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The Earth Story

@earthstory / earthstory.tumblr.com

This is the blog homepage of the Facebook group "The Earth Story" (Click here to visit our Facebook group). “The Earth Story” are group of volunteers with backgrounds throughout the Earth Sciences. We cover all Earth sciences - oceanography, climatology, geology, geophysics and much, much more. Our articles combine the latest research, stunning photography, and basic knowledge of geosciences, and are written for everyone!
We hope you find us to be a unique home for learning about the Earth sciences, and we hope you enjoy!
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Badlands Meteor

Photographer Randy Halverson was at Badlands National Park filming a time-lapse video, when he happened to catch something bright in the clouds. It was a meteor!

Meteors are what we call a “shooting star”. It refers specifically to the light we see in the sky. A meteoroid is the actual debris or dust that’s speeding through the atmosphere.

The color of the meteor is influenced by its composition. This meteoroid likely has magnesium in it because Mg appears blue-green when it collides with air molecules. The initial collisions create a vapor trail of atoms, while subsequent ones knock elections further away from the atom’s nucleus. When those electrons return to their resting state, light is emitted giving us a shooting star.

  • RE

Photo Credit: Randy Halverson https://www.facebook.com/dakotalapse Photo used with permission

Source: facebook.com
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Original caption:

You probably know about the majestic Canadian Rockies or even the Canadian boreal forest but have you ever heard of the Canadian prairies? They are a very peculiar landscape and ecosystem found in the foothills of the Canadian rocky plateau. They extend to much of southern and central Alberta and Saskatchewan. The dominant south-western winds (Chinook) bring in a warmer climate than that of north and the mountains act as a shield and give very sunny and favorable conditions for a particular fauna and flora to thrive. In the winter the prairies are barren and desolate but when summer kicks in they come to life! The prairies are a perfect location to breed cattle (cows, horses, bisons…) as they can graze on endless hilly pastures. There you can also cross path with an abundant wildlife like big carnivores (bears, wolves, wolverines, coyotes, mountain lions, many bords of prey…) but also herbivores like deers, moose…
The Canadian prairies are extremely scenic and offer a very wide variety of landscapes that I wanted to capture in this astrolapse movie. Since it really is cowboy and Indian country, my thoughts were to get the grassy hills swept by the wind and lit by the moonlight, with the Rockies in the background. I also managed to capture some cattle grazing under the northern lights in southern Alberta next to the Montana border. Further east in Alberta, you can find the mythical badland valleys (or ‘coulees’) carved by time (Dinosaur Provincial Parc). The differential erosion of sedimentary layers previously deposited has helped sculpt out those fairy chimneys or ‘hoodoos’ over time, which made an excellent ‘prehistoric’ foreground for noctilucent cloud timelapses. One of those valleys was filled with water and I was able to capture it all the way east in Saskatchewan (Buffalo Pound National Park). If you take the road further north to the central regions of those western provinces, the praires’ face changes a bit and you can feel there’s more water there. The green grass, willow trees and countless bodies of water make it easy to take gorgeous scenes playing with the mirroring of the water. It might have been pure serendipity (and also hard work!) but I managed to capture a beautiful display of aurorae and noctilucent clouds at the same time reflecting in some of Bashaw’s lakes as I was out shooting with Darlene and Theresa Tanner, two extremely talented photographers I stayed with (facebook.com/treeanddar/). This scene even helped me get my very first APOD and I am extremely honored and proud! Lastly you can’t be talking about the Canadian prairies without mentioning the stormy weather that can build up over the mountains and slide east potentially giving monstrous thunderstorms, lightning shows and even tornadoes. Even if we wanted to go storm chasing we ‘only’ got a beautiful night-time lightning show near Alix, Alberta, with gorgeous bolts showcased during the climax of this short film.
Whether you are a nature lover, a weather addict or even a star-gazer, the Canadian prairies are one of the best places to enjoy outdoor activities in North-America and I strongly recommend a visit there. The possibilities are endless and there’s something for everybody as my video hopefully demonstrates. Aurorae, shooting stars, noctilucent clouds, fireflies, lightning, bright nights: those are the phenomena that I was willing to capture and combine with some of the most iconic places of the Canadian prairies. Everything was recorded with the Sony a7rII, Sony a7s and Canon 6D, as well as a wide variety of lenses (Sigma, Samyang) ranging from 14 to 500mm. Motion created using the Vixen Polarie in a panning mode and the Syrp Genie generation I 3-axis system. All this content is copyrighted AMP&F and may NOT be used without the owner’s permission (shoot me an email for inquiries at [email protected]). The soundtrack ‘Steady’ by Roary was licensed through Musicbed and may not be used for any other purpose. Finally I really want to thank Darlene, Theresa, Dr. Jason Reimuller, Captain Te Keoti, Rosalee Schmaltz and Amy Patterson for their generosity and help.
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Fireball over the snowy Dolomites

A piece of fortuitously snapped space rock burning up in the atmosphere at dusk provides the background to a discussion of this Italian part of the Alpine chain, uplifted from the sea bottom into mountains as the Adriatic Plate grinds into Southern Europe while the Mediterranean closes. Many things are happening tectonically...Africa is colliding gently with Europe, while the Red Sea's opening pushes Arabia into Asia creating a great rotational movement through Turkey and Greece. This fireball on November 14th was widely seen and reported across Europe as it passed over Germany from its radiant in the constellation of Taurus. This meteor shower is associated with debris from the short period comet Enke.

