rhamphotheca:

Meet Amasia, the Next Supercontinent
by Sid Perkins
Over the next few hundred million years, the Arctic Ocean and the  Caribbean Sea will disappear, and Asia will crash into the Americas  forming a supercontinent that will stretch across much of the Northern  Hemisphere. That’s the conclusion of a new analysis of the movements of  these giant landmasses.
Unlike in today’s world, where a variety of tectonic plates move  across Earth’s surface carrying the bits of crust that we recognize as  continents, ancient Earth was home to supercontinents, which combined  most if not all major landmasses into one. Previous studies suggest that  supercontinents last about 100 million years or so before they break  apart, setting the pieces adrift to start another cycle.
The geological record reveals that in the past 2 billion years or so,  there have been three supercontinents, says Ross Mitchell, a  geophysicist at Yale University. The oldest known supercontinent, Nuna,  came together about 1.8 billion years ago. The next, Rodinia, existed  about 1 billion years ago, and the most recent, Pangaea, came together  about 300 million years ago. In the lengthy intervals between  supercontinents, continent-sized-and-smaller landmasses drifted  individually via plate tectonics, as they do today…
(read: Science NOW)    
(image: 100 million years from now, adapted from Mitchell et al., Nature)

rhamphotheca:

Meet Amasia, the Next Supercontinent

by Sid Perkins

Over the next few hundred million years, the Arctic Ocean and the Caribbean Sea will disappear, and Asia will crash into the Americas forming a supercontinent that will stretch across much of the Northern Hemisphere. That’s the conclusion of a new analysis of the movements of these giant landmasses.

Unlike in today’s world, where a variety of tectonic plates move across Earth’s surface carrying the bits of crust that we recognize as continents, ancient Earth was home to supercontinents, which combined most if not all major landmasses into one. Previous studies suggest that supercontinents last about 100 million years or so before they break apart, setting the pieces adrift to start another cycle.

The geological record reveals that in the past 2 billion years or so, there have been three supercontinents, says Ross Mitchell, a geophysicist at Yale University. The oldest known supercontinent, Nuna, came together about 1.8 billion years ago. The next, Rodinia, existed about 1 billion years ago, and the most recent, Pangaea, came together about 300 million years ago. In the lengthy intervals between supercontinents, continent-sized-and-smaller landmasses drifted individually via plate tectonics, as they do today…

(read: Science NOW)    

(image: 100 million years from now, adapted from Mitchell et al., Nature)

3 months ago

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    http://youtu.be/uGcDed4xVD4 video //youtu.be/8eqMK-9qYvk...Future is wild, video
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    So. Earth has ships. All I’m saying.
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    #geography nerd #plate tectonics was one of my favourite topics
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