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Ancient Imbalances Sent Earth's Continents "Wandering"
National Geographic News ^ | Continents "Wandering"

Posted on 04/09/2008 3:28:18 PM PDT by blam

Ancient Imbalances Sent Earth's Continents "Wandering"

Anne Minard
for National Geographic News
April 7, 2008

A new study lends weight to the controversial theory that Earth became massively imbalanced in the distant past, sending its tectonic plates on a mad dash to even things out.

Bernhard Steinberger and Trond Torsvik, of the Geological Survey of Norway, analyzed rock samples dating back 320 million years to hunt for clues in Earth's magnetic field about the history of plate motions.

The researchers found evidence of a steady northward continental motion and, during certain time intervals, clockwise and counterclockwise rotations.

That pattern matches the predictions of a phenomenon known as true polar wander, a theory first proposed in the 1950s.

The theory states that at times Earth's surface mass becomes imbalanced. The continents become dramatically offset from the planet's spin axis and so move rapidly to right themselves.

The new study shows evidence for such motion within the past 320 million years that would have been enough to shift the continents by about 18 degrees latitude.

A change like that today would put Richmond, Virginia, where Mexico City is now.

Island Hot Spots

"I am surprised that our results clearly indicate those episodes of true polar wander at all," Steinberger said.

"Up until now, there wasn't really any agreement in the community about the existence and amount of true polar wander."

That's because the phenomenon has been difficult to distinguish from the slower motion of tectonic plates traveling over the underlying mantle, Steinberger said.

Scientists often use hot spots, relatively fixed thermal plumes of material that rise up from the deep mantle, to track the paths of plates

But geological records of suitable hot spot chains only go back about 130 million years.

A convergence of improvements to geologists' tools paved the way for the team to probe further back in time, Steinberger said.

"We use an updated global plate-tectonic reconstruction and integrate suitable paleomagnetic results from all continents," he said.

The authors were then able to compute the global average of continental motion and rotation as far back as 320 million years ago.

Paleomagnetic records like the ones used in the study can provide a new reference frame for relating surface motions to deep-mantle processes, the authors say.

The study appeared in last week's issue of the journal Nature, and another paper elaborating on the results is in press with Reviews of Geophysics.

Same on Mars?

Given current understanding of Earth's geology, Steinberger is puzzled that true polar wander doesn't show up more often in the planet's history.

"It points toward a long-term stability … which is not expected from fluid dynamics, something which currently geodynamicists try to understand."

Papers published in the journal Science in 1997 and 1998 proposed a much more dramatic polar wander associated with the Cambrian Explosion, a huge diversification in species that shows up in the fossil record beginning around 550 million years ago.

Co-authors of those studies suggested that Earth's continents were thrown asunder relative to the planet's spin axis by about 90 degrees at the time.

One of the researchers, Joseph Kirschvink of the California Institute of Technology, theorized that the shift happened after one or more major subduction zones in the ancient oceans closed down during the final assembly stages of the supercontinent Gondwanaland.

That sent the entire continent rotating at almost a right angle beginning about 534 million years ago, said the authors of the earlier work.

About 16 million years later, North America darted from deep in the Southern Hemisphere to the Equator.

"Even the type of marine rocks deposited on the various continents—carbonates in the tropics, and clays and clastics in high latitudes—agree with these paleomagnetically determined motions," Kirschvink notes on his Web site.

Kirschvink's co-author David Evans, now an associate professor of geology at Yale University, said he's most excited about a relationship between the latest paper and one that came out in Nature last year.

The 2007 study proposes similar continental shake-ups on Mars.

"In the geosciences, we as a community have continued to be impressed by the differences among all the terrestrial planets," he said.

But when it comes to polar wander, Earth and Mars might not be so far apart.

Evans said large igneous regions on both planets—Tharsis on Mars and the central Atlantic magmatic province on Earth—were so massive that they threw their host planets off balance in the distant past.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: ancient; catastrophism; continents; glaciation; godsgravesglyphs; imbalanced; joekirschvink; snowballearth; truepolarwander; wander
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1 posted on 04/09/2008 3:28:19 PM PDT by blam
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To: SunkenCiv

2 posted on 04/09/2008 3:29:34 PM PDT by blam (Secure the border and enforce the law)
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To: blam

bump


3 posted on 04/09/2008 3:30:05 PM PDT by lesser_satan (Vote McCain - The Choice who Sucks Less!)
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To: blam
The theory states that at times Earth's surface mass becomes imbalanced. The continents become dramatically offset from the planet's spin axis and so move rapidly to right themselves

Excuse me while I call out for some skepticism. Crust 50miles thick. Mantle 2000+ miles thick. A defect on the skin of an onion is not going to destabilize the entire thing when it spins.

