with dogs led to 23 fatalities.

But in terms of venomous creatures, the fact that so many deaths and hospitalisations are being caused by bees and wasps suggests that people might not realise how dangerous these stingers really are.

Of the 27 snake bite fatalities recorded in the study, about three-quarters of those bitten made it to the hospital alive, before later dying during treatment.

When it comes to bees and wasps though, only 44 percent of those who died made it to hospital alive, and the researchers think it's because they initially underestimated the danger – not realising how deadly sting-based anaphylaxis (severe allergic reaction) can be.

"Perhaps it's because bees are so innocuous that most people don't really fear them in the same way they fear snakes," says Welton.

"Without having a previous history of allergy, you might get bitten and although nothing happens the first time, you've still developed an allergic sensitivity."

Allergen sensitivity in Australia made headlines around the world last year, when eight people were killed and more than 8,500 hospitalised after a severe outbreak of thunderstorm asthma, brought on by a massive pollen dispersal following a storm.

The researchers hope their findings will help better inform people and health providers about the real risks posed by Australia's stingers and biters.

And at the same time, if the research can provide a little context – and help lay to rest some of the hyperbole and stereotypes swirling around the country's 'deadliest creatures' – that might not be a bad thing either.

"The biggest surprise is just how small the numbers are — from a national perspective, we get a lot of media hype on how dangerous [animals] are, but if you look at things like drowning, there was nearly 5,000 deaths in the same study period," Welton told Loretta Florance at ABC News.


"[S]o it's nothing to be alarmed about, just be prepared, make sure you understand your first aid, if you do have allergies or know someone who does."



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Wednesday, December 14, 2016

Australian Radio Telescope Parkes Joins $100 Million Search for Alien Life

The Parkes radio telescope in Australia is the third telescope to begin searching for signs of intelligent alien life as part of the $100 million Breakthrough Listen project. Credit: CSIRO


Updated today 20/05/2020

$100 million search for intelligent alien life just added a big arrow to its quiver.

Breakthrough Listen has begun using the Parkes radio telescope in Australia to scan the heavens, representatives of the ambitious, decade-long project announced Monday (Nov.7).

Parkes, Narrabri radio telescopes to be upgraded to improve Space Connect


The Parkes dish becomes the third telescope to be employed by Breakthrough Listen, joining the Green Bank Telescope in West Virginia and the Automated Planet Finder at Lick Observatory in Northern California


"The addition of Parkes is an important milestone," billionaire entrepreneur Yuri Milner, founder of the Breakthrough Initiatives, which include Breakthrough Listen, said in a statement. "These major instruments are the ears of planet Earth, and now they are listening for signs of other civilizations."


The Parkes radio telescope can tilt 60° from vertical and would take 15 minutes to perform a 360° rotation. photo: wikipedia.org

The first Breakthrough Listen observations for the Parkes dish came Monday, when scientists turned the telescope toward the Proxima Centauri star system to look for possible signals from alien civilizations.


Proxima Centauri is the closest star to the sun, lying just 4.2 light-years away from Earth's star. This past August, astronomers announced the discovery of an Earth-size planet orbiting in Proxima Centauri's "habitable zone," the just-right range of distances where liquid water could exist on a world's surface.

It's therefore possible that the planet, known as Proxima b, may be capable of supporting life as we know it, scientists have said.



"The chances of any particular planet hosting intelligent life-forms are probably minuscule," Andrew Siemion, director of the University of California, Berkeley's SETI (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence) Research Center, said in the same statement.

"But once we knew there was a planet right next door, we had to ask the question, and it was a fitting first observation for Parkes," Siemion added. "To find a civilization just 4.2 light-years away would change everything."

Proxima Centauri is also the target of Breakthrough Starshot, a Breakthrough Initiatives effort that aims to blast tiny, sail-equipped "nanoprobes" toward the system at 20 percent the speed of light using powerful lasers. Milner and a group of researchers, including famed cosmologist Stephen Hawking, announced Breakthrough Listen in July 2015. Over the next 10 years, the $100 million endeavor aims to search the 1 million stars closest to the sun, as well as the 100 nearest galaxies to the Milky Way, for possible SETI signals.



The 210-foot-wide (64 meters) Parkes dish, which is operated by Australia's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO), lies near the town of Parkes, in the state of New South Wales. The radio telescope famously helped relay live video of the Apollo 11 moon landing back to Earth in July 1969, a role featured in the 2000 film "The Dish."

Breakthrough Listen representatives also announced last month that the project would be teaming up with China's new Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical radio Telescope (FAST) — the world's largest radio telescope — to coordinate SETI observations.


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Saturday, September 24, 2016

The oldest civilization existing today. They were the first explorers who dared to cross the ocean 58,000 years ago

After some extensive genetic studies proved that Aboriginal Australians are the oldest civilization still exists. Australian Aborigines are the first people who settled in Australia 50,000 years ago.

The three studies, published in the journal Nature, reveal information about the origins of historical migrations of mankind.



According to the DNA results, most modern eurasists are descendants of a single wave of migrants who left Africa about 72,000 years ago. During migration, Aboriginal Australians and Papuans (ancestors of the inhabitants of Papua New Guinea) were divided into two groups and were the first people who crossed the ocean 58,000 years ago, before he gets to Australia 50,000 years ago.

,, This story lacked science, '' said researcher Eske Willerslev of the University of Copenhagen, Denmark. ,, Now we know the ancestors of the Australians were the first explorers, '' he added.



Australian and Papuan native population was divided by 37,000 years before the continental masses to separate. Australian Aborigines remained isolated until nearly 4,000 years ago, but the journey of thousands of years they have been in contact with other species homini because about 4% of their genome belongs to an unidentified species of hominids.


The Oldest Humans, Aboriginal Australians photo: Anthropology.net

In reaching this conclusion, the international team of researchers has sequenced the genomes of 25 Papuan and 83 Australian Aboriginal group in which language is used pama-nyungan, which is spoken by 90% of Australian aboriginal.

In a substudy led the Medical School at Harvard, was drawn a map of the genome originated from 300 people from 142 different populations around the world, through which they tried to discover genetic changes associated with the development features modern man caves such as painting, sculpting utensils sophisticated, but was not discovered any resemblance.

,, There is no evidence of a specific mutations that turned us into people, '' said Willerslev.

Although the two studies was suggested that there was a single wave of migration from Africa, the third paper provides evidence of the two waves of migrations from Africa.

Eske Willerslev World famous DNA scientiest and adventurer

Led by Luca Pagani, biologist and anthropologist from Tartu Estonian Biocentre in the study were discovered evidence of a huge migration 75,000 years ago, but the researcher has found evidence of a migration previous 120,000 years ago.

Dipartimento di Biologia - Unipd



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