• A big whack that made the moon may have also created continents that mo

    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Fri Jun 21 11:27:39 2024
    XPost: alt.astronomy, alt.fan.heinlein

    A big whack that made the moon may have also created continents that move

    June 19, 2024 at 11:31 am
    A rendering of Earth’s collision with a Mars-size planetary object
    called Theia 4.44 billion years ago. Computer simulations suggest that a collision with another planetary object early in Earth’s history may
    have provided the heat to set off plate tectonics. (Hernán Cañellas via
    The New York Times)

    A rendering of Earth’s collision with a Mars-size planetary object
    called Theia 4.44 billion years ago. Computer simulations suggest that a collision with another... (Hernán Cañellas via The New York Times)More
    By Lucas Joel
    The New York Times
    Some 4.5 billion years ago, many scientists say, Earth had a meetup with
    Theia, another planetary object the size of Mars. When the two worlds
    collided in a big whack, the thinking goes, debris shot into space, got
    locked into the orbit of the young, damaged Earth and led to the
    formation of our moon.

    But the collision with Theia may have done more than that, according to
    a study published last month in the journal Geophysical Research
    Letters. The impact may have given rise to something else: plate
    tectonics, the engine that drives the motion of Earth’s giant
    continental and oceanic plates and causes earthquakes, volcanic
    eruptions and the eventual remaking of our planet’s surface about every
    200 million years.

    Earth scientists have long studied and debated the origin of plate
    tectonics, and other theories have been offered. Qian Yuan, a
    postdoctoral researcher at the California Institute of Technology and an
    author of the new paper, and his colleagues make the case for the Theia collision as the source of plate tectonics. They reason from computer simulations that the event produced the heat needed in Earth’s early
    days to get the process going.

    Tectonics starts with superheated plumes of magma from close to Earth’s
    core rising and sitting beneath the planet’s plates. The plumes can
    weaken the crust, and lava can erupt and push aside overriding plates.

    Driven by the erupting lava, plates scrape past and collide with each
    other, and they can also dive beneath other plates and into the planet’s interior in a process called subduction.

    In earlier research, Yuan described continent-size “blobs” floating some 2,000 miles beneath Earth’s surface near the core. He and his team think those blobs are remnants of Theia that, delivered violently, created the
    heat needed to form the first tectonics-driving plumes. The giant blobs
    are believed to be connected to magma plumes, which means the blobs
    could be fueling plate tectonics.

    “Simulations show the catastrophic, moon-forming giant impact ignited
    the engine that drives plate tectonics,” Yuan said.

    Another clue is in Western Australia. There, in a place called the Jack
    Hills, rocks contain crystals that formed about 4.4 billion years ago —
    not long, geologically speaking, after Theia struck Earth.

    Those crystals in Australia, called zircons, form only where there is
    plate subduction, and subduction can happen only on a planet with active
    plate tectonics.

    Once Yuan learned that the zircons formed relatively soon after the
    Theia impact, he became convinced the collision had something to do with
    the start of plate tectonics.

    Bradford Foley, a geophysicist at Pennsylvania State University, thinks
    that the idea of plate tectonics starting from a planetary collision has
    merit. But it is not the only way tectonics can start, he says.

    “The giant impact is one possible way to make Earth’s core initially
    very hot,” he said. “It’s an interesting idea that I’m glad to see published for the scientific community to debate, but can easily be
    oversold and over-dramatized to the general public.”

    An alternative explanation that the study does not refute, he says, is
    that the planetary core’s initial formation may have made it hot enough
    for tectonic activity to begin.

    The challenge, Yuan explained, is in accurately representing the
    physical states of our planet from more than 4 billion years ago.

    “We have confidence in our model, but does it really represent the whole
    true Earth?” Yuan said. “That’s a question to be explored by future tests.”

    This story was originally published at nytimes.com. Read it here.
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