Will new tectonic fault system kill the Atlantic? - environment - 17 June 2013 - New Scientist
Oceans come and go over hundreds of millions of years. New ones are born when continents are ripped apart, allowing hot magma to bubble up and solidify into oceanic crust. They die when continents collide and force oceanic crust back down into the mantle.
Oh? What does that say about the species who rely on those oceans? It's all well and good that it's a natural cycle, but it's gonna suck the big one for us.
Oh? What does that say about the species who rely on those oceans? It's all well and good that it's a natural cycle, but it's gonna suck the big one for us.
Oceans come and go over hundreds of millions of years. New ones are born when continents are ripped apart, allowing hot magma to bubble up and solidify into oceanic crust. They die when continents collide and force oceanic crust back down into the mantle.
Not so much us as them. Probably no one alive today either. Either way neither we nor any other species in or out of the ocean will last forever. Some poor suckers are doomed to be the last sooner or later.
I'd be far more concerned about what's happening in the near term with the oceans.
The findings provide a unique opportunity to observe a passive margin becoming active – a process that will take around 20 million years. Even at this early phase the site will yield data that is crucial to refining the geodynamic models.