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Massive, mysterious ‘hot blob’ beneath Eastern US
#1
Further research suggests it's a normal, natural geologic occurrence, but still

Massive, mysterious ‘hot blob’ beneath Eastern USJUST IN - Massive, mysterious ‘hot blob’ beneath Eastern US is moving toward New York, puzzling scientists — NYP4:04 PM · Aug 4, 2025

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MORE: UK scientists have identified a massive “blob” of rock beneath the Appalachian Mountains that is gradually oozing toward New York City, according to a new study published in the journal Geology. “This thermal upwelling has long been a puzzling feature of North American geology,” said the study’s lead author, Tom Gernon, Professor of Earth Science at the University of Southampton - NYP

https://thedebrief.org/scientists-propos...c-anomaly/
Quote:Scientists studying a massive, 350-kilometer-wide hot zone deep beneath the northern part of the United States’ Appalachian Mountains, near New England, have determined that the mysterious region of deep heat is likely a remnant of the split between North America and Greenland that occurred over 80 million years ago.
Known as the Northern Appalachian Anomaly (NAA), the enigmatic hot zone, located 200 km beneath the surface, likely accounts for previously unexplained diamond-filled volcanic eruptions and other geological effects in the areas above the hot zone that have occurred over the millions of years since its formation. 

 
The concept of the ‘mantle wave’ theory. According to the statement, the theory describes how the hot, dense rock found at these depths starts to peel away from the base of tectonic plates, “much like blobs in a lava lamp,” once the continents break apart.
Now free from the continental shelf, these blobs ripple along the lower surfaces of the continents like waves rippling on a pond. Based on geological observations and computer simulations, this process can occur over tens of millions of years. It’s this movement that the team believed caused the hot zone’s birth and migration under its current location.
The team’s previous research suggested the rock drips can line up in series like dominoes. When they fall, they effectively “migrate” over time.
Professor Sascha Brune, co-author of the study who leads the Geodynamic Modelling Section at GFZ in Potsdam, Germany, said the puzzling hot zone underneath the Appalachian Mountains is “very likely one of these drips, which originated far from where it now sits.”
His mind was not for rent to any god or government
Always hopeful yet discontent, knows changes aren't permanent
But change is 
Professor Neil Ellwood Peart 
 
[Image: PEART-2744335652.gif]

 
#2
I am sorry it is my fault, I had some three-bean soup.

...

By gradually, they mean 0.0634 inches per year.

Also, why are UK scientists 'probing' the east coast? Are we just going to let them get away with that?
#3

#4
(08-04-2025, 06:25 PM)putnam6 Wrote: Further research suggests it's a normal, natural geologic occurrence, but still

Massive, mysterious ‘hot blob’ beneath Eastern USJUST IN - Massive, mysterious ‘hot blob’ beneath Eastern US is moving toward New York, puzzling scientists — NYP4:04 PM · Aug 4, 2025


Interesting you should post this today as there was an earthquake yesterdady in the NY area...wonder if it is related
https://www.scientificamerican.com/artic...after-the/
#5
(08-04-2025, 11:07 PM)DontTreadOnMe Wrote: Interesting you should post this today as there was an earthquake yesterdady in the NY area...wonder if it is related

https://www.scientificamerican.com/artic...after-the/

I don't have a clue. I'd think they would be more sure about East Coast earthquakes than the West Coast, but hell, who knows, they may know less because it's less active and fewer earthquake events to study
 
Quote:Here's Grok's short and long answers

There’s no substantial evidence to suggest a direct correlation between recent New York seismic activity (e.g., the July 28, 2025, magnitude 1.7 event) and the Northern Appalachian Anomaly.


Potential Correlation with the Northern Appalachian Anomaly
The NAA, a thermal upwelling of hot rock moving southwest at 12 miles per million years, is a deep mantle feature (125 miles down) identified through seismic tomography. Here’s an analysis of any possible link to recent seismic activity:
  • Geological Mechanism:
    • The NAA is thought to have formed 80 million years ago during rifting events and may contribute to uplift in the Appalachians by weakening the continental lithosphere. This process, described as a "mantle wave," involves slow convective movements that could reactivate ancient faults, such as the Ramapo Fault System, the most active fault zone in the region.
    • Intraplate earthquakes in the Northeast are often attributed to stress release along pre-existing faults, as noted in the Wikipedia entry on New York seismicity. The NAA’s heat could theoretically increase stress in the crust over millions of years, potentially influencing seismic activity.
  • Time Scale Discrepancy:
    • The NAA’s movement is extremely slow (12 miles per million years), and its estimated arrival near New York is 10-15 million years away. This timescale is vastly longer than the recurrence interval of minor earthquakes (e.g., magnitude 2-3 events occur sporadically), making a direct causal link to recent activity unlikely.
    • The 2008 Columbia study suggested a higher risk of larger earthquakes due to accumulated stress, but this is more related to regional fault dynamics than the NAA’s current position, which is still northeast of the Appalachians.
  • Scientific Evidence:
    • The Newsweek article (July 29, 2025) and the University of Southampton study focus on the NAA’s role in past volcanism and uplift, not recent seismicity. There’s no mention of current seismic triggers from the anomaly. Seismic data from the region (e.g., limited records in Newfoundland) shows no clear correlation with the NAA’s movement.
    • Rare volcanic intrusions, like the Palisades sill (200 million years old), indicate past activity, but modern seismicity is more likely tied to local fault reactivation than the NAA’s deep thermal influence.
  • Expert Consensus:
    • Geologists, including lead author Tom Gernon, emphasize the NAA’s long-term geological impact (e.g., mountain uplift) rather than immediate seismic hazards. The lack of recent significant earthquakes (beyond minor tremors) aligns with New York’s low seismicity, as noted by FEMA’s 2008 assessment ranking it fourth for building-related earthquake risk due to pre-1995 construction.
Conclusion
There’s no substantial evidence to suggest a direct correlation between recent New York seismic activity (e.g., the July 28, 2025, magnitude 1.7 event) and the Northern Appalachian Anomaly. The NAA’s deep, slow-moving nature operates on a geological timescale incompatible with short-term seismic events. Any minor earthquakes are more likely due to natural stress adjustments along faults like the Ramapo system, a phenomenon independent of the NAA’s current influence. That said, ongoing research into mantle waves (as pioneered by Gernon’s team) might refine our understanding of long-term seismic risks, but for now, the "huge blob of magma" remains a distant, non-imminent concern—more sci-fi than science fact for today’s New Yorkers!
His mind was not for rent to any god or government
Always hopeful yet discontent, knows changes aren't permanent
But change is 
Professor Neil Ellwood Peart 
 
[Image: PEART-2744335652.gif]

 
#6
(08-04-2025, 11:07 PM)DontTreadOnMe Wrote: Interesting you should post this today as there was an earthquake yesterdady in the NY area...wonder if it is related
https://www.scientificamerican.com/artic...after-the/

Here's another small one

[Image: Screenshot%202025-08-05_14-23-12-046.jpg]
His mind was not for rent to any god or government
Always hopeful yet discontent, knows changes aren't permanent
But change is 
Professor Neil Ellwood Peart 
 
[Image: PEART-2744335652.gif]

 



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