The thickness of new volcanic crust forming on the seafloor has gotten thinner over the last 170 million years. That suggests that the underlying mantle is cooling about twice as fast as previously thought, researchers reported December 13 at the American Geophysical Union's fall meeting.
The rapid mantle cooling offers fresh insight into how plate tectonics regulates Earth's internal temperature, said study coauthor Harm Van Avendonk, a geophysicist at the University of Texas at Austin. "We're seeing this kind of thin oceanic crust on the seafloor that may not have existed several hundred million years ago," he said. "We always consider that the present is the clue to the past, but that doesn't work here."
The finding is fascinating, though the underlying data is sparse, said Laurent Montési, a geodynamicist at the University of Maryland in College Park. Measuring the thickness of seafloor crust requires seismic studies, and "you don't have that everywhere; there's nothing in the South Pacific, for example." Still, he said, "it's amazing that we can see the signature of the cooling of the Earth." The finding could help explain why supercontinents such as Pangaea break apart, he added.
(Score: 1, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 19 2016, @08:06PM
I saw a movie about this exact thing.
What we need to do is send nukes down a deep hole and reignite the core. Perhaps a job for the currently out of work coal miners; you know, salt of the earth types.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:33AM
A movie? No dude, that was a documentary you were watching. I've seen the same one. It had Aaron Eckhart in it though, not Bruce Willis.