
web.archive.org/web/20210729081144/http:/news.mit.edu/2021/earth-inner-temperature-sea-glass-0729
Preview meta tags from the web.archive.org website.
Linked Hostnames
1Thumbnail

Search Engine Appearance
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.
Bing
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.
DuckDuckGo

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.
General Meta Tags
12- titleGeologists take Earth’s inner temperature using erupted sea glass | MIT News | Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- charsetutf-8
- viewportwidth=device-width, initial-scale=1.0
- descriptionMIT 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.
- keywordsStephanie Brown Krein, ReversePetrogen, Timothy Grove, mid-ocean ridges, Earth temperature map, interior Earth’s temperature
Open Graph Meta Tags
7- og:titleGeologists take Earth’s inner temperature using erupted sea glass
- og:imagehttps://web.archive.org/web/20210729070114im_/https://news.mit.edu/sites/default/files/images/202107/MIT_Earth-Hot-Spot.jpg
- og:descriptionMIT 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.
- og:site_nameMIT News | Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- og:typearticle
Twitter Meta Tags
2- twitter:site@mit
- twitter:cardsummary_large_image
Link Tags
21- apple-touch-icon/web/20210729070114im_/https://news.mit.edu/themes/mit/assets/img/favicon/apple-icon-57x57.png
- apple-touch-icon/web/20210729070114im_/https://news.mit.edu/themes/mit/assets/img/favicon/apple-icon-60x60.png
- apple-touch-icon/web/20210729070114im_/https://news.mit.edu/themes/mit/assets/img/favicon/apple-icon-72x72.png
- apple-touch-icon/web/20210729070114im_/https://news.mit.edu/themes/mit/assets/img/favicon/apple-icon-76x76.png
- apple-touch-icon/web/20210729070114im_/https://news.mit.edu/themes/mit/assets/img/favicon/apple-icon-114x114.png
Links
90- https://web.archive.org/web/20210729070114/http://calendar.mit.edu
- https://web.archive.org/web/20210729070114/http://careers.mit.edu
- https://web.archive.org/web/20210729070114/http://comms.mit.edu
- https://web.archive.org/web/20210729070114/http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0
- https://web.archive.org/web/20210729070114/http://socialmediahub.mit.edu