Geology : The role of megacontinents in the supercontinent cycle
来源:项目办    发布日期:2021-01-25

  Supercontinent Pangea was preceded by the formation of Gondwana, a “megacontinent” about half the size of Pangea. There is much debate, however, over what role the assembly of the precursor megacontinent played in the Pangean supercontinent cycle. Here we demonstrate that the past three cycles of supercontinent amalgamation were each preceded by 200 m.y. by the assembly of a megacontinent akin to Gondwana, and that the building of a megacontinent is a geodynamically important precursor to supercontinent amalgamation. The recent assembly of Eurasia is considered as a fourth megacontinent associated with future supercontinent Amasia. We use constraints from seismology of the deep mantle for Eurasia and paleogeography for Gondwana to develop a geodynamic model for megacontinent assembly and subsequent supercontinent amalgamation. As a supercontinent breaks up, a megacontinent assembles along the subduction girdle that encircled it, at a specifc location where the downwelling is most intense. The megacontinent then migrates along the girdle where it collides with other continents to form a supercontinent. The geometry of this model is consistent with the kinematic transitions from Rodinia to Gondwana to Pangea.

  

  研究成果发表于国际顶级学术期刊Geology。(Chong Wang, Ross N. Mitchell, J. Brendan Murphy, Peng Peng, Christopher J. Spencer; The role of megacontinents in the supercontinent cycle. Geology 2020; doi: https://doi.org/10.1130/G47988.1)

 

  延伸阅读:Science期刊对该文章的相关报道——What might Earth’s next supercontinent look like? New study provides clues