A new study of possible links between climate and
geophysics on Earth and similar planets finds that
prolonged heating of the atmosphere can shut down
plate tectonics and cause a planet's crust to become
locked in place.
"The heat required goes far beyond anything we expect
from human-induced climate change, but things like
volcanic activity and changes in the sun's luminosity
could lead to this level of heating," said lead author
Adrian Lenardic, associate professor of Earth science
at Rice University. "Our goal was to establish an
upper limit of naturally generated climate variation
beyond which the entire solid planet would respond."
Lenardic said the research team wanted to better
understand the differences between the Earth and Venus
and establish the potential range of conditions that
could exist on Earth-like planets beyond the solar
system. The team includes Lenardic and co-authors Mark
Jellinek of the University of British Columbia in
Vancouver and Louis Moresi of Monash University in
Clayton, Australia. The research is available online
from the journal Earth and Planetary Science Letters.
The findings may explain why Venus evolved differently
from Earth. The two planets are close in size and
geological makeup, but Venus' carbon dioxide-rich
atmosphere is almost 100 times more dense than the
Earth's and acts like a blanket. As a result, Venus'
surface temperature is hotter than that of even
Mercury, which is twice as close to the sun.
The Earth's crust -- along with carbon trapped on the
oceans' floors -- gets returned to the interior of the
Earth when free-floating sections of crust called
tectonic plates slide beneath one another and return
to the Earth's mantle. The mantle is a flowing layer
of rock that extends from the planet's outer core,
about 1,800 miles below the surface, to within about
30 miles of the surface, just below the crust.
"We found the Earth's plate tectonics could become
unstable if the surface temperature rose by 100
degrees Fahrenheit or more for a few million years,"
Lenardic said. "The time period and the rise in
temperatures, while drastic for humans, are not
unreasonable on a geologic scale, particularly
compared to what scientists previously thought would
be required to affect a planet's geodynamics."
Conventional wisdom holds that plate tectonics is both
stable and self-correcting, but that view relies on
the assumption that excess heat from the Earth's
mantle can efficiently escape through the crust. The
stress generated by flowing mantle helps keep tectonic
plates in motion, and the mantle can become less
viscous if it heats up. The new findings show that
prolonged heating of a planet's crust via rising
atmospheric temperatures can heat the deep inside of
the planet and shut down tectonic plate movement.
"We found a corresponding spike in volcanic activity
could accompany the initial locking of the tectonic
plates," Lenardic said. "This may explain the large
percentage of volcanic plains that we find on Venus."
Venus' surface, which shows no outward signs of
tectonic activity, is bone dry and heavily scarred
with volcanoes. Scientists have long believed that
Venus' crust, lacking water to help lubricate tectonic
plate boundaries, is too rigid for active plate
tectonics.
Lenardic said one of the most significant findings in
the new study is that the atmospheric heating needed
to shut down plate tectonics is considerably less than
the critical temperature beyond which free water could
exist on the Earth's surface.
"The water doesn't have to boil away for irrevocable
heating to occur," Lenardic said. "The cycle of
heating can be kicked off long before that happens.
All that's required is enough prolonged surface
heating to cause a feedback loop in the planet's
mantle convection cycle."
The research was supported by the National Science
Foundation and the Canadian Institute for Advanced
Research.
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Source:-
Rice University
Published on
27th May 2008
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