Back home   |   Bookmark   |   Start page   |   Site map    
Services
News
Channels
Home & Family
Leisure
Technology
Business
Science
Site Search
Free email




'Roof of the world' tells tale of colliding continents, earth's interior

TheallIneed/NC&T/UC
David Rowley from the University of Chicago and Brian Currie of Miami University in Ohio report their finding in the Feb. 9 issue of the journal Nature.

Before their last expedition to Tibet, the geologists expected to find evidence that the plateau was rising 35 million years ago, the result of large-scale geologic forces grinding India and Asia against one another. They found instead that the plateau has stood at its current high elevation for at least 35 million years.

The best explanation for Rowley and Currie's finding: the plateau has widened progressively northward as the Earth's crust thickened. "This explanation is at odds with a popular theory that has survived since the 1980s," said geological oceanographer Chris Beaumont of Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.

India and Asia began colliding 50 million years ago as a result of plate tectonics, a large-scale geologic force that slowly moves the continents around the Earth's surface. The collision took place in an area that once may have resembled the tropical Indonesian island of Sumatra, and it produced the Tibetan Plateau. Today, the plateau stretches for 190,000 square miles at an elevation of approximately 16,000 feet.

"It looks not a whole lot different in places from Kansas," said Rowley, Professor and Chairman of the Geophysical Sciences Department at Chicago. "You could convince yourself that you're in Kansas, except that you're breathing a little too hard."

According to a popular theory, both the Earth's crust--the planet's outermost solid layer--and the upper portion of the mantle layer that lies below the crust thicken as the continents collide. Then the crust containing the plateau would have "bobbed up," Beaumont explained, while the mantle fell away and sank deep into the Earth.

Rowley and Currie's research, which is funded by the National Science Foundation, supports the idea that the collision has deformed the crust, but not the mantle. "The bottom of the crust is weak and any attempt to increase the elevation increases the stress on the bottom of the crust, and that crust is now capable of flowing," Rowley explained.

The Nature paper is based on a technique that Rowley and a colleague developed in the late 1990s to determine the elevation of ancient land surfaces. "It turns out that elevation is one of the most sensitive monitors of large-scale processes happening within the Earth," he said.

The technique relies on precise measurement of oxygen isotopes, different varieties of oxygen atoms that are found in rocks formed at various elevations. Water vapor derived from the oceans displays a well-defined isotopic composition that changes in a predictable way as air masses rise, cool and condense with elevation.

As precipitation seeps into the soil, it becomes incorporated into nodules of calcium carbonate, a chemical compound found in rocks around the world. An oxygen isotopic analysis of these nodules reveals the elevation at which they were created, as Rowley and his University of Chicago colleague Ray Pierrehumbert reported in 2001.

David Rowley, Professor and Chairman of the Geophysical Sciences Department at the University of Chicago, conducts research on the Tibetan Plateau, the "Roof of the World," which reveals new insights into processes operating deep below the Earth's surface. (Photo: Dan Dry)
The technique is accurate to within approximately 2,000 feet, and it is especially sensitive at elevations of three to five kilometers (9,900 to 16,500 feet). "For asking questions about the height of the Himalayas, the height of Tibet, the height of the Andes, it's terrific," Rowley said. "But if you go to small mountain ranges or small elevation differences, you're probably not going to be able to say much with confidence."

Previous efforts aimed at reconstructing the elevation history of mountain ranges depended on comparing tree species that live today at various elevations with the species found in the distant past as indicated by fossilized leaves and pollen. But temperature, rainfall and climate change can influence the distribution of tree species, along with elevation. "It's not always clear which one is the driver," Rowley said.

As for the Tibetan Plateau, Rowley plans to examine even older rocks to see if he can take a scientific snapshot of the area as it began to rise. From this, scientists will be better able to answer a critical question: how fast does the concentration of heat-generating radioactive elements in thickening crust limit its strength?

"Some people had earlier argued that it took, 10, 20, 30 million years before you got enough heat production to limit that strength," Rowley said, an argument that his data are beginning to support.

"The significance of this research should not be underestimated," Beaumont said. "It demonstrates how a critical observation has the potential to advance our understanding of continental deformation."

About the Author
©2006 All rights reserved

More articles
New Guinea new species
Roof of the world continents collision
Global warming medieval diaries
Human migration from Africa
Global warming Kilimanjaro
Loss of ice global warming
Video Sprites thunderstorms
Ozono levels in U.S.
Deep ocean mining
Fossil wood ancient climates
Old inactive volcanoes danger
Old inactive volcanoes danger
Vertebrate skeleton origin hagfish
Global warming speed
Protons movements capture
Massive earthquakes
Icebergs global warming
Carbon dioxide oceans
Amazonian dark earth terra preta
Great Sahara crater
Quotes
I will not expose the ignorance of the faculty. - Bart Simpson.

I want an Internet. Can I have one of those? -- Spice Girl Mel B.,aka Scary Spice, pointing to a monitor during an AOL press conference

I want to get a tatoo of myself on my entire body, only 2 taller. -- Steven Wright

I think you should defend to the death their right to march, and then go down and meet them with baseball bats.-Woody Allen, on the KKK


Writers
If you are a writer and want to see your article published at Theallineed.com, just click here to submit.

Info
Today...
In the news...
Economic integration can spur development in Western Asia
Closer economic integration can help the Western Asian region overcome recent conflicts and political tensions and also spur progress towards internationally agreed anti-poverty goals, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said today.
What is your favourite foreign cuisine?
French
Spanish
Chinese
Mexican
Italian
Japanese
Other
 
Things to ponder
If you ate pasta and anti-pasta, would you still be hungry?

Did you know...
Yonge Street in Toronto, Ontario, Canada is 1,178 miles (1,896 km) in long.

Quote of the day
When men are pure, laws are useless; when men are corrupt, laws are broken.
Benjamin Disraeli

Featured article
The Manager Interview - The 5 Management Skills that Matter
A good manager establishes and defines specific objectives and desired results. These are clearly communicated to staff and responsibility and resources appropriately delegated to achieve these outcomes.

 
© 2002 - 2007 Lexur