News Bites - National Geographic Kids

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Results tagged “Pacific Ocean”

Wednesday, March 25, 2009
kidssuperadmin

Volcanoes Erupt in Alaska and Tonga

Alaska's Mount Redoubt erupted six times between Sunday night and Saturday morning, sending an ash cloud 9.5 miles (15 kilometers) into the air! The eruptions also caused small earthquakes and mudflows. The volcano could keep erupting for days... weeks... or even months!

Mount Redoubt wasn't the only recent volcano eruption. An undersea volcano in Tonga also erupted last week. Tonga is an archipelago (group of islands) in the Pacific Ocean. The eruption has sent up ash, smoke, and steam. Underwater volcanoes can build islands as the magma builds up--that's how the Hawaiian Islands were formed.

Read more about the Mount Redoubt eruptions and see pictures on National Geographic News.

Read about the Tonga eruption on National Geographic News.

See photos of volcanoes in the Photo Gallery!
 
Tuesday, February 24, 2009
kidssuperadmin

Freaky Fish

Photo: A Pacific barreleye fish






















Photograph courtesy Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute


Fishermen and scientists have found pieces of the unusual Pacific barreleye fish in their nets since 1939, but the first photos of live, intact fish were released today. Their grayish, barrel-like fish eyes are upright tubes, which are protected by a transparent dome on the top of the head, similar to the cockpit of a fighter plane.
 
Wednesday, January 7, 2009
kidssuperadmin

New Marine Monuments

Photo: A diver and a giant coral colony






















Photograph by Enric Sala



In the last few days of his presidency, President George W. Bush created three new national monuments in the Pacific Ocean in the largest ocean conservation effort ever. The new monuments will protect Kingman Reef  (as part of the U.S. Pacific Remote Islands Marine National Monument), Rose Atoll, and the Mariana Trench, which is home to Earth's deepest spot.

All three of the protected areas are home to many species, including the giant coral colony shown in the photo above.
 

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