Scientists give the alarm: The end of the world will come from underground

It looks like a movie scenario: an invisible magnetic force that protects life on earth against the killer rays of space weakens. Radiation blasts destroy our communications satellites, and black out of power on Earth. The chaos prevails. People's cancer multiplies after sun-free radiation destroys people's AND. Billions of creatures in [...]
It looks like a movie scenario: an invisible magnetic force that protects life on earth against the killer rays of space weakens. Radiation blasts destroy our communications satellites, and black out of power on Earth.
The chaos prevails. People's cancer multiplies after sun-free radiation destroys people's AND. Billions of creatures around the world die because of their ability to migrate because of changes in the planet's magnetic field.
After all, earth's own atmosphere leaves because of solar winds, as happened long ago with planet Mars, when its magnetic field was distributed.
But this is not a science fiction movie. Scientists warn that this can happen because of an immediate revolution of the interior of Earth, the Daily Mail writes.
High-tech monitoring team shows a lot of signs that earth's magnetic poles are changing, and that's because of the fundamental changes of iron in the heart of our planet. If that happens, the Earth's magnetic field would roll. Over a thousand years this will completely change, our vital magnetic protection would become weaker, and hence catastrophic.
Scientists predict that it can weaken by 1/10 of its ordinary magnetic force, dramatically reducing Earth's protection against radiation and heavy energy particles coming from solar winds.
Evidence on the early rocks shows that changes in earth's magnetic field have occurred before. Under the earth's solid covering is a layer of liquid iron that is held up because of heat that penetrates the earth's surface. It is the mobile currents of this metal that act like a giant electromagnet.
According to the European Space Agency, the process is believed to take several centuries in human terms.
The evidence shows that the future change is already under way. Earth's magnetic shield is currently weakening ten times faster than previously thought, to 5 per cent per decade, according to satellite data collected by the ESA.
The magnetic field is particularly weakened in South America, an area that scientists call South Atlantic anomalies.
Data from the ESA monitoring has also revealed concerned activity in liquid iron currents under the surface of the Earth, suggesting that the field may be ready to change.











