Around the world, miles of rock are missing. Could 'Snowball Earth' be the culprit?
by Julia Rosen, Los Angeles Times
Jan 04, 2019
4 minutes
When the famed explorer John Wesley Powell bumped, splashed and thrashed his way down the Colorado River in 1869, he discovered one of the most striking geologic features on Earth. Not the Grand Canyon - although that too is a marvel - but a conspicuous boundary between the sunset-colored sediments of the upper walls and the dark, jagged rocks below them.
Powell had learned to read the layers of desert rocks like pages in a book, and he recognized that the boundary represented a missing chapter in Earth's geological history. Later, researchers realized it was more like an entire lost volume, spanning roughly one-fifth of Earth's existence, and
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