The continents are moving. When will they collide? - Jean-Baptiste P. Koehl

382,840 views ・ 2023-03-02

TED-Ed


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In the early 20th century,
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a meteorologist named Alfred Wegener noticed striking similarities
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between the coasts of Africa and South America.
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These observations led him to propose a controversial new theory:
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perhaps these and many other continents had once been connected
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in a single, gigantic landmass.
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Wegener’s Theory of Continental Drift directly contradicted the popular opinion
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that Earth’s continents had remained steady for millennia,
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and it took almost 50 years for his advocates
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to convince the larger scientific community.
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But today, we know something even more exciting—
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Pangea was only the latest in a long lineage of supercontinents,
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and it won’t be the last.
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Continental Drift laid the foundation for our modern theory of plate tectonics,
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which states that Earth’s crust is made of vast, jagged plates
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that shift over a layer of partially molten rock called the mantle.
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These plates only move at rates of around 2.5 to 10 centimeters per year,
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but those incremental movements shape the planet's surface.
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So to determine when a new supercontinent will emerge,
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we need to predict where these plates are headed.
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One approach here is to look at how they’ve moved in the past.
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Geologists can trace the position of continents over time
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by measuring changes in Earth’s magnetic field.
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When molten rock cools, its magnetic minerals are “frozen”
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at a specific point in time.
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So by calculating the direction and intensity
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of a given rock’s magnetic field,
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we can discover the latitude at which it was located at the time of cooling.
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But this approach has serious limitations.
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For one thing, a rock’s magnetic field doesn’t tell us the plate’s longitude,
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and the latitude measurement could be either north or south.
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Worse still, this magnetic data gets erased when the rock is reheated,
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like during continental collisions or volcanic activity.
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So geologists need to employ other methods to reconstruct the continents’ positions.
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Dating local fossils and comparing them to the global fossil record
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can help identifying previously connected regions.
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The same is true of cracks and other deformations in the Earth's crust,
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which can sometimes be traced across plates.
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Using these tools, scientists have pieced together
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a relatively reliable history of plate movements,
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and their research revealed a pattern spanning hundreds of millions of years.
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What’s now known as the Wilson Cycle
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predicts how continents diverge and reassemble.
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And it currently predicts the next supercontinent will form
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50 to 250 million years from now.
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We don’t have much certainty on what that landmass will look like.
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It could be a new Pangea that emerges from the closing of the Atlantic.
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Or it might result from the formation of a new Pan-Asian ocean.
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But while its shape and size remain a mystery,
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we do know these changes will impact much more than our national borders.
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In the past, colliding plates have caused major environmental upheavals.
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When the Rodinia supercontinent broke up circa 750 million years ago,
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it left large landmasses vulnerable to weathering.
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This newly exposed rock absorbed more carbon dioxide from rainfall,
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eventually removing so much atmospheric CO2
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that the planet was plunged into a period called Snowball Earth.
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Over time, volcanic activity released enough CO2 to melt this ice,
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but that process took another 4 to 6 million years.
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Meanwhile, when the next supercontinent assembles,
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it's more likely to heat things up.
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Shifting plates and continental collisions could create and enlarge
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cracks in the Earth’s crust,
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potentially releasing huge amounts of carbon and methane into the atmosphere.
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This influx of greenhouse gases would rapidly heat the planet,
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possibly triggering a mass extinction.
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The sheer scale of these cracks would make them almost impossible to plug,
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and even if we could, the resulting pressure would just create new ruptures.
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Fortunately, we have at least 50 million years to come up with a solution here,
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and we might already be onto something.
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In Iceland, recently conducted trials were able to store carbon in basalt,
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rapidly transforming these gases into stone.
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So it’s possible a global network of pipes
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could redirect vented gases into basalt outcrops,
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mitigating some of our emissions now and protecting our supercontinental future.
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