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earth science
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earth science

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The crust of the Earth is made up of plates with different kinds of margins. In mid-ocean, there are constructive plate margins, where magma wells up from the Earth's interior, forming new crust. On continent-continent margins, mountain ranges are flung up by the collision of two continents. At an ocean-continent destructive margin, ocean crust is forced under the denser continental crust, forming an area of volcanic instability.
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Inside the Earth. The surface of the Earth is a thin crust about 6 km/4 mi thick under the sea and 40 km/25 mi thick under the continents. Under the crust lies the mantle, about 2,900 km/1,800 mi thick and with a temperature of 1,500-3,000°C/2,700-5,400°F. The outer core is about 2,250 km/1,400 mi thick, of molten iron and nickel. The inner core is probably solid iron and nickel, at about 5,000°C/9,000°F.

Scientific study of the planet Earth as a whole. The mining and extraction of minerals and gems, the prediction of weather and earthquakes, the pollution of the atmosphere, and the forces that shape the physical world all fall within its scope of study. The emergence of the discipline reflects scientists' concern that an understanding of the global aspects of the Earth's structure and its past will hold the key to how humans affect its future, ensuring that its resources are used in a sustainable way. It is a synthesis of several traditional subjects such as geology, meteorology, oceanography, geophysics, geochemistry, and palaeontology.



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The Canadian Council of Professional Geoscientists (CCPG) is a national coordinating body created in 1997 by the provincial and territorial geoscientist associations of Canada that deals with professional geoscience issues on the national and international scenes.
I have spent the past 30 years as a geoscientist studying the history of Earth and take great exception to a statement in the article: "Scientists are divided on whether climate change, induced by industrial and automotive release of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases, is driving these statistics.
The Ministry of Northern Development and Mines has been analyzing lake sediments for platinum group elements (PGEs) with great success," said OGS geoscientist Richard Dyer.
 
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