18/02/2026
There’s a place in the Indian Ocean where gravity is weaker than anywhere else on Earth.
Scientists call it the Indian Ocean Geoid Low ... a massive zone where the sea surface actually dips downward like an invisible crater, covering nearly 3 million square kilometers.
For over 70 years, no one could explain why Earth’s gravity was “broken” here.
Theories ranged from asteroid impacts to hollow sections inside the planet.
Then in late 2025 and early 2026, super-computer simulations of Earth’s ancient history finally revealed the truth.
Millions of years ago, an ancient ocean floor sank deep into the planet when tectonic plates collided to form the Himalayas. That heavy sinking rock displaced a huge plume of hot, lightweight magma rising from Earth’s mantle.
Because this hot material is less dense, it produces weaker gravity.
And that weakness is so strong… it literally pulls the ocean downward.
Hidden beneath the waves is a battle between a lost ancient ocean and rising molten rock ...
and that battle is bending Earth’s gravity itself.