The Pontus oceanic plate that was reconstructed by Suzanna van de Lagemaat: its location in the paleo-Pacific ocean 120 million years ago, and its present relicts. An earlier study showed that a large subduction zone must have run through the western paleo-Pacific Ocean, which separated the known Pacific plates in the east from a hypothetical Pontus plate in the west. This hypothesis has now been independently demonstrated by Van de Lagemaat’s research. Credit: Suzanna van de Lagemaat, Utrecht University
Utrecht
University geologist Suzanna van de Lagemaat has reconstructed a massive and
previously unknown tectonic plate that was once one-quarter the size of the
Pacific Ocean. Her colleagues in Utrecht had predicted its existence over 10
years ago based on fragments of old tectonic plates found deep in the Earth's
mantle. Van de Lagemaat reconstructed lost plates through field research and
detailed investigations of the mountain belts of Japan, Borneo, the
Philippines, New Guinea, and New Zealand.
To her surprise, she found that oceanic
remnants on northern Borneo must have belonged to the long-suspected plate,
which scientists have named Pontus. She has now reconstructed the entire plate
in its full glory. The work has been published in Gondwana
Research.
Understanding the movements of the
tectonic plates that make up the Earth's rigid outer shell is essential to
understand the planet's geological history. The movements of these plates
strongly influenced how the planet's paleogeography and climate have changed
over time, and even where to find rare metals. But large oceanic plates from
the geological past have since disappeared into the Earth's mantle by means of
subduction. They have left behind only fragments of rock hidden in mountain
belts.
Van de Lagemaat studied the planet's
most complicated plate tectonic region: the area around the Philippines.
"The Philippines is located at a complex junction of different plate
systems. The region almost entirely consists of oceanic crust, but some pieces
are raised above sea level, and show rocks of very different ages."
Utrecht University geologist Suzanna van de
Lagemaat has reconstructed a massive and previously unknown tectonic plate that
was once one-quarter the size of the Pacific Ocean. Her colleagues in Utrecht
had already predicted the existence of the plate years ago, based on fragments
of old tectonic plates found deep in the earth’s mantle. Van de Lagemaat
reconstructed lost plates through field research and detailed investigations of
the mountains of Japan, Borneo, the Philippines, New Guinea and New Zealand. To
her astonishment, she found that oceanic remnants on northern Borneo must have
belonged to the long-suspected plate, which scientists have named Pontus. She
has now reconstructed the entire plate in its full glory. Credit: Suzanna van
de Lagemaat/Utrecht University
Reconstruction
Using geological data, Van de
Lagemaat first reconstructed the movements of the current plates in the region
between Japan and New Zealand. That revealed how large the area was of plates
that must have disappeared in the current western Pacific region.
"We also conducted field work on northern Borneo, where we found the most
important piece of the puzzle. We thought we were dealing with relicts of a
lost plate that we already knew about. But our magnetic lab research on those
rocks indicated that our finds were originally from much farther north, and had
to be remnants of a different, previously unknown plate."
But the important realization was
yet to come. "11 years ago, we thought that the remnants of Pontus might
lie in northern Japan, but we'd since refuted that theory," explains Douwe
van Hinsbergen, Van de Lagemaat's Ph.D. supervisor. "It was only after
Suzanna had systematically reconstructed half of the 'Ring of Fire' mountain
belts from Japan, through New Guinea, to New Zealand that the proposed Pontus
plate revealed itself, and it included the rocks we studied on Borneo."
Relics and waves
The relics of Pontus are not only
located on northern Borneo, but also on Palawan, an island in the Western
Philippines, and in the South China Sea. Van de Lagemaat's research also showed
that a single coherent plate tectonic system stretched from southern Japan to
New Zealand, and it must have existed for at least 150 million years. That is
also a new discovery in the field.
The previous predictions of the
existence of Pontus were made possible because a subducted plate leaves behind
traces when it 'sinks' into the Earth's mantle: zones in the mantle with
anomalous temperatures or compositions. These anomalies can be observed when
seismographs pick up signals from earthquakes.
Earthquakes send waves through
Earth's interior, and when they travel through an anomaly, such as a fragment
from an old plate, the anomaly produces a disruption of the signal. Geologists
can trace these disruptions to the existence of phenomena in the mantle, such
as fragments of tectonic plates. That allows them to look 300 million years
into the past; older plate fragments have 'dissolved' at the boundary between
the mantle and the core.
A study from 11 years ago showed that a large subduction zone must have run through the western paleo-Pacific Ocean, which separated the known Pacific plates in the east from the hypothetical Pontus plate in the west. This hypothesis has now been independently demonstrated by Van de Lagemaat's research.
Source: Plate tectonic surprise: Geologist unexpectedly finds remnants of a lost mega-plate (phys.org)
No comments:
Post a Comment