The Dolomites took their name from the ubiquitous rock that forms the chain, a form of limestone where magnesium has replaced the calcium known as dolomite or dolostone (named after French mineralogist Deodat Gratet de Dolomieu who first described it and these mountains to the scientific world after an Italian journey in 1789-90), although they were traditionally known for obvious reasons as the pale mountains. The rock started off as ordinary limestone, but was transformed by magnesium rich fluids passing through somewhere around 230 million years ago and unlike limestone the resultant rock does not fizz on contact with acids.

The original sediments were laid down in warm tropical seas, filled with corals and other life, and spanning with good resolution the late Palaeozoic (from roughly 280- million years ago) through a large chunk of the Mesozoic (251-65 million years ago), starting when Africa and Europe were still united in the supercontinent Pangaea and spanning the opening and closing of the Tethys Ocean (see http://bit.ly/2yNcH7n) and varied sub basins thereof. The rocks here include some of the most complete fossil coral reef ecosystems on Earth, some up to 2km thick and complete fossil atolls (see http://bit.ly/2zdaUgh) displaying the complex interactions between reef and volcano in this distant past, and traceable from long gone beaches to sea floor, a thousand metres lower.

The great end Permian extinction and slow Triassic recovery are also well documented in these strata. Much of the marine life of these eras were also first classified here, as the world's fossils showed us in the 19th century how to divide geological time on the basis of their appearance and disappearance, with the lines being drawn at points of large scale faunal turnover. Sea level rose and fell, volcanism came and went and each phase of geological history left its readable imprint but during the Permian a large archipelago of coraline islands developed, followed by extensive volcanism between 240 and 230 million years ago repeatedly burying and fossilising reefs in the hot embrace of lava and ash followed by a new generation of islands.

Later still the area rose above sea level into a muddy plain, and the footprints of early dinosaurs have turned up in varied corners of the Dolomites. The sea rose again, and the entire Jurassic and Cretaceous saw huge amounts of marine sedimentation between 170 and 65 million years ago adding more layers of carbonate and marl (limey mudstone). Some 50 million years ago the growing tectonic pressure of the birthing Alps pushed the region above sea level without much folding or deformation, and started to uplift it into the current ranges in a slow process that is still ongoing. Much later still they were carved during the last 3 million years as the glaciers of the ice ages waxed and waned from their high altitude layers. One of the joys of all this geology is that large vertical (in time) and horizontal (in space) distances are available for study, giving us a clear idea of how a whole region evolved during a considerable span of geological time.

Loz

Image credit: Ollie Taylor via APOD

Source: facebook.com
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A large meteor was seen during the daytime over Thailand on Monday, September 7. Meteors are produced when bits of space debris enter Earth’s atmosphere, heat up from friction, and eventually begin glowing. Generally the larger they are the more they can glow, so the one that produced this daylight fireball was probably decently sized, a chunk of rock maybe fist sized or larger. Good chance that it still burned up in the atmosphere and no pieces will ever be found, many times nothing reaches the ground even from bright ones like this. 

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It's that time of year again! Time to get a peek of the annual Perseid meteor shower.

The Perseid meteor shower occurs every year in late July and early August in the Northern Hemisphere, when the Earth passes through the dusty remains of the comet; “Swift-Tuttle”. In the night sky, the meteor shower appears to radiate out of the constellation Perseus, hence, its name: Perseid meteor shower.

The 11th, 12th and 13th of August, is a good time to see the shower. The moon will be a waning crescent and the meteors should be flying at a rate close to their peak – about 50 or 60 meteors per hour.

So get outside, away from city lights, look up and enjoy.

If anyone gets any good photos, post them to our wall so we can share them with everyone (Don't forget to say where and when it was taken).

-Jean

Photo taken by SWNS in Stonehenge

For viewing times by Country see: http://www.spacedex.com/perseids/

For a guide to meteor shower watching see here: http://earthsky.org/astronomy-essentials/earthskys-meteor-shower-guide

Source: facebook.com
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While shooting time-lapsed video last week near Santa Cruz, California, videographer Marc Donahue of PermaGrin Films saw a very bright flash of light, much brighter than most shooting stars. After checking the film, he found that he had captured a meteor exploding in the atmosphere and the debris cloud from it moving through his frame. When rocks from space enter the atmosphere they heat up due to friction; as the heat builds it can cause pressure inside a rock that will cause it to explode. That happened here.

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Here is a photo of a meteor as it passed through our atmosphere, taken from the vantage point of the International Space Station. This image was taken on August 13th 2011, during the Perseid Meteor Shower, while the station was about 400km northwest of Beijing.

So, what are Meteoroids and Meteorites?

Meteoroids are relatively small objects that are moving throughout the solar system which are attracted toward Earth by its gravitational pull. These small fragments are usually fragments of asteroids or comets. When they enter our atmosphere they begin to burn up as they collide with air molecules; this is why a bright vapour trail or streak can be seen- at this point the object is known as a meteor, or often a “shooting star”. If any piece of the object survives the journey through the atmosphere and impacts Earth’s surface (as what happened in Russia); we call it a meteorite.

-Jean

PS: Also visible in this photo is green and yellow air glow. This phenomenon appears at levels above 50km in the atmosphere- here atoms and molecules are excited by sunlight during the day and then release the energy at night.

Image courtesy of NASA’s Earth Observatory.

Source: facebook.com
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