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Home Science & Technology Science

Australian scientist uncovered underwater volcanoes

byCustoms Today Report
22/07/2015
in Science, Science & Technology
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SYDNEY: A chance discovery by an Australian scientific vessel searching for lobster larvae has uncovered a range of underwater volcanoes that have remained inactive, and unknown, for an estimated 50 million years.
While scanning the seabed more than 150 miles off the coast of Sydney, scientists were stunned to find a cluster of volcanoes sitting three miles beneath the ocean’s surface. In all there were four extinct volcanoes, the largest nearly a mile wide and rising some 2,000ft above the sea floor.
The volcanoes are now calderas, which form after the eruption when the land around them collapses, may reveal why Australia and New Zealand separated between 40 and 80 million years ago. The chief scientist aboard the government research vessel, Investigator, described the discovery as being “like something off the front cover of a geology text book”.
“If you could drain the ocean it would be magnificent to see for a few seconds – it’s a remarkable structure,” Professor Iain Suthers told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
The cluster of volcanoes measures 12 miles by four. But for a lucky sighting on the final night of the crew’s 15-day voyage, it would have gone unnoticed.
The 28 scientists on board were looking for the nursery grounds of larval lobsters before they stumbled across the submarine phenomenon. It is believed that the volcanoes were created by a series of shifts in geological plates that caused Australia to split from New Zealand.
Professor Suthers said the area was thought to be “billiard-table flat” before the discovery.
Professor Richard Arculus, of the Australian National University and a world expert on volcanoes, said: “[We are] learning more about the past of Australia and New Zealand and the nature of the stuff below the crust of the earth.

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