Which appeared on the left side of the picture above is a picture of the image seen to the right, revealing abnormalities attenuation (weakening) mesofer shock waves in the depths of 620 miles under the ground.
In between the two images, the red color layer to explain the extraordinary rock is weak and loose, and considered the interior contains water, while the blue color to explain unusual rock hard (white and yellow colors are located in the middle).
For the first time humans discovered a giant water systems in the inner Mesosphere. According to the life science com, that when memayar in the inner depths of the earth, scientists discover a giant reservoir beneath eastern Asia, the volume of water in it equal to the amount of water in the Antarctic sea or the Arctic ocean. This is the first time humans discovered a giant water system in the inner mesofer.
These findings are the result of joint research geologist at the University of Washington, namely Michael Wysession by Jesse Lawrence, a student from the University of California, and these findings will be published in the monograph published by the American geophysical institute.
They both have mengalisis with graphics almost as much a shock wave of 600,000 (record shock waves that arise when an earthquake across the earth, collected from the equipment scattered in various regions of the world).
They found, that the wave of earthquakes beneath the Asian mainland showed a weak phenomenon, but it also slightly slowed its speed, Wysession said: "The water can slow the speed of earthquake waves, a large number of signs of slowing and weakening it can predict where there is water. "
According to previous calculations, when the layer of rock that sank into the cold mesofer deep underground thousands of km, the high temperature deep underground will be out of water vapor in the rock layers.
Wysession tells us: "That's what we show here, the water in the rock layer with a layer of rock deep seabed and the water was very cold, but along with the growing level of depth, the temperature will begin to rise, and the rock began to unstable, and loses water contained in it. "then the water began to rise and go into the pile, and there be a water saturated area, but there was still like a glimpse of the rock solid, and only by putting them in your new lab can find water in it. "
Although they briefly looked like a solid rock, as much as 15% in some ocean floor rocks is water. Wysession tells us: "Concretely, the water is in the mineral structure of rock. When you heat it, it will remove the water, just like you burn a piece of clay, can remove all the water in it. "
Researchers predict that in areas of the earth's surface is covered with water, just 0.1% of rock layers deep into the mesofer could produce an equal volume of water with a sea of the North Pole.
Wysession called underground structure of this new as the "Beijing abnormal", because he found under the City of Beijing, China, the value of the largest earthquake waves recession. Wysession first used this term in an explanation at the University of Beijing.
According to Wysession: "They feel very attractive, China earthquake threat far greater than other regions in the world, so they are very interested in seismology."
As many as 70% of the earth's surface is covered by water, water, water has many advantages, one of which is playing the role of "lubricant" for the land plate movement.
Let us see Venus, which according to Wysession, the interior is very hot and extremely dry, he does not have plate structures, all of the water may have on-evaporation (yawn), no plates, and the entire system is closed.
Friday, January 15, 2010
Giant Ocean Earth Found In Stomach
Tuesday, January 12, 2010
The waters surrounding the Chagos Islands

A company belonging to the Government’s Chief Scientific Adviser is opposing plans to create the world’s biggest marine reserve. His company holds a government contract to manage fishing in the area, which would be banned if the reserve were created.
The waters surrounding the Chagos Islands — or the British Indian Ocean Territory — are among the most pristine in the world. In November David Miliband, the Foreign Secretary, announced a consultation on whether to ban all fishing in the area after a campaign by a coalition of conservationists and ecological scientists. A decision is expected in the spring.
The company owned by Professor John Beddington, the Chief Scientific Adviser, and his wife, argues there is no evidence that a ban would improve the environment and would in fact drive fishing boats into other areas of the Indian Ocean where there is less control over what they catch.
The Marine Resources Assessment Group (MRAG) Ltd was established by Professor Beddington, a renowned expert on marine fisheries, in 1986.

A green turtle in the Chagos Islands
In 1991 a 200-mile exclusion zone was declared around the Chagos Islands and MRAG won the contract to manage the fishing. The following year Professor Beddington became special adviser to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office on the fisheries around Chagos. Although the management contract must be put out for tender every five years, MRAG has always won it. Neither MRAG nor the Foreign Office will confirm its value, but MacAlister Elliott, a company that tendered for the work in 2005, put in a bid of £1.4 million for three years.
Upon taking his government position in 2008 Professor Beddington resigned his directorship but he still controls the company with a majority shareholding (50.1 per cent). The remainder are owned by his wife.
The Foreign Office earns between £700,000 and £1 million a year from licences to fish around Chagos. This income offsets the £1.7 million annual cost of running the region’s patrol boat, the Pacific Marlin. The shortfall is made up from a Foreign Office fund.
MRAG is not opposed to protecting the area’s coral reefs, but is against the proposal to ban fishing from the 544,000 sq km (210,000 sq miles) under British control. The MRAG contract ends in May, although the Government has the option of extending it for another year.
“If the whole area was declared closed there could be potentially negative consequences,” said Chris Rees, the MRAG development director. “Shark-finning is banned completely, unlike elsewhere in the Indian Ocean. If you close the fishery those boats will be displaced to areas where there is less control.”
While acknowledging the benefits of marine reserves for resident species, Mr Rees said that “for tuna fisheries the case is less strong. Unless very, very large — and the size of the waters is not sufficiently large — then reserves are not going to affect the catch of highly migratory species like tuna.”
But other marine scientists disagree. “Tuna aren’t free-swimming in a random way,” said Heather Koldewey, a marine ecologist at the Zoological Society of London. “They’re attracted to certain features and Chagos is a perfect breeding area for them.”
While scientists working on fisheries management (including those at MRAG) focus on the sustainability of harvesting key species such as tuna, those from other branches of marine science increasingly recognise that protecting the wider ecosystem is vital for the long-term health of the ocean.
“Top predators are the linchpin for the whole ecosystem. Remove them and there are knock-on effects down the food chain,” Dr Koldeway said.
A spokesman said that Professor Beddington had not been involved in the management of MRAG and had not discussed related issues with the Foreign Office. Not all science related to government business passed his office, the spokesman said, but he did oversee other chief scientific advisers.
Last July the Foreign Office hired Professor David Clary as its chief scientific adviser. If the Foreign Secretary requires guidance, it is Professor Clary that he will turn to first.
“The concern is that he [Professor Beddington] has the potential for informal influence over this decision,” said Norman Lamb, the Liberal Democrat frontbencher. “I would have thought, given his role, it is perhaps appropriate to divest himself of all financial interests while the decision is being made.”
Willie Mackenzie, an ocean campaigner for Greenpeace, said: “Scientists tell us that marine reserves are crucial to protect marine life. Unfortunately it seems that a company owned by the Government’s Chief Scientific Adviser didn’t get the memo.”