translated from Spanish: New continent discovered and called Great Adria

Researchers discovered a hidden continent on Earth, but it is not Atlantis.
The discovery came after specialists reconstructed the evolution of the complex geology of the Mediterranean region, which rises with mountain ranges and plunges into seas from Spain to Iran.
The continent, which was called Greater Adria, is the size of Greenland and separated from North Africa, only to be buried under southern Europe about 140 million years ago.
Experts say that chances are that someone would have ever been there without even knowing it.

“Forget Atlantis,” said Douwe van Hinsbergen, study author and professor of global tectonics and paleogeography at the University of Utrecht. “Inadvertently, a large number of tourists spend their holidays every year on the lost continent of Gran Adria.”
“The only remaining part of this continent is a strip that runs from Turin across the Adriatic Sea to the heel of the boot that forms Italy.”

Geologists call this area Adria, so the researchers in this study refer to the newly discovered continent as Great Adria.
In the Mediterranean region, geologists have a different understanding of plate tectonics, which is the theory behind how oceans and continents form and that suggests that plates do not deform when moving together in areas with large lines of fall To.
In the case of Great Adria, most of it was underwater, covered by shallow seas, coral reefs and sediments, which formed rocks and disappeared when Gran Adria remained under the mantle of southern Europe. These discarded rocks became mountain ranges in the Alps, the Apennines, the Balkans, Greece and Turkey.
Reconstructing the evolutionary gaze to the Mediterranean mountain ranges required collaboration because it covers more than 30 countries, each with its own geological study, maps and pre-existing ideas on how the layers were formed, the researchers said.
Using plate tectonic reconstruction software, researchers literally took off the layers to go back in time when continents looked very different from the map we know today.
Researchers discovered that Gran Adria began to become its own continent about 240 million years ago during the Triassic period.
This is not the first time a lost continent has been found. In January 2017, researchers announced the discovery of a lost continent left over from the supercontinent Gondwana, which began to break down 200 million years ago. The leftover piece, which was covered in lava, is now located beneath Mauritius, an island in the Indian Ocean.

Original source in Spanish

wolfe

Compartir
Publicado por
wolfe
Etiquetas: mexico

Entradas recientes

Javier Milei catalogó la Marcha Federal Universitaria como “la reedición de la campaña del miedo”

"El reclamo puede ser genuino, pero construido sobre una mentira", apuntó el presidente Javier Milei…

2 weeks hace

Axel Kicillof lideró un acto masivo por el Canal Magdalena en Ensenada

El gobernador de la provincia de Buenos Aires, Axel Kicillof, encabezó un acto en Ensenada…

2 weeks hace

Espert confía en la aprobación de la ley Bases y el paquete fiscal

El diputado nacional de La Libertad Avanza, José Luis Espert, expresó su confianza en la…

2 weeks hace

Milei defendió su gobierno ante críticas de CFK sobre el hambre del pueblo: “Sirve para reconstruir lo que ustedes hicieron”

Tras la masiva reaparición de Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, el presidente Javier Milei apuntó contra…

2 weeks hace

Victoria Villarruel creó una comisión para optimizar los recursos humanos del Senado

El principal propósito de la nueva comisión es evaluar los recursos humanos en el Senado,…

2 weeks hace

Polémica medida del Gobierno: las aseguradoras ya no brindarán el servicio de grúas y auxilio

En una medida que busca redefinir las condiciones de los seguros de automóviles en Argentina,…

2 weeks hace