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	<title>Page builder &#8211; Dementiavirast</title>
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		<title>Page builder post layout</title>
		<link>https://dementiavirast.com/post-6/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Ana]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 12 May 2017 13:29:45 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Page builder]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://themedemos.webmandesign.eu/icelander/?p=296</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<div class="entry-summary">
For more interesting, story-telling-like experience for your site visitors, you can build your post content even with a page builder.
</div><div class="link-more"><a href="https://dementiavirast.com/post-6/" class="more-link">Continue reading<span class="screen-reader-text"> &#8220;Page builder post layout&#8221;</span>&#8230;</a></div>]]></description>
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	<p class="dropcap-text h3">Mauna Loa, the biggest volcano on Earth, and one of the most active, covers half the Island of Hawaii. Just 35 miles to the northeast, Mauna Kea, known to native Hawaiians as <em>Mauna a Wakea</em>, rises 14,000 feet above sea level. To them it represents a spiritual connection between our planet and the heavens above.</p>
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	<h2>Hawaiian volcanos</h2>
<p>These volcanoes, which have beguiled millions of tourists visiting the Hawaiian islands, have also plagued scientists with a long-running mystery: If they are so close together, how did they develop in two parallel tracks along the Hawaiian-Emperor chain formed over the same hot spot in the Pacific Ocean — and why are their chemical compositions so different?</p>
<blockquote class="pullquote alignleft"><p>We knew this was related to something deeper, but we couldn’t see what,</p></blockquote>
<p>said Tim Jones, an earth science Ph.D. student at Australian National University and the lead author of a paper published in Nature on Wednesday that may hold the answer.</p>
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	<h2>Simulation model</h2>
<p>Mr. Jones and his colleagues developed a model that simulates what’s happening in our planet’s mantle, <strong>beneath the crust that we live on</strong>, offering a window to the center of the Earth — or close to it. Their study may one day allow a reconstruction of the history of the movement of Earth’s plates — and the processes linked to these movements over billions of years, like mass extinction events, diamond and oil deposits, and changes in climate.</p>
<p>If you were to drill <a href="#0">nearly 4,000 miles into the Earth</a>, you’d reach its core, a ball of solid iron surrounded by liquid that scientists estimate is hotter than the sun. Before making it there, you’d hit the mantle — an <a href="#0">1,800-mile-thick layer</a> of solid rock that can flow like a liquid, just substantially slower. This mantle is the reason plates move across the surface.</p>
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	<h2>Deep into Earth's crust</h2>
<p>It’s why we have continents, earthquakes and volcanoes. The closest anyone ever got to the mantle was a seven-mile-deep hole drilled into the crust on a peninsula in western Russia. But now we can better understand what’s happening below by looking at Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa, said Mr. Jones. The prevailing hypothesis has been that volcanoes like these two in Hawaii are chemical fingerprints of the Earth’s composition at the deep mantle, just at the border of its core.</p>
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	<h3>What seismic activity reveals?</h3>
<blockquote class="pullquote alignright"><p>But that didn’t explain the separate tracks along which the volcanoes formed.</p></blockquote>
<p class="dropcap-text">Scientists have <em>seismic evidence</em> that the deep part of the mantle is a graveyard where long ago slabs of earth were subducted, creating separate regions with different chemical compositions that eventually made their way to the surface in a hot mantle plume as the core heated the rock into magma.</p>
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	<h2>Bottom line</h2>
<p>By examining data from the two volcanoes, Mr. Jones and his team suggested an alternative: The chemical signature, along with this double-track volcanism as it’s called, occurred three million years ago when the plates above the hot spot shifted direction, moving north.</p>
<p>This shimmy rearranged zones of magma that are heated under different pressures in the shallower part of the mantle — <strong>when they cool, the volcanic rock that results reflects this difference</strong>. Previously stacked on top of one another, the movement of the plates exposed now geographically separates magma zones that fed the volcanoes individually.</p>
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