Kelvin and Chamberlin
Kelvin
- One of two major physics-based attack on geological models (other one was Fisher arguments against contraction)
- Argues that age of the earth is limited – no perpetual motion machine
- Three arguments
- Age of the sun
- Sun has finite energy being lost through cooling (recall before radioactive decay and fusion known)
- Must be cooling
- Estimate that sun can only be 10-100 million years old; later shortened to 20-25 million years
- Cooling of the earth
- Earth starts as molten ball, then radiates heat energy
- Liquid interior possible in this idea
- Estimate that crust can only be 98-200 million years od
- Tidal friction
- Tidal friction will slow the Earth’s rotation (22 seconds/century)
- Distance from sun slowly shortens
- Estimate that earth can only be ~ 1 billion years old
- Age of the sun
- Over time, his estimates of age of the earth shortened through time from about 100 ma to 25 ma.
- Disputed by geologists at the short end
- Really problematic to paleontologists
- Problems
- Assumes a homogeneous earