Researchers explain mystery of India's rapid move toward Eurasia 80 million years ago.
Continental
drift is something that doesn't happen overnight, but in geologic terms
India has speedily outrun every other landmass on Earth on its collision
course with Eurasia, researchers say.
After breaking
off of the Gondwana supercontinent in the Southern Hemisphere about 120
million years ago, India began sliding northward at about 2 inches a
year, a pretty average speed for continental drift.
Suddenly,
around 80 million years ago, India put the pedal to the metal and
started moving at almost half a foot a year, around twice as fast as any
continent or tectonic plate is moving today, researchers at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology say.
The result was a
impact with Eurasia around 50 million years ago, a cataclysmic impact
that created the Himalayas, the tallest mountains on Earth.
That
acceleration has always puzzled scientists, but researchers at MIT have
suggested an answer; India got some help from two separate subduction
zones helping to pull it along.
Subduction
zones are regions in the Earth's mantle where the forward edge of one
tectonic plate is driven under another plate, with the sinking plate
pulling along any landmasses connected to it.
Two sinking
plates, one in front of the other, would provide double the "pull," they
suggest, which could have doubled the speed of India's northward
journey.
"The collision
scenario between India and Eurasia is more complex and protracted than
most people think," says MIT geologist Oliver Jagoutz, one of the
authors of a study appearing in Nature Geoscience.
The researchers
say an examination and dating of rocks in the Himalayan region suggests
the existence of such a double subduction system, which they modeled
based on their findings.
One of the
plates was carrying India, they suggest, adjacent to a second plate in
the middle of the Tethys Ocean, an ancient and immense body of water
separating Gondwana from Eurasia.
Two factors
could have affected India's drift velocity, they say: the width of the
two subduction plates, and the space separating them.
If the plates were narrow and somewhat far apart, their model showed, they could have accelerated India's drift rate.
"In earth
science, it's hard to be completely sure of anything," says geophysics
and geology Professor Leigh Royden. "But there are so many pieces of
evidence that all fit together here that we're pretty convinced."
"When you look
at simulations of Gondwana breaking up, the plates kind of start to
move, and then India comes slowly off of Antarctica, and suddenly it
just zooms across -- it's very dramatic," she says.
Gondwana is
what paleogeographers call the more southerly of two supercontinents
that were part of the Pangaea supercontinent that existed from about 510
to 180 million years ago. It included most of today's Southern
Hemisphere, including Antarctica, South America, Africa, Madagascar, and
the Australian continent. It also included the Arabian Peninsula and
the Indian subcontinent, but plate movement now has placed them entirely
into the Northern Hemisphere.
http://www.geologyin.com/2016/03/when-it-comes-to-continental-drift.html
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