by Mitch Battros - Earth Changes Media                                                  June 11th 2013

New findings suggest a series of current events are weakening the Earth's magnetic field. Above the liquid outer core is the mantle; a solid rock composition which can be moldable due to the intense heat and high pressure. At the boundary between Earth's core and mantle at a depth of 2900 km (1,802 miles), there is an intense heat exchange.

One ongoing process is the shifting of tectonic plates - especially at subduction zones such as Sumatra, Cascadia, and Puerto Rico. This sinking of tectonic plates (Earth's crust) cools the mantle, which in-turn, speeds up the process of "convection". (the transfer of heat by the circulation or movement). Simultaneously, super-heated liquid rocks from the Earth's outer core form large bubbles called 'mantle plumes' which rise into the mantle.

A cooling mantle accelerates the flow of heat from the hot core and in this way alters the heat-driven convection in Earth's core. Earthquakes and volcanoes - most of which occur on the ocean floor, is the key source of cooling the mantle. Furthermore, as the result of increased submarine volcanoes, ocean temperatures rise causing a fluctuation in ocean and jet stream currents causing "extreme weather".

Sequence of Convection

Increase Charged Particles → Decreased Magnetic Field → Increase Heat in Earth's Core → Increase of Mantle Plumes → Increase in Earthquake & Volcanoes → Mantle and Outer Core Cools

Just as humans sweat to cool down the body - the Earth cools down its over-heated core by releasing heat through the core-mantle which finds its way to the surface in the way of heated oceans, volcanoes, and earthquakes.

(Part-III)  NASA & NOAA Warn of Coming Natural Disasters

Mitch Battros
Producer - Earth Changes Media
Email: newsletter@earthchangesmedia.com

Web: http://www.earthchangesmedia.com