Current Events

  • Kansas Legislator Proposes Bill to Outlaw Sustainability Education
    A bill has been introduced in the Kansas legislature this week that would prohibit the promotion of ...Read more

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    Kansas Legislator Proposes Bill to Outlaw Sustainability Education

    A bill has been introduced in the Kansas legislature this week that would prohibit the promotion of sustainability. Here is a link to the one-page bill: http://www.kslegislature.org/li/b2013_14/measures/documents/hb2366_00_0000.pdf. See report on Bloomberg News.
  • Earth's Center Is 1,000 Degrees Hotter Than Previously Thought, Synchrotron X-Ray Experiment Shows
    Scientists have determined the temperature near the Earth’s center to be 6000 degrees Celsius, 1000 ...Read more

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    Earth's Center Is 1,000 Degrees Hotter Than Previously Thought, Synchrotron X-Ray Experiment Shows

    Scientists have determined the temperature near the Earth’s center to be 6000 degrees Celsius, 1000 degrees hotter than in a previous experiment run 20 years ago. These measurements confirm geophysical models that the temperature difference between the solid core and the mantle above, must be at least 1500 degrees to explain why the Earth has a magnetic field. For more information about this study, see the press release from the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility.
  • Ocean Volcanic Rocks Contain Samples of Recycled Crust
    Scientists have long believed that lava erupted from certain oceanic volcanoes contains materials fr...Read more

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    Ocean Volcanic Rocks Contain Samples of Recycled Crust

    Scientists have long believed that lava erupted from certain oceanic volcanoes contains materials from the early Earth’s crust. But decisive evidence for this phenomenon has proven elusive. New research from a team including Carnegie’s Erik Hauri demonstrates that oceanic volcanic rocks contain samples of recycled crust dating back to the Archean era 2.5 billion years ago. Their work is published in Nature. Oceanic crust sinks into the Earth’s mantle at so-called subduction zones, where two plates come together. Much of what happens to the crust during this journey is unknown. Model-dependent studies for how long subducted material can exist in the mantle are uncertain and evidence of very old crust returning to Earth’s surface via upwellings of magma has not been found until now. For more information about these results, see the press release from the Carnegie Institution.

History and People

Who made the first star map? When did people know that the Earth was round? When were sunspots discovered? The links to the right will lead you to biographies of scientists who lived at different times through history. Discover the people who made science history!

<a href="/php/tour_test_mobile.php?page=/people/ancient_epoch/eratosthenes.html">Eratosthenes</a> was a Greek scientist  who lived from 276 to 194 B.C. He studied astronomy, geography, and math. Eratosthenes is famous for making the <a href="/php/tour_test_mobile.php?page=/the_universe/uts/eratosthenes_calc_earth_size.html">first good measurement of the size of the Earth</a>. This portrait, drawn long after he was dead, shows what the artist thought he might have looked like.<p><small><em>Public domain.</em></small></p>Science educators on a research immersion experience with the <a href="/php/tour_test_mobile.php?page=/people/postcards/andrill/andrill_post.html">Antarctic Geological Drilling Project (ANDRILL)</a> sent postcards to Windows to the Universe while they were in <a href="/php/tour_test_mobile.php?page=/earth/polar/antarctica.html">Antarctica</a> from October 2007 until January 2008. The team drilled into <a href="/php/tour_test_mobile.php?page=/earth/geology/sed_intro.html">sedimentary rocks</a> below the ice of the Ross <a href="/php/tour_test_mobile.php?page=/earth/polar/cryosphere_iceshelf1.html">ice shelf</a> to help learn more about the environmental changes that have affected the continent in the past.   This image shows what life is like in a field camp on the ice.<p><small><em>Image courtesy of Julia Dooley </em></small></p>Jocelyn Bell Burnell is a British <a href="/php/tour_test_mobile.php?page=/the_universe/uts/ast_history.html">astronomer</a> who was born in 1943. She discovered <a href="/php/tour_test_mobile.php?page=/the_universe/NS.html">pulsars</a> - <a href="/php/tour_test_mobile.php?page=/the_universe/Stars.html">stars</a> which emit periodic radio waves - in 1967. Burnell was a graduate student at Cambridge University when she discovered pulsars. Her professor, Antony Hewish, received the Nobel Prize in Physics for her discovery.<p><small><em>  The Open University</em></small></p><a href="/php/tour_test_mobile.php?page=/people/postcards/vocals/dione_rossiter.html">Dione Rossiter</a> is a scientist that participated in a research expedition to understand the climate of the southeastern Pacific in fall, 2008 - the <a href="/php/tour_test_mobile.php?page=/vocals/vocals_intro.html">VOCALS campaign</a>.  She got to fly a her scientific instrument aboard a research aircraft above a layer of <a href="/php/tour_test_mobile.php?page=/earth/Atmosphere/clouds/stratocumulus.html">stratocumulus</a> cloud that seemed to go on forever.<p><small><em>Image courtesy of Dione Rossiter</em></small></p>Although we humans have never experienced fast <a href="/php/tour_test_mobile.php?page=/earth/climate/climate.html">global
warming</a>, our
planet has. And our planet keeps records of what happened. The oldest
records that the
<a href="/php/tour_test_mobile.php?page=/earth/earth.html">Earth</a> keeps
are in its
<a href="/php/tour_test_mobile.php?page=/earth/geology/sed_intro.html">rocks</a>.
In this image, <a href="/php/tour_test_mobile.php?page=/headline_universe/olpa/methane_28may08.html">geologists Chris von der Borch and Dave
Mrofka</a> collect
sediment samples in South Australia. These rocks hold clues to help
explain why climate changed abruptly 635 million years ago.<p><small><em>                    Courtesy of Martin Kennedy, UCR</em></small></p>

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Windows to the Universe, a project of the National Earth Science Teachers Association, is sponsored in part by the National Science Foundation and NASA, our Founding Partners (the American Geophysical Union and American Geosciences Institute) as well as through Institutional, Contributing, and Affiliate Partners, individual memberships and generous donors. Thank you for your support! NASA AGU AGI NSF