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

344,224 views

2023-03-02 ・ TED-Ed


New videos

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

344,224 views ・ 2023-03-02

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:06
In the early 20th century,
0
6961
1627
00:08
a meteorologist named Alfred Wegener noticed striking similarities
1
8588
4379
00:12
between the coasts of Africa and South America.
2
12967
3003
00:16
These observations led him to propose a controversial new theory:
3
16179
3920
00:20
perhaps these and many other continents had once been connected
4
20183
4045
00:24
in a single, gigantic landmass.
5
24228
2378
00:26
Wegener’s Theory of Continental Drift directly contradicted the popular opinion
6
26939
5172
00:32
that Earth’s continents had remained steady for millennia,
7
32111
3003
00:35
and it took almost 50 years for his advocates
8
35114
3003
00:38
to convince the larger scientific community.
9
38117
2461
00:40
But today, we know something even more exciting—
10
40828
2586
00:43
Pangea was only the latest in a long lineage of supercontinents,
11
43790
4838
00:48
and it won’t be the last.
12
48628
1835
00:50
Continental Drift laid the foundation for our modern theory of plate tectonics,
13
50713
5297
00:56
which states that Earth’s crust is made of vast, jagged plates
14
56052
4254
01:00
that shift over a layer of partially molten rock called the mantle.
15
60306
4588
01:05
These plates only move at rates of around 2.5 to 10 centimeters per year,
16
65269
6006
01:11
but those incremental movements shape the planet's surface.
17
71526
3587
01:15
So to determine when a new supercontinent will emerge,
18
75363
3044
01:18
we need to predict where these plates are headed.
19
78407
2670
01:21
One approach here is to look at how they’ve moved in the past.
20
81661
3378
01:25
Geologists can trace the position of continents over time
21
85039
3670
01:28
by measuring changes in Earth’s magnetic field.
22
88709
2920
01:32
When molten rock cools, its magnetic minerals are “frozen”
23
92130
3962
01:36
at a specific point in time.
24
96092
1960
01:38
So by calculating the direction and intensity
25
98136
2836
01:40
of a given rock’s magnetic field,
26
100972
2252
01:43
we can discover the latitude at which it was located at the time of cooling.
27
103224
4463
01:48
But this approach has serious limitations.
28
108020
2586
01:50
For one thing, a rock’s magnetic field doesn’t tell us the plate’s longitude,
29
110606
4547
01:55
and the latitude measurement could be either north or south.
30
115319
3254
01:59
Worse still, this magnetic data gets erased when the rock is reheated,
31
119073
4755
02:03
like during continental collisions or volcanic activity.
32
123828
3503
02:07
So geologists need to employ other methods to reconstruct the continents’ positions.
33
127582
5964
02:13
Dating local fossils and comparing them to the global fossil record
34
133838
4004
02:17
can help identifying previously connected regions.
35
137842
3295
02:21
The same is true of cracks and other deformations in the Earth's crust,
36
141262
4630
02:25
which can sometimes be traced across plates.
37
145892
3169
02:29
Using these tools, scientists have pieced together
38
149687
3212
02:32
a relatively reliable history of plate movements,
39
152899
3336
02:36
and their research revealed a pattern spanning hundreds of millions of years.
40
156402
4379
02:41
What’s now known as the Wilson Cycle
41
161032
2419
02:43
predicts how continents diverge and reassemble.
42
163451
3044
02:46
And it currently predicts the next supercontinent will form
43
166579
3545
02:50
50 to 250 million years from now.
44
170124
3420
02:53
We don’t have much certainty on what that landmass will look like.
45
173836
3545
02:57
It could be a new Pangea that emerges from the closing of the Atlantic.
46
177381
3587
03:01
Or it might result from the formation of a new Pan-Asian ocean.
47
181260
4338
03:05
But while its shape and size remain a mystery,
48
185806
2837
03:08
we do know these changes will impact much more than our national borders.
49
188643
4671
03:13
In the past, colliding plates have caused major environmental upheavals.
50
193689
5172
03:19
When the Rodinia supercontinent broke up circa 750 million years ago,
51
199070
5213
03:24
it left large landmasses vulnerable to weathering.
52
204283
3462
03:28
This newly exposed rock absorbed more carbon dioxide from rainfall,
53
208079
4880
03:33
eventually removing so much atmospheric CO2
54
213042
3462
03:36
that the planet was plunged into a period called Snowball Earth.
55
216504
4588
03:41
Over time, volcanic activity released enough CO2 to melt this ice,
56
221801
4880
03:46
but that process took another 4 to 6 million years.
57
226681
3920
03:50
Meanwhile, when the next supercontinent assembles,
58
230768
2920
03:53
it's more likely to heat things up.
59
233688
1960
03:55
Shifting plates and continental collisions could create and enlarge
60
235940
4504
04:00
cracks in the Earth’s crust,
61
240444
1919
04:02
potentially releasing huge amounts of carbon and methane into the atmosphere.
62
242363
4713
04:07
This influx of greenhouse gases would rapidly heat the planet,
63
247243
4212
04:11
possibly triggering a mass extinction.
64
251455
2461
04:14
The sheer scale of these cracks would make them almost impossible to plug,
65
254292
4379
04:18
and even if we could, the resulting pressure would just create new ruptures.
66
258671
4254
04:23
Fortunately, we have at least 50 million years to come up with a solution here,
67
263050
4463
04:27
and we might already be onto something.
68
267722
2168
04:30
In Iceland, recently conducted trials were able to store carbon in basalt,
69
270141
5422
04:35
rapidly transforming these gases into stone.
70
275813
3212
04:39
So it’s possible a global network of pipes
71
279150
2752
04:41
could redirect vented gases into basalt outcrops,
72
281902
3879
04:45
mitigating some of our emissions now and protecting our supercontinental future.
73
285781
4797
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7