4 posted on 04/09/2008 3:30:49 PM PDT by Centurion2000 (Party ahead of principles; eventually you'll be selling out anything to anyone for the right price.)
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To: blam

Whatever it is, it’s Bush’s fault.


5 posted on 04/09/2008 3:31:42 PM PDT by beethovenfan (If Islam is the solution, the "problem" must be freedom.)
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To: blam
Caption to go with the fig. in post 2...

"An illustration shows what Earth's continents looked like 110 million to 100 million years ago and their rotation based on magnetic signatures in ancient rocks.

A new study suggests that the motion represents a phenomenon called true polar wander, in which Earth's landmasses become imbalanced compared to its spin axis and then move rapidly to right themselves."

6 posted on 04/09/2008 3:42:29 PM PDT by spunkets ("Freedom is about authority", Rudy Giuliani, gun grabber)
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To: blam
A change like that today would put Richmond, Virginia, where Mexico City is now.

No, thanks.

Perhaps the Absolut Vodka people were just some frustrated geophysicist wannabe types.

7 posted on 04/09/2008 3:46:38 PM PDT by aposiopetic
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To: blam
A new study lends weight to the controversial theory that Earth became massively imbalanced in the distant past, sending its tectonic plates on a mad dash to even things out.

Was this after the mass was ejected that formed the moon?
8 posted on 04/09/2008 3:48:30 PM PDT by aruanan
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To: Centurion2000
"Crust 50miles thick."

The crust isn't 50 mi thick. It varies. Here's a contour map of hte thickness. 1km=0.62mi.

"This contour map of the thickness of the Earth's crust was developed from the CRUST 5.1 model. The contour interval is 10 km; we also include the 45 km contour for greater detail on the continents."

9 posted on 04/09/2008 3:54:14 PM PDT by spunkets ("Freedom is about authority", Rudy Giuliani, gun grabber)
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To: blam

All due to “Global Warming, Climate Change and anticipation of the Bush Presidency.”


10 posted on 04/09/2008 3:56:58 PM PDT by Don Corleone (Leave the gun..take the cannoli)
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To: aruanan
"Was this after the mass was ejected that formed the moon?"

Yes.

Mother Earth only started to spin later. It was an attempt to throw all the libs off into space. That didn't work. Next she tried shifting the land masses to dump them in the ocean as they slept. As we all know, they're still here.

11 posted on 04/09/2008 3:58:24 PM PDT by spunkets ("Freedom is about authority", Rudy Giuliani, gun grabber)
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To: blam
in other related news rosie o’donnells enormous girth contributed to hollywoods to lurch to the far left
12 posted on 04/09/2008 4:00:21 PM PDT by daku ("My dream continues with ferocity, thank you.")
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To: blam
"We use an updated global plate-tectonic reconstruction and integrate suitable paleomagnetic results from all continents," he said.

My chiropractor talks like that.

13 posted on 04/09/2008 4:09:54 PM PDT by billorites (Freepo ergo sum)
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To: blam
I read a good book many years ago about how the weight of the polar ice caps (not the tectonic plates themselves) caused the earth to change its polar orientation about every 7500 years. The poles would swing to the equator and cause quite a mess. It was called The HAB Theory and still has quite a following to this day. Just thought I'd share.
14 posted on 04/09/2008 4:25:10 PM PDT by USMA '71
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To: USMA '71
I guess I don't get it. It an object, say your clothes dryer is off balance, how does the heavier side migrate to the lighter side to correct itself? I can not think of another form of matter that actually self-repels from the force acting upon it. If we could repeat such an occurrence couldn't we duplicate it as a form of perpetual motion?
15 posted on 04/09/2008 4:32:52 PM PDT by enraged (What about global prosession, the 26,000 year wobble?)
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To: USMA '71

Einstein was interested in that hypothesis.


16 posted on 04/09/2008 4:35:02 PM PDT by RightWhale (Repeal the Law of the Excluded Middle)
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To: blam

Bump for later.


17 posted on 04/09/2008 4:40:38 PM PDT by Question_Assumptions
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To: blam

St Algore, defender of mother earth, save us from the moving plates. (sarcasm)


18 posted on 04/09/2008 4:40:50 PM PDT by The Great RJ ("Mir we bleiwen wat mir sin" or "We want to remain what we are." ..Luxembourg motto)
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To: blam
It's called lot's of water, covering the whole earth...and then the water receding.

Check the Terra computer models at Los Alamos Labs!

19 posted on 04/09/2008 4:43:20 PM PDT by LiteKeeper (Beware the secularization of America; the Islamization of Eurabia)
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To: Centurion2000

I can imagine a “jumpstart” being given to existing plate motion, say by the Chicxulub impact, a six mile diameter rock, producing a 100 teraton blast, leaving a crater over a hundred miles across.


20 posted on 04/09/2008 4:44:43 PM PDT by yefragetuwrabrumuy
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