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To: Bernard Marx
Seriously, nobody knows why Pangea: 1) came together and 2) then split again. If you move mobile plates around on a sphere long enough, you'll ram them together and then split them up again eventually (because the process which drives the plates (mantle convection) is still operating.)

As for kimberlites, there is a large, professional literature. The best reference is:

Wylie P.J. (1967) Kimberlites, in Ultramafic and Related Rocks, J. Wiley and Sons, New York, pp. 240-278.

Good luck!

26 posted on 01/29/2002 11:20:33 AM PST by Cincinatus
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To: Cincinatus
As for kimberlites, there is a large, professional literature.

Thanks very much for taking the time to post a reference. I'll definitely try to find it. Meanwhile, I've found a lot of interesting stuff on-line.

Yes, convection is pretty interesting. I melt quite a bit of gold and silver for casting jewelry and have always thought the "scum" on the surface of the melt is a fair analog for what's happening to the continents on earth's molten core (enormous differences, of course, but an analog as I said). The movement of the surface scum on molten metal seems to be related to the direction of heat application and the total amount of heat. Those two factors are probably the major ones in plate tectonics (apart from earth's rotational effects, gravitational forces, the presence of immense quantities of liquid water, etc., etc.) It still seems plausible that impacts may play some role from time to time.

27 posted on 01/29/2002 11:35:42 AM PST by Bernard Marx
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To: Cincinatus

Ok heres what you want to know.

Ill try to keep it short. When heavy planets form initially they heat up. and are molten. than as they start to form a atmosphere the surfaced start to cold and form a think layer of mass, which over time condensates to a local point do to rotation of the planet( Pangaea) the subsurface layer( under the liquid, typically water based, forms a solid crust. This a common scenario fyi and and about 85 percent of starts have planets and about 1 in 1000 stars have some from of live. Now what happened here is that a very large meteor pinged earth like a pool ball, near what was than northern africa roughly, according to most maps, and fractured the crust like a egg shell, this is also very common occurance over such a long period of time. hence the creation of the plates, what happens that causes great extinctions in life forms is, as the fractures occur you get massive volcanic activity all at the the same time along the fractured plate boundrys, which causes a number of effectss, the 2 primary being poisonous gases and atmospheric changes in content and Temperature, which tends to crush most forms of life, much of what goes extinct depends on the type and severity of the effects and somewhat on geological locations etc etc etc you can figure the rest ,,it can actually be modeled. if your understanding/science is great enough. please forgive the bad grammer and this is a summary fyi and not complete detail..didnt fell like typing to much or editing to much :) Im tired and its late


40 posted on 05/25/2007 9:16:58 PM PDT by AHLISH
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