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    Default Reconstructing Tectonic Plates' Past Wanderings

    A map that fills a 500-million year gap in Earth’s history

    By Alan Collins and Andrew Merdith
    The Conversation
    Tue, 27 Jun 2017 09:33 UTC

    Fieldwork in central Madagascar, an area that records a continental collision at about 550 million years ago. © Alan Collins, Author provided

    The new map was created using data from rocks found in locations including Madagascar.

    Earth is estimated to be around 4.5 billion years old, with life first appearing around 3 billion years ago.

    To unravel this incredible history, scientists use a range of different techniques to determine when and where continents moved, how life evolved, how climate changed over time, when our oceans rose and fell, and how land was shaped. Tectonic plates – the huge, constantly moving slabs of rock that make up the outermost layer of the Earth, the crust – are central to all these studies.

    Along with our colleagues, we have published the first whole-Earth plate tectonic map of half a billion years of Earth history, from 1,000 million years ago to 520 million years ago.

    We now have a map of plate tectonics for the period 1,000-520 million years ago. The colours refer to where the continents lie today. Light blue = India, Madagascar and Arabia, magenta = Australia and Antarctica, white = Siberia, red = North America, orange = Africa, dark blue = South America, yellow = China, green = northeast Europe.
    The time range is crucial. It’s a period when the Earth went through the most extreme climate swings known, from “Snowball Earth” icy extremes to super-hot greenhouse conditions, when the atmosphere got a major injection of oxygen and when multicellular life appeared and exploded in diversity.

    Now with this first global map of plate tectonics through this period, we (and others) can start to assess the role of plate tectonic processes on other Earth systems and even address how movement of structures deep in our Earth may have varied over a billion year cycle.

    The Earth moves under our feet
    The modern Earth’s tectonic plate boundaries are mapped in excruciating detail.


    Modern plate tectonic boundaries. But how do we map the Earth like this in the past? NASA's Earth Observatory

    In the modern Earth, global positioning satellites are used to map how the Earth changes and moves. We know that up-welling plumes of hot rock from over 2,500 km deep in the planet’s mantle (the layer beneath the Earth’s crust) hit the solid carapace of the planet (the crust and the top part of the mantle). This forces rigid surface tectonic plates to move at the tempo of a fingernail’s growth.

    On the other side of the up-welling hot rock plumes are areas known as subduction zones, where vast regions of the ocean floor plunge down into the deep Earth. Eventually these down-going oceanic plates hit the boundary between the core and mantle layers of Earth, about 2,900 km down. They come together, forming thermal or chemical accumulations that eventually source these up-welling zones.

    It’s fascinating stuff, but these processes also create problems for scientists trying to look back in time. The planet can only be directly mapped over its last 200 million years. Before that, back over the preceding four billion years, the majority of the planet’s surface is missing, as all the crust that lay under the oceans has been destroyed through subduction. Oceanic crust just doesn’t last: it’s constantly being pulled back deep into the Earth, where it’s inaccessible to science.

    Mapping the Earth in deep time
    So what did we do to map the Earth in deep time? To get at where plate margins were and how they changed, we looked for proxies – or alternative representations – of plate margins in the geological record.

    We found rocks that formed above subduction zones, in continental collisions, or in the fissures where plates ripped apart. Our data came from rocks found in locations including Madagascar, Ethiopia and far west Brazil. The new map and associated work is the result of a couple of decades of work by many excellent PhD students and colleagues from all over the world.

    We now have more details, and a view to way further back in geological time, than were previously available for those studying the Earth.

    Using other methods, the latitudes of continents in the past can be worked out, as some iron-bearing rocks freeze the magnetic field in them as they form. This is like a fossil compass, with the needle pointing into the ground at an angle related to the latitude where it formed — near the equator the magnetic field is roughly parallel to the Earth’s surface, at the poles it plunges directly down. You can see this today if you buy a compass in Australia and take it to Canada: the compass won’t work very well, as the needle will want to point down into the Earth. Compass needles are always balanced to remain broadly horizontal in the region that they are designed to work in.

    But, these so-called “palaeomagnetic” measurements are hard to do, and it is not easy finding rocks that preserve these records. Also, they only tell us about the continents and not about plate margins or the oceans.

    [...]

    Full article: https://theconversation.com/a-map-th...-history-79838
    Last edited by Hervé; 11th July 2017 at 14:42.
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    Default Re: Reconstructing Tectonic Plates' Past Wanderings

    The Achilles heel of Plate tectonics:


    How does subduction start, and why does it seem to start/stop?

    If that cannot be explained, why bother with this theory?
    Hard times create strong men, Strong men create good times, Good times create weak men, Weak men create hard times.
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    Default Re: Reconstructing Tectonic Plates' Past Wanderings

    Because "THEY" are there:

    Quote [...]
    In the modern Earth, global positioning satellites are used to map how the Earth changes and moves. We know that up-welling plumes of hot rock from over 2,500 km deep in the planet’s mantle (the layer beneath the Earth’s crust) hit the solid carapace of the planet (the crust and the top part of the mantle). This forces rigid surface tectonic plates to move at the tempo of a fingernail’s growth.
    [...]
    Quote Posted by Hervé (here)
    [[...]
    ... seismological data and the motion mechanism at earthquake rupture points (the "beach ball" graphs) are all in strong support of the subduction of oceanic slabs at continental margins affected by such series of earthquakes:


    http://earthquake.usgs.gov/data/slab/#models


    Oceanic slab mapping under Japan:


    Kamchatka/Kurils/Japan http://earthquake.usgs.gov/data/slab.../kur_slab1.jpg
    Circles indicate recorded earthquakes and the lines indicate their depth of occurrence.
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    Default Re: Reconstructing Tectonic Plates' Past Wanderings

    Plate tectonic evolution from 1 Billion years ago to the present. 00:40

    EarthByte
    Feb 1, 2021
    2,604,910 views

    We have created the first continuous plate model with evolving plate boundaries spanning 1 Ga to the present-day, that includes a revised and improved model for the Neoproterozoic–Cambrian (1000–520 Ma) that connects with models of the Phanerozoic, thereby opening up pre-Gondwana times for quantitative analysis and further regional refinements. In this contribution, we first summarise methodological approaches to full-plate modelling and review the existing full-plate models in order to select appropriate models that produce a single continuous model. Our model is presented in a palaeomagnetic reference frame, with a newly-derived apparent polar wander path for Gondwana from 540 to 320 Ma, and a global apparent polar wander path from 320 to 0 Ma. We stress, though while we have used palaeomagnetic data when available, the model is also geologically constrained, based on preserved data from past-plate boundaries. This study is intended as a first step in the direction of a detailed and self-consistent tectonic reconstruction for the last billion years of Earth history, and our model files are released to facilitate community development. Reference: Merdith, A.S., Williams, S.E., Collins, A.S., Tetley, M.G., Mulder, J.A., Blades, M.L., Young, A., Armistead, S.E., Cannon, J., Zahirovic, S. and Müller, R.D., 2020. Extending full-plate tectonic models into deep time: Linking the neoproterozoic and the phanerozoic. Earth-Science Reviews, p.103477.

    https://www.youtube.com/redirect?eve...m_source%3DAC_

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