Get Mystery Box with random crypto!

Today I Learn

Logo of telegram channel todayilearn — Today I Learn T
Logo of telegram channel todayilearn — Today I Learn
Channel address: @todayilearn
Categories: Education
Language: English
Subscribers: 9.75K
Description from channel

Life is all about Learning. We learn something new everyday. Now the question arises So, What did you learn today ?
➡️Some time i have to post ads to Grow the channel.
For Ads and Support :- https://telega.io/c/TodayILearn
Admin :- @DigitalGuy

Ratings & Reviews

3.00

3 reviews

Reviews can be left only by registered users. All reviews are moderated by admins.

5 stars

1

4 stars

0

3 stars

1

2 stars

0

1 stars

1


The latest Messages 26

2021-06-17 07:08:28
325 views04:08
Open / Comment
2021-06-16 08:36:01 ​​How were the Himalayan ranges formed?

The Himalayan mountain range and Tibetan plateau have formed as a result of the collision between the Indian Plate and Eurasian Plate which began 50 million years ago and continues today.

225 million years ago  India was a large island situated off the Australian coast and separated from Asia by the Tethys Ocean.

The Indo-Australian tectonic plate collided with the Euroasian plate after many hundreds of millions of years of slow migration, forcing the land up and forming the area that is now India pushed against Tibet.

This created the massive mountain fold that is known as the Himalayas, some of the tallest mountains in the world. The mountain range extends for more than 1,500 miles, with the highest peak, Mount Everest, rising 29,029 feet above sea level.

Tectonic plates are located in the earth's lithosphere. These plates move at different rates through a process of convection.

In the Earth's inner mantle - which is directly below the lithosphere - molten rock forms and pushes hot gas and liquid upward.

The hot materials displace cooler gases and liquids and create convection currents that push the tectonic plates. Due to the continued plate movement, the Himalaya region also experiences many earthquakes.

Some of these earthquakes are some of the most destructive natural disasters on record.

@TodayILearn
144 viewsedited  05:36
Open / Comment
2021-06-16 08:35:56
138 views05:35
Open / Comment
2021-06-15 06:34:18 Today I Learn pinned a photo
03:34
Open / Comment
2021-06-15 06:31:21
We invite you to learn a little more about what data is used to make predictions about cryptocurrencies.

The text is written in simple and clear language.
5 minutes to read.

The first half of 2021 is almost over.
What to expect from the value of Litecoin and what predictions can be trusted.

Source: https://cutt.ly/VnGErd0
363 views03:31
Open / Comment
2021-06-15 06:28:57
How do icebergs lose their salt?

Icebergs do not have any salt to begin with. Icebergs are not pieces of frozen ocean water. Rather, icebergs are frozen chunks of fresh water that began their life on land. It all starts when snow falls in a region of land that is too cold for the snow to melt.

Over time, the non-salty snow builds up on the ground. Without temperatures warm enough to melt the snow, it piles up so high that it starts to crush under its own weight. The crushing force of gravity fuses the non-salty snow crystals into a giant slab of non-salty ice known as a glacier. This process is very slow and takes a long time. Gravity not only pulls the snow down into the ice, it also pulls the ice downhill.

@TodayILearn
362 viewsedited  03:28
Open / Comment
2021-06-13 07:47:42 ​​Why Are Rain Clouds Dark?

It's pretty well-known that most clouds are white, while rain clouds are usually a darker shade of gray.

But why are rain clouds so dark?

Unlike atmospheric particles that scatter more blue light than other colors (making the sky blue), the tiny cloud particles equally scatter all colors of light, which together make up white light.

However, rain clouds are gray instead of white because of their thickness, or height. That is, a cloud gets thicker and denser as it gathers more water droplets and ice crystals the thicker it gets, the more light it scatters, resulting in less light penetrating all the way through it.

The particles on the underside of the rain cloud don't have a lot of light to scatter to your eyes, so the base appears gray as you look on from the ground below.

This effect becomes more pronounced the larger the water droplets get such as right before they're large enough to fall from the sky as rain or snow because they become more efficient at absorbing light, rather than scattering it.

@TodayILearn
348 viewsedited  04:47
Open / Comment
2021-06-13 07:47:38
337 views04:47
Open / Comment
2021-06-11 05:09:17 Today I Learn pinned a photo
02:09
Open / Comment
2021-06-11 05:07:52
Want to know the reason ?

WHY ????

Then do join our channel Did You Know. Here you will get to know a lot of things with proper explanation.

Do check it once, using the link below.

@Didyoureallyknow
301 views02:07
Open / Comment