New study challenges conventional view of Earth's continental history and stability.

TL;DR Summary
New research challenges the conventional view of the Earth's continental history and stability. The study shows that the seemingly stable regions of the Earth's continental plates, known as cratons, have suffered repetitive deformation below their crust since their formation. The study hypothesizes that the lower portion of the mantle keel, which is dense, tends to repeatedly peel away from the lithosphere above when mantle upwellings initiate supercontinent breakup. This deformation history is expressed in some of the more puzzling geophysical properties observed in the lithosphere.
Reading Insights
Total Reads
0
Unique Readers
1
Time Saved
3 min
vs 4 min read
Condensed
89%
745 → 85 words
Want the full story? Read the original article
Read on Phys.org