What moves the continents, creates mountains, swallows up the sea floor, makes volcanoes erupt, triggers earthquakes, and imprints ancient climates into the rocks? Oliver Strimpel, a former astrophysicist and museum director asks leading researchers to divulge what they have discovered and how they did it. To learn more about the series, and see images that support the podcasts, go to geologybites... more
Publishes | Weekly | Episodes | 87 | Founded | 3 years ago |
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Categories | Earth SciencesScience |
At roughly 15-25-million-year intervals since the Archean, huge volumes of lava have spewed onto the Earth’s surface. These form the large igneous provinces, which are called flood basalts when they occur on continents. As Richard Ernst explains in t... more
Perhaps as many as five times over the course of Earth history, most of the continents gathered together to form a supercontinent. The supercontinents lasted on the order of a hundred million years before breaking apart and dispersing the continents.... more
The Earth’s tectonic plates float on top of the ductile portion of the Earth’s mantle called the asthenosphere. The properties of the asthenosphere, in particular its viscosity, are thought to play a key role in determining how plates move, subduct, ... more
In many countries, nuclear power is a significant part of the energy mix being planned as part of the drive to achieve net-zero greenhouse-gas emissions. This means that we will be producing a lot more radioactive waste, some of it with half-lives th... more
We have learned a great deal about the geology of the Moon from remote sensing instruments aboard lunar orbiters, from robot landers, from the Apollo landings, and from samples returned to the Earth by Apollo and robot landings. But in 2025, when NAS... more
At the core of Earth’s geological thermostat is the dissolution of silicate minerals in the presence of atmospheric carbon dioxide and liquid water. But at large scales, the effectiveness and temperature sensitivity of this reaction depends on geomor... more
Banded Iron Formations (BIFs) are a visually striking group of sedimentary rocks that are iron rich and almost exclusively deposited in the Precambrian. Their existence points to a major marine iron cycle that does not operate today. Several theories... more
The geological history of most regions is shaped by a whole range of processes that occur at temperatures ranging from above 800°C to as low as 100°C. The timing of events occurring over a particular temperature range can be recorded by a mineral whi... more
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Apple Podcasts | #54 | United States/Science/Earth Sciences |
Apple Podcasts | #58 | United Kingdom/Science/Earth Sciences |
Apple Podcasts | #118 | Canada/Science/Earth Sciences |
Apple Podcasts | #101 | Australia/Science/Earth Sciences |
Apple Podcasts | #5 | Austria/Science/Earth Sciences |
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Apple Podcasts | #22 | Switzerland/Science/Earth Sciences |
Apple Podcasts | #26 | India/Science/Earth Sciences |
Apple Podcasts | #55 | Brazil/Science/Earth Sciences |
Apple Podcasts | #90 | Austria/Science |
Apple Podcasts | #113 | Chile/Science |
Listeners, engagement and demographics and more for this podcast.
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Geology Bites launched 3 years ago and published 87 episodes to date. You can find more information about this podcast including rankings, audience demographics and engagement in our podcast database.
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