Se observará que más de la mitad de los artículos de Giancarlo Scalera sobre la expansión de la tierra son publicados por Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica and Vulcanologia donde trabaja Giancarlo Scalera. Destacan las publicaciones en Nexus, New Concepts in Global Tectonics, Journal of Scientific Exploration. Véase también la mención de la película La Tierra es un planeta en expansión de Franz Fitzke en Richard Monvoisin, Pour une didactique de l'esprit critique, p. 105, tesis sostenida el 25 de octubre de 2007, Grenoble.
Voir par exemple « since the mid-sixties it is well-established that mid-oceanic ridges are areas of lithosphere production, while subduction zones are areas where lithosphere is being consumed (destructive plate margin). » dans Kurt Stüwe, Geodynamics of the lithosphere, 2007, Springer, ISBN978-3-540-71236-7, p. 16.
Herbert, Sandra (1991), «Charles Darwin as a prospective geological author», British Journal for the History of Science (Cambridge University Press) 24 (2): 159–192 [184–188], JSTOR4027165, doi:10.1017/S0007087400027060, consultado el 24 de octubre de 2008., pp. 178, 184, 189, also Darwin, C. R. Geological diary: Elevation of Patagonia. (5.1834) CUL-DAR34.40-60 Transcribed by Kees Rookmaaker (Darwin Online), pp. 58–59.
Wu, X.; X. Collilieux; Z. Altamimi; B. L. A. Vermeersen; R. S. Gross; I. Fukumori (8 de julio de 2011). «Accuracy of the International Terrestrial Reference Frame origin and Earth expansion». Geophysical Research Letters38 (13): 5 PP. Bibcode:2011GeoRL..3813304W. doi:10.1029/2011GL047450.
Bucher, K. (2005), «Blueschists, eclogites, and decompression assemblages of the Zermatt-Saas ophiolite: High-pressure metamorphism of subducted Tethys lithosphere», American Mineralogist90 (5–6): 821-835, Bibcode:2005AmMin..90..821B, doi:10.2138/am.2005.1718.
Schmidt, P. W. and Clark, D. A. (1980), The response of palaeomagnetic data to Earth expansion, Geophysical Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society, 61: 95–100, 1980, doi10.1111/j.1365-246X.1980.tb04306.x
Herbert, Sandra (1991), «Charles Darwin as a prospective geological author», British Journal for the History of Science (Cambridge University Press) 24 (2): 159–192 [184–188], JSTOR4027165, doi:10.1017/S0007087400027060, consultado el 24 de octubre de 2008., pp. 178, 184, 189, also Darwin, C. R. Geological diary: Elevation of Patagonia. (5.1834) CUL-DAR34.40-60 Transcribed by Kees Rookmaaker (Darwin Online), pp. 58–59.
S. W. Carey (1955), Wegener's South America-Africa Assembly, Fit or Misfit?, Geological Magazine, vol. 92-3, p.196, 1955, doi10.1017/S0016756800063548
S. W. Carey, The Expanding Earth – An essay review, 1975, Earth Science Reviews, vol.11-2, pp.105-143, doi10.1016/0012-8252(75)90097-5
Egyed, L. (1956), The change of the earth’s dimensions determined from paleogeographical data, Pure and Applied Geophysics, vol. 33, p. 42-48, 1956, doi10.1007/BF02629945
Van Der Lee, Suzan; Nolet, Guust (1997), «Seismic image of the subducted trailing fragments of the Farallon plate», Nature386 (6622): 266, Bibcode:1997Natur.386..266V, doi:10.1038/386266a0.
McElhinney, M. W.; Taylor, S. R.; Stevenson, D. J. (1978), «Limits to the expansion of Earth, Moon, Mars, and Mercury and to changes in the gravitational constant», Nature271 (5643): 316-321, Bibcode:1978Natur.271..316M, doi:10.1038/271316a0.
Wu, X.; X. Collilieux; Z. Altamimi; B. L. A. Vermeersen; R. S. Gross; I. Fukumori (8 de julio de 2011). «Accuracy of the International Terrestrial Reference Frame origin and Earth expansion». Geophysical Research Letters38 (13): 5 PP. Bibcode:2011GeoRL..3813304W. doi:10.1029/2011GL047450.
Bucher, K. (2005), «Blueschists, eclogites, and decompression assemblages of the Zermatt-Saas ophiolite: High-pressure metamorphism of subducted Tethys lithosphere», American Mineralogist90 (5–6): 821-835, Bibcode:2005AmMin..90..821B, doi:10.2138/am.2005.1718.
Hilgenberg, O.C. (1933), Vom wachsenden Erdball (The Expanding Earth), Berlin: Giessmann & Bartsch, Bibcode:1933vwe..book.....H.
Van Der Lee, Suzan; Nolet, Guust (1997), «Seismic image of the subducted trailing fragments of the Farallon plate», Nature386 (6622): 266, Bibcode:1997Natur.386..266V, doi:10.1038/386266a0.
McElhinney, M. W.; Taylor, S. R.; Stevenson, D. J. (1978), «Limits to the expansion of Earth, Moon, Mars, and Mercury and to changes in the gravitational constant», Nature271 (5643): 316-321, Bibcode:1978Natur.271..316M, doi:10.1038/271316a0.
Herbert, Sandra (1991), «Charles Darwin as a prospective geological author», British Journal for the History of Science (Cambridge University Press) 24 (2): 159–192 [184–188], JSTOR4027165, doi:10.1017/S0007087400027060, consultado el 24 de octubre de 2008., pp. 178, 184, 189, also Darwin, C. R. Geological diary: Elevation of Patagonia. (5.1834) CUL-DAR34.40-60 Transcribed by Kees Rookmaaker (Darwin Online), pp. 58–59.
Herndon, J. Marvin (10 de diciembre de 2005). «Whole-earth decompression dynamics». Current Science89 (11): 1937-1941. JSTOR24111129.
daily.jstor.org
Wills, Matthew (8 de octubre de 2016). «The Mother of Ocean Floor Cartography». JSTOR. Consultado el 14 de octubre de 2016. «While working with the North Atlantic data, she noted what must have been a rift between high undersea mountains. This suggested earthquake activity, which then [was] only associated with [the] fringe theory of continental drift. Heezen infamously dismissed his assistant's idea as "girl talk." But she was right, and her thinking helped to vindicate Alfred Wegener's 1912 theory of moving continents. Yet Tharp's name isn't on any of the key papers that Heezen and others published about plate tectonics between 1959-1963, which brought this once controversial idea to the mainstream of earth sciences.»
"Every day about 100 tons of meteoroids -- fragments of dust and gravel and sometimes even big rocks – enter the Earth's atmosphere." «What's Hitting Earth? | Science Mission Directorate». Archivado desde el original el 25 de mayo de 2020. Consultado el 16 de mayo de 2019.
ncgt.org
New Concepts in Global Tectonics Newsletter, n°57, décembre 2010, p.131.
"Every day about 100 tons of meteoroids -- fragments of dust and gravel and sometimes even big rocks – enter the Earth's atmosphere." «What's Hitting Earth? | Science Mission Directorate». Archivado desde el original el 25 de mayo de 2020. Consultado el 16 de mayo de 2019.