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![]() don findlay wrote: WillE1 wrote: "don findlay" wrote in message oups.com... Don Findlay has a link on his website about Plate Tectonics saying to "ask a guru a question" - down the bottom of his page http://users.indigo.net.au/don/ee/abstract.html Does anybody have any idea of a reasonable question I could ask about plate tectonics? Does plate Tectonics have any questions? Or only answers? And if it's only got answers, what's the biggest one? Where are the nearest hot springs from here? It has been ages since I've been in one. Time for me to take a break. While I am sitting in the geothermal pool I promise to think about your question Don. And when I get back, I'll have a few questions for you. Will E. Right, Will, .. Just don't fall asleep in the pool, will you.... You are our only hope to test these gurusome badunkabadunks. Here's one to be going on with, ...for anybody to answer (..reveal me for the ignoramus I am increasingly finding myself to be) ...I can't remember ever coming across any allusion to the problem this 'cold descending slab' (the one Mr Uyeda says is being pushed down by the continental side of the equation) (and for which that other fellow got a prize for helping him say so) confronts when it meets the higher temperature regime it's going down into. Why doesn't the heat down there make it pop back up where it came from? (Like it does at the other end of the cycle - drives everything up) Because the continents are pushing it down? ..pushing it through the eclogite transition and making it dense so it sinks? Denser than what? Denser than the basalt etc it used to be? Or the eclogite already down there?? We've been through the bit about the continents pushing the shubducting slab down before, ..so this is just about the next bit of nonsense, ..the failure of heat-source at this end of the cycle to push everything back up. Blobtonics always worth a google-up for a laugh ..and ambient rise of the mantle when the slab goes down is an even better one... Or what about this one, under the "more stories" banner:- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- "Suction and pull drive movement of Earth's plates, U-M researchers show.." ( http://www.umich.edu/~urecord/0203/O..._suction.shtml ) (Can anybody maybe find a few questions hiding in here? ) "When two plates collide, one is forced beneath the other into the mantle .... creating what geologists call a subduction zone. Because subducting slabs are colder and more dense than surrounding mantle material, they tend to sink like a lead ball in a vat of molasses. ... "It's been known that slabs (portions of plates that extend down into the Earth) drive convection in Earth's mantle, and ultimately the motion of the surface plates, but it hasn't been well established exactly how that happens-the ideas have been fairly vague," says Clinton Conrad, a postdoctoral fellow in the department of geological sciences. "There are two main ways these sinking slabs might influence plate motion. If a slab is attached to a plate, the slab can directly pull the plate toward the subduction zone. A slab that is not well attached to a plate, on the other hand, can't pull directly on the plate. Instead, as it sinks, it sets up circulation patterns in the mantle that exert a sort of suction force, drawing nearby plates toward the subduction zone much as floating toys are drawn toward the outlet of a draining bathtub. "To understand the relative importance of slab pull and slab suction forces, Conrad and Carolina Lithgow-Bertelloni, an assistant professor of geological sciences with whom he worked on the project, developed models in which: 1) only slab suction was operating; 2) only slab pull was operating; and 3) both slab suction and slab pull were at work. Then they compared the plate motions that would result from each of these scenarios with actual plate motions. The best fit was the model that combined slab pull and slab suction forces. "The model also explained an observation that has baffled geodynamicists for some time. "The way the observation was originally framed was that plates that have continents on them are slow, compared to plates that are only oceanic," says Lithgow-Bertelloni. But the real issue is whether or not the plates have slabs attached, she says. Overriding plates, which have no slabs, are slower than subducting plates, which have slabs. The explanation? Subducting plates move faster because the pull effect acts directly on them, making them move rapidly toward the subduction zone. Overriding plates are also drawn toward the subduction zone-by the suction effect-but at the same time, the pull effect creates forces in the mantle that counteract that motion. The net effect is that overriding plates move more slowly toward the subduction zone than subducting plates do. "We've been able to explain that the difference in speed occurs because slab pull generates mantle flow that counteracts the motion of the overriding plate," says Lithgow-Bertelloni. "We also found that this effect is only important for slabs in the upper 600 to 700 kilometers of the mantle. Any slabs deeper than 700 kilometers do not contribute to this effect. They're important for driving flow in the mantle, but they're not important for the pull." Ground breaking stuff from umich ---------------------------------------- http://tinyurl.com/yzbsqw ---------------------------------------- Hey, .. I wonder if Stunami Sue will chip in that bit about 'mantle wind'...coming through 'trapdoors', ... Maybe after the break... I mean, ..are we supposed to think this rubbish actually has currency, ...and Plate Tectonics has a 'mechanism' of sorts? (That's the question for a guru, that is increasingly on everyone's lips...) ----------------------------------------------- **The Story of Plate Tectonics** The story of Plate Tectonics is a fascinating story of continents drifting majestically from place to place breaking apart, colliding, and grinding against each other; of terrestrial mountain ranges rising up like rumples in rugs being pushed together; of oceans opening and closing and undersea mountain chains girdling the planet like seams on a baseball; of violent earthquakes and fiery volcanoes. Plate Tectonics describes the intricate design of a complex, living planet in a state of dynamic flux. http://www.platetectonics.com/ ------------------------------------------------ This would be a joke if it were not for the tacit support of universities worldwide, and the billions of dollars that have been, and still are, getting spent on it. And to what end? the load of hogwash you can read on any of the (now) how many million sites (?) on Plate Tectonics - being taught in our schools? Don't you reckon we deserve a better deal from our so-called 'professionals'? And what's the question academics are intent on addressing? Do plates have slabs attached? Check out ' blobtonics' |
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