FACTOID # 132: Women make up more than 10% of the prison population in only six countries: Thailand, , Qatar, Paraguay, Costa Rica, and Singapore.
 
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Encyclopedia > South Atlantic Magnetic Anomaly

The South Atlantic Anomaly (or SAA) is the region where Earth's inner van Allen radiation belt makes its closest approach to the planet's surface. The result is that, for a given altitude, the radiation intensity is higher over this region than elsewhere. The SAA is produced by a "dip" in the Earth's magnetic field at that location, caused by the fact that the center of Earth's magnetic field is offset from its geographic center by 280 miles.


The South Atlantic Anomaly is of great significance to satellites and other spacecraft that orbit at several hundred miles' altitude and at orbital inclinations between 35° and 60°; these orbits take satellites through the Anomaly periodically, exposing them to several minutes of strong radiation each time. The International Space Station, orbiting with an inclination of 51.6°, required extra shielding to deal with this problem. The Hubble Space Telescope does not take observations while passing through the SAA.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Inkaba yeAfrica (2320 words)
South Africa is the only subcontinental region in the world, therefore, where a history of the elevation of its paleo-surfaces can be used with confidence to track paleo-mantle dynamics of the lower mantle in isolation from horizontal forces of plate tectonics.
South Africa was part of the heartland of Gondwana and it has the world's best preserved terrestrial-marine linked sequences of volcanic rocks, sediments and fossils with which to track the break-up of this supercontinent, and its associated long-wavelength global climate and biodiversity changes.
South Africa is surrounded by the two end-members of extensional-type continental margins: one produced during pure-shear perpendicular to the present southern Atlantic margin; the other through simple shear parallel to the margin of the southern Indian Ocean.
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