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8/6/2015 Earth's shrinking crust could leave us living on a water world New Scientist https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn27875earthsshrinkingcrustcouldleaveuslivingonawaterworld/ 1/5 What do you think of our new site? Give us your feedback Home | News | Earth 38 DAILY NEWS 9 July 2015 Earth’s shrinking crust could leave us living on a water world Climate change will have us under water before Earth’s sinking crust will (Image: Alexander Mustard/Solent News/Rex) Add this to the distant-doomsdays file. Earth’s continental crust, which forms the land we live on, has been slimming down, according to a new estimate. If the slimming rate holds, the continents might disappear into the sea within a couple of billion years. There are, of course, more pressing things to worry about. Sea levels are rising along with temperatures and
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Page 1: Earth’s shrinking crust could leave us living on a water world · 2019-10-02 · 8/6/2015 Earth's shrinking crust could leave us living on a water world New Scientist ... continental

8/6/2015 Earth's shrinking crust could leave us living on a water world ­ New Scientist

https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn27875­earths­shrinking­crust­could­leave­us­living­on­a­water­world/ 1/5

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38

DAILY NEWS 9 July 2015

Earth’s shrinking crust could leave us living on a waterworld

Climate change will have us under water before Earth’s sinking crust will (Image: Alexander Mustard/SolentNews/Rex)

Add this to the distant-doomsdays file. Earth’s continental crust, which forms the land we live on, has beenslimming down, according to a new estimate.

If the slimming rate holds, the continents might disappear into the sea within a couple of billion years.

There are, of course, more pressing things to worry about. Sea levels are rising along with temperatures and

Page 2: Earth’s shrinking crust could leave us living on a water world · 2019-10-02 · 8/6/2015 Earth's shrinking crust could leave us living on a water world New Scientist ... continental

8/6/2015 Earth's shrinking crust could leave us living on a water world ­ New Scientist

https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn27875­earths­shrinking­crust­could­leave­us­living­on­a­water­world/ 2/5

atmospheric carbon, and asteroids whizz by occasionally.

But if we survive all that, the slow flattening of continents could end our world as we know it. As thecontinental crust erodes, land would disappear into the oceans – even without climate induced sea levelrises.

There are already movies about what the most extreme case might look like, jokes Bruno Dhuime of theUniversity of Bristol, UK, who led the study. “I’m thinking Waterworld.”

Written in the stonesTo reconstruct the history of continental crust, Dhuime’s team collated measurements of 13,000 rocksamples from around the world. They found that in rocks from the Andes and Central America – wherecontinental crust is forming – the amount of silicon and the relative concentrations of rubidium andstrontium isotopes are related to the thickness of the crust that the rocks had come from.

This relationship can allow us to estimate the thickness of crust at different times in the past. Dhuime’steam did just that, inferring the rise and fall of continents over the Earth’s history.

Continents today are about 35 kilometres thick, on average, with the buoyant rock bobbing next to the 7-kilometre-thick, denser oceanic crust, which rides lower.

But before about 3 billion years ago, Dhuime thinks, the continents were slimmer. Having less volume madethem less buoyant, meaning they couldn’t float up above sea level.

Once plate tectonics began on Earth in earnest, the continents spent the next 2 billion years beefing upwhen plates collided, pushing the crust up. Continental crust peaked in thickness about a billion years ago –around the time Earth’s mightiest continents banded together to form the supercontinent Rodinia.

The mountains raised by that event have been eroding ever since, and not enough new crust is forming to

Page 3: Earth’s shrinking crust could leave us living on a water world · 2019-10-02 · 8/6/2015 Earth's shrinking crust could leave us living on a water world New Scientist ... continental

8/6/2015 Earth's shrinking crust could leave us living on a water world ­ New Scientist

https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn27875­earths­shrinking­crust­could­leave­us­living­on­a­water­world/ 3/5

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By Joshua Sokol

A shorter version of this article was published in New Scientist magazine on 18 July 2015

offset the losses.

“If it continues for the next 2 billion years, then the crust will again reach that state where the continentsare submerged beneath the ocean,” Dhuime says.

Rise and fallSo just how worried should we be? Dhuime does say that his record of continental thickness is an inferencefrom isotope concentrations.

“There are a lot of assumptions and models in here,” says Clark Johnson of the University of Wisconsin-Madison. For example, he says, for the continents to get thinner in the long term, erosion would have toalso outpace magma that attaches to the base of the crust – not just the build-up of crust at plateconvergences that Dhuime’s team considered.

Some support comes from suggestions that continental crust may have shrunk over the last few hundredmillion years, an idea that is based on looking at subduction zones, where two plates come together and oneslides beneath another.

The first bloom of life on Earth happened at about the same time as the first rise of continental crust, whenshallow seas could host algae, about 2.5 billion years ago. According to Dhuime’s model, land was juststarting to peek out of the water and now it might be slowly headed back in that direction.

Will it be the final doomsday? If the crust does go and we somehow manage to survive in the brave newwater world, we will still face the sun’s expansion in 5 billion years or so that will swallow up the planet.There’s also the heat death of the universe to prepare for.

Journal reference: Nature Geoscience, DOI: 10.1038/ngeo2466

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