The ground beneath your feet may feel solid, but Earth is constantly shifting. While we have mapped the surface in detail, its deep interior remains a mystery. Even with modern technology, no probe ...
The gravity survey covered an area measuring up to 4.8 by 4.5 km, with data collected at 200-metre centres where terrain allowed. The survey discovered a strong 5 mGal anomaly that extends from the ...
The Indian Ocean "gravity hole" is Earth's deepest geoid low. Its weak gravitational pull makes sea levels here 348 feet lower than average, creating a 1.2-million-square-mile anomaly southwest of ...
Earth's deepest gravitational anomaly, known as the "gravity hole," lies 1,200 km southwest of India in the Indian Ocean. Spanning 3.1 million square kilometres, this region's sea level is 348 ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results