Somewhat disappointing this month, as Dr. Carroll had a mix-up with subject matter and book selection and does not recommend three of the five titles he read.
I am pretty ignorant of both oceanography and meteorology, but still didn't get much out of the summary.
This idea is dramatically conveyed by the image that got shared around a few years ago.
This makes them among the oldest mountains in the world, once as great as the Himalayas of today.
This is commonly known as the tide. Most of the effect is due to the nearby moon: there is a high tide facing the moon because the moon's gravity is stronger, and a high tide away from the moon, because the moon's gravity is weaker. The sun contributes some tidal effect as well, so the most extreme tides are during a full moon and new moon, when the three bodies are approximately in alignment.
This is interesting, and unexpected. I suppose it depends on your definition of change.
This is something I also find wondrous and terrifying.
#learnnewthings schedule:
January 2016 – Water and growth in California
February – Wine
March – Game theory
April – Cryptography
May – Art history
June – The history of railroads in the U.S.
July – Oceanography
August – Football (strategy and theory)
September – Chaos theory
November – Linguistics