Live Breaking News & Updates on Wout Krijgsman At Utrecht University

Stay updated with breaking news from Wout krijgsman at utrecht university. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.

Ancient 'megalake' covered more than one million square miles 10 million years ago


The largest lake ever to exist on Earth – the Paratethys megalake – suffered a disaster that killed off most of its lifeforms less than 10 million years ago, a new study says. 
At its vastest, Paratethys had a surface area of more than a million square miles (2.8 million square km) – slightly larger than the present-day Mediterranean Sea, according to a team led by experts at Utrecht University, Netherlands. 
For a modern day comparison, Paratethys would stretch from the eastern Alps to what is now Kazakhstan in central Asia. 
It also contained a water volume of more than 1.77 million km3 – representing more than a third the volume of the Mediterranean today.  ....

Black Sea , Oceans General , Caspian Sea , Mediterranean Sea , Dan Palcu At University , Wout Krijgsman At Utrecht University , Utrecht University , Aral Sea , Lake Urmia , Namak Lake , Mad Max , Wout Krijgsman , Great Khersonian Drying , Cape Kaliakra , Dan Palcu , Late Miocene , கருப்பு கடல் , பெருங்கடல்கள் ஜநரல் , காஸ்பியன் கடல் , மத்திய தரைக்கடல் கடல் , அட்ரெக்ட் பல்கலைக்கழகம் , ஆரல் கடல் , நமக் ஏரி , பைத்தியம் அதிகபட்சம் , தாமதமாக மியோசீன் ,

'Megalake' covered more than 1million square miles 10million years ago


Megalake covered more than 1million square miles 10million years ago
Jonathan Chadwick For Mailonline
© Provided by Daily Mail
MailOnline logo
The largest lake ever to exist on Earth – the Paratethys megalake – suffered a disaster that killed off most of its lifeforms less than 10 million years ago, a new study says. 
At its vastest, Paratethys had a surface area of more than a million square miles (2.8 million square km) – slightly larger than the present-day Mediterranean Sea, according to a team led by experts at Utrecht University, Netherlands. 
For a modern day comparison, Paratethys would stretch from the eastern Alps to what is now Kazakhstan in central Asia.  ....

Black Sea , Oceans General , Caspian Sea , Mediterranean Sea , Dan Palcu At University , Wout Krijgsman At Utrecht University , Daily Mail Mailonline , Daily Mail , Aral Sea , Lake Urmia , Namak Lake , Mad Max , Wout Krijgsman , Great Khersonian Drying , Dan Palcu , Late Miocene , கருப்பு கடல் , பெருங்கடல்கள் ஜநரல் , காஸ்பியன் கடல் , மத்திய தரைக்கடல் கடல் , தினசரி அஞ்சல் , ஆரல் கடல் , நமக் ஏரி , பைத்தியம் அதிகபட்சம் , தாமதமாக மியோசீன் ,