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https://web.archive.org/web/20210729081144/http:/news.mit.edu/2021/earth-inner-temperature-sea-glass-0729

Geologists take Earth’s inner temperature using erupted sea glass

MIT geologists analyzed samples of erupted material along ocean ridges and traced their chemical history to estimate the temperature of Earth’s interior. They find the temperature of Earth’s ocean ridges is relatively consistent, around 1,200 degrees Celsius, but hotspots can reach 1,600 C.



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Geologists take Earth’s inner temperature using erupted sea glass

https://web.archive.org/web/20210729081144/http:/news.mit.edu/2021/earth-inner-temperature-sea-glass-0729

MIT geologists analyzed samples of erupted material along ocean ridges and traced their chemical history to estimate the temperature of Earth’s interior. They find the temperature of Earth’s ocean ridges is relatively consistent, around 1,200 degrees Celsius, but hotspots can reach 1,600 C.



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https://web.archive.org/web/20210729081144/http:/news.mit.edu/2021/earth-inner-temperature-sea-glass-0729

Geologists take Earth’s inner temperature using erupted sea glass

MIT geologists analyzed samples of erupted material along ocean ridges and traced their chemical history to estimate the temperature of Earth’s interior. They find the temperature of Earth’s ocean ridges is relatively consistent, around 1,200 degrees Celsius, but hotspots can reach 1,600 C.

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      Geologists take Earth’s inner temperature using erupted sea glass | MIT News | Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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      MIT geologists analyzed samples of erupted material along ocean ridges and traced their chemical history to estimate the temperature of Earth’s interior. They find the temperature of Earth’s ocean ridges is relatively consistent, around 1,200 degrees Celsius, but hotspots can reach 1,600 C.
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      Stephanie Brown Krein, ReversePetrogen, Timothy Grove, mid-ocean ridges, Earth temperature map, interior Earth’s temperature
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      MIT geologists analyzed samples of erupted material along ocean ridges and traced their chemical history to estimate the temperature of Earth’s interior. They find the temperature of Earth’s ocean ridges is relatively consistent, around 1,200 degrees Celsius, but hotspots can reach 1,600 C.
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