Posted on 08/15/2008 11:48:02 AM PDT by decimon
The Pacific is the biggest ocean on Earth, but it's getting smaller every day. Australasia and the Americas are inching closer together, and in about 350 million years the Pacific will effectively close.
That's when plate tectonics - the process driving all that slow motion, and one that geologists have assumed to be continuous - may grind to a halt.
(Excerpt) Read more at news.yahoo.com ...
ate tectonics may have already taken a global hiatus 900 million years ago, when several continents collided to form the supercontinent Rodinia. The team says various geological indicators suggest that during Rodinia's 140-million-year existence, the world's plates were at a standstill.
140 million years ain't diddly in geological terms.
Garde la Foi, mes amis! Nous nous sommes les sauveurs de la République! Maintenant et Toujours!
(Keep the Faith, my friends! We are the saviors of the Republic! Now and Forever!)
LonePalm, le Républicain du verre cassé (The Broken Glass Republican)
Rep. Clyburn just issued a statement that said that plate tectonics disproportionately affect the minority community.
We probably could use electron guns to fire electrons into space leaving the earth with a net positive charge, coupled with earth’s spin, this would generate a global magnetic field.
Of greater concern is the carbon cycle where all the dead marine life sink to the bottom of the ocean trapping the carbon there.
I guess we could do massive dredging to recover the carbon.
The electron guns might be placed on mars to generate a magnetic field and then you need to crash a mostly icy comet into mars to get the water back.
somebody call algore quick he must stop this.....
That would be the Wilson cycle, I think. Named after J. Tuzo Wilson, who observed that the Atlantic Ocean (or another ocean in roughly the same position between N. America and Europe) had opened and closed several times. Somehow that did not stop plate tectonics, nor did the formation of Pangea after the last closure.
250 million years ago there was only one continent, Pangea it has been called, there might once again be only one. But as long as the 'engine' at the earth's core is still running, that too will evenutally break up.
That's how I read the article. That there would be a 'hesitation' following some continental coziness.
(350 million-year old Sandra Bullock) - "We've got to somehow slow down these continents from crashing."
(350 million-year old Keanu Reeves) - "WHOOAAA!"
(350 million-year old Al Gore) - “We have just ten years...”
Only after there's been 1.4 billion quarterly fundraisers.
...sorry...couldn't resist.
I was wondering when Al Gore would get around to tackling that pesky continnetial drift problem.
Most conducted by Will Robinson.
In less than half the time it takes for that to happen, Earth will be irrelevant to the human race. If there still is a human race. We might well evolve to something considerably different in a tenth of that time.
Given our current rate of technological advance, you'd think we'll be outta here within ten thousand years.
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On a History Channel show about the history of the Earth, they projected that the Earth's core would cool enough to turn off tectonics in 4 billion years or so.
Maybe that's when Obambi was thinking we'd be up to "57 states" -- we'd welcome Australia, New Zealand, various Pacific island nations, etc.......
450 million years... I guess that means I really don’t need to wait up for it.
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