NowComment
2-Pane Combined
Comments:
Full Summaries Sorted

How the West Was Done


0 General Document comments
0 Sentence and Paragraph comments
0 Image and Video comments


How the West was Done

New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 1 0
No paragraph-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 1, Sentence 1 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.

Tectonic history of North America’s Pacific Rim gets even more jumbled
By Erin Wayman

New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 2 0
No paragraph-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 2, Sentence 1 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 2, Sentence 2 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.

Web edition: April 3, 2013
Print edition: May 4, 2013; Vol.183
#9 (p. 19)

New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 3 0
No paragraph-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 3, Sentence 1 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 3, Sentence 2 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 3, Sentence 3 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.

New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 4 (Image 1) 0
No whole image conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Whole Image 0
No whole image conversations. Start one.

Scientists used seismic waves to create this 3-D image of the Farallon plate extending 1,800 kilometers beneath North America (each color represents a 200-kilometer change in depth). Credit: K. Sigloch

New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 5 0
No paragraph-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 5, Sentence 1 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 5, Sentence 2 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.

The building of western North America wasn’t a simple construction job. Multiple sections of seafloor slid beneath the continent and each other like conveyor belts, researchers suggest, bringing islands in from different directions and pasting them to the western edge of North America in a jumble of rugged terrain.

New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 6 0
No paragraph-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 6, Sentence 1 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 6, Sentence 2 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.

“It’s a major change in how we view the tectonic history of North America,” says geophysicist Don Forsyth of Brown University in Providence, R.I., who wasn’t involved in the work. “It’s a mini-revolution.”

New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 7 0
No paragraph-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 7, Sentence 1 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 7, Sentence 2 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.

North America west of the Rocky Mountains is a patchwork of different islands and other fragments of crust that the continent accumulated over the last 200 million years. The accumulation began when North America broke free from Pangaea and started drifting west.

New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 8 0
No paragraph-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 8, Sentence 1 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 8, Sentence 2 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.

During this time, geologists had thought, a section of seafloor crust known as the Farallon plate dove beneath North America’s western edge and into the mantle. Like a bulldozer, the continent scooped up islands sitting on top of the subducting Farallon plate, which were too buoyant to sink into the mantle.

New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 9 0
No paragraph-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 9, Sentence 1 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 9, Sentence 2 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.

Three-dimensional pictures of Earth’s interior expose a more complicated geological history, say Karin Sigloch of Ludwig Maximilian University in Munich and Mitchell Mihalynuk of the British Columbia Geological Survey in Canada. The pair describes the new scenario in the April 4 Nature.

New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 10 0
No paragraph-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 10, Sentence 1 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 10, Sentence 2 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.

Because an earthquake’s seismic waves travel faster through remnant slabs of subducted crust than the surrounding mantle, Sigloch could use the vibrations to create images of slabs extending about 2,000 kilometers beneath North America. The pictures reveal that two cycles of subduction helped stitch together the western part of the continent.

New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 11 0
No paragraph-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 11, Sentence 1 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 11, Sentence 2 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.

Sigloch and Mihalynuk noticed that the shape of one slab, previously interpreted from fuzzier images as the eastern section of the Farallon plate, doesn’t match what you’d expect to find if it had simply Scientists used seismic waves to create this 3-D image of the Farallon plate extending 1,800 kilometers beneath North America (each color represents a 200-kilometer change in depth). Credit: K. Sigloch subducted beneath North America. Instead, the researchers say, this slab is the remains of two newly discovered sections of seafloor crust that once extended off the west coast of North America.

New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 12 0
No paragraph-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 12, Sentence 1 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 12, Sentence 2 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 12, Sentence 3 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.

As North America drifted westward, these seafloor sections plunged beneath the Farallon plate and perhaps other plates to the west, the researchers propose. Islands began accumulating around that subduction zone. Once these seafloor slabs completely disappeared into the mantle, the Farallon plate began sliding east beneath North America. First the islands from the initial period of subduction were pasted to the continent, then islands on the Farallon plate began piling up along its edge.

New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 13 0
No paragraph-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 13, Sentence 1 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 13, Sentence 2 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 13, Sentence 3 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 13, Sentence 4 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.

Sigloch and Mihalynuk tested the scenario by reconstructing North America’s trajectory over the last 200 million years. They say the timing of geological events on the surface, such as the rise of the Canadian Rockies, matches their reconstructed timeline of when North America should have collided into islands, based on the rate at which seafloor slabs subducted.

New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 14 0
No paragraph-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 14, Sentence 1 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 14, Sentence 2 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.

The new research does reveal that the subduction of the Farallon plate was not as simple as geologists had previously thought, says Lijun Liu, a geophysicist at the University of Illinois in Urbana-Champaign. But he’s not ready to accept the idea that there are two previously unrecognized sections of ocean crust that were attached to North America. The problem, he says, is that the researchers’ finding is based on some overly simplified assumptions about how the seafloor subducted, which may not hold up to further scrutiny.

New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 15 0
No paragraph-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 15, Sentence 1 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 15, Sentence 2 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 15, Sentence 3 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.

Only further testing, Forsyth says, will determine whether the new hypothesis better explains all of western North America’s complex geologic features than the traditional view.

New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 16 0
No paragraph-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 16, Sentence 1 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.

http://www.sciencenews.org/view/access/id/349344/description/_

New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 17 0
No paragraph-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 17, Sentence 1 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.

Reprinted with permission from Society for Science & the Public

New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 18 0
No paragraph-level conversations. Start one.
New Thinking Partner Conversation New Conversation
Paragraph 18, Sentence 1 0
No sentence-level conversations. Start one.

DMU Timestamp: October 25, 2016 14:13

General Document Comments 0
New Thinking Partner Conversation Start a new Document-level conversation

Image
0 comments, 0 areas
add area
add comment
change display
Video
add comment

Quickstart: Commenting and Sharing

How to Comment
  • Click icons on the left to see existing comments.
  • Desktop/Laptop: double-click any text, highlight a section of an image, or add a comment while a video is playing to start a new conversation.
    Tablet/Phone: single click then click on the "Start One" link (look right or below).
  • Click "Reply" on a comment to join the conversation.
How to Share Documents
  1. "Upload" a new document.
  2. "Invite" others to it.

Logging in, please wait... Blue_on_grey_spinner