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by andrewflnr
1464 days ago
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This article seems like it's trying to imply that the core changes position relative to the earth, when all the actual details, and the linked journal article [0] only talk about changes in rotation speed relative to the surface. This appears to be a uniquely and bafflingly bad case of science journalism. Anyway, it would be cool if this led us to understand where mantle plumes come from. I don't know how likey that is, but it seems that the dynamics between the core and mantle is the right place to look. [0] https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.abm9916 <-- Just read the abstract of this instead |
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No, it's all like that.
Though I should note that the model of "the core is shifting position relative to the surface" is fully justified here. Here's the statement:
> “The inner core is not fixed — it’s moving under our feet, and it seems to going back and forth a couple of kilometers every six years,” Vidale said.
And here's the concept:
> Research published in 1996 was the first to propose the inner core rotates faster than the rest of the planet — also known as super-rotation — at roughly 1 degree per year.
But rotating at a speed that is so slightly different means exactly that the location on the surface of the core that is directly below a particular point on the surface shifts -- slightly -- over time. Positional change relative to the surface is what's happening.