What happens when continents collide? - Juan D. Carrillo

1,825,262 views ・ 2015-08-18

TED-Ed


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Tens of millions of years ago,
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a force of nature set two giant masses on an unavoidable collision course
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that would change the face of the Earth
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and spell life or death for thousands of species.
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The force of nature was plate tectonics,
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and the bodies were North and South America.
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And even though they were hurdling towards each other
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at an underwhelming 2.5 cm per year,
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their collision actually did have massive biological reprocussions
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by causing one of the greatest episodes of biological migration in Earth's history:
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The Great American Biotic Interchange.
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Our story begins 65 million years ago, the beginning of the age of mammals,
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when what is now North and South America
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were continents separated by a marine connection
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between the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans.
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During this time, South America was the home of fauna
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that included armored glyptodonts as large as compact cars,
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giant ground sloths weighing more than a ton,
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opossums, monkeys, and carnivorous terror birds.
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North America had its own species,
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such as horses, bears, and saber-toothed cats.
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Over 20 million years, the shifting of the Farallon and Caribbean Plates
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produced the Central America Volcanic Arc, a peninsula connected to North America,
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with only a very narrow seaway separating it from South America.
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As these plates continued to surf the Earth's magma layer
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far beneath the Pacific Ocean floor,
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the Caribbean Plate migrated eastward,
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and about 15 million years ago,
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South America finally collided with this Central American Arc.
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This gradually closed the water connection between the Pacific and the Caribbean,
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creating a land bridge,
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which connected North America to South America.
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Terrestrial organisms could now cross between the two continents,
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and from the fossil records,
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it's evident that different waves of their dispersals took place.
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Even though plants don't physically move,
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they are easily dispersed by wind and waves,
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so they migrated first, along with a few species of birds.
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They were followed by some freshwater fishes
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and amphibians,
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and finally, various mammals began to traverse the bridge.
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From South America, mammals like ground sloths and glyptodonts
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were widly distributed in North America.
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Moreover, many South American tropical mammals,
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like monkeys and bats, colonized the forests of Central America,
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and are very abundant today.
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South American predator marsupials went extinct 3 million years ago,
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at which point North American predators, such as cats, bears and foxes,
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migrated south and occupied the ecological space left behind.
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Horses, llamas, tapirs, cougars, saber-toothed cats, gomphotheres,
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and later humans also headed south across the land bridge.
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But what happened on land is only half the story.
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What had been one giant ocean was now two,
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creating differences in temperature and salinity for the two bodies of water.
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The isthmus also became a barrier for many marine organisms,
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like mollusks, crustaceans, foraminifera, bryozoans, and fish,
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and separated the populations of many marine species.
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It also allowed the establishment of the thermohaline circulation,
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a global water conveyor belt,
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which transports warm water across the Atlantic,
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and influences the climate of the East Coast of North America,
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the West Coast of Europe, and many other areas.
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It's a challenge to track all of the ways
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the collision of the Americas changed the world,
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but it's safe to say that the ripples of the Great American Biotic Interchange
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have propagated through the history of life on the planet,
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and that of mankind.
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What if these species hadn't gone extinct,
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or if there were no monkeys in Central America,
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or jaguars in South America?
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What if the thermohaline circulation wasn't flowing?
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Would the East Coast of North America be much colder?
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It all goes to show some of the most impactful transformations of our planet
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aren't the explosive ones that happen in an instant,
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but the ones that crawl towards irreversible change.
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We are the product of history.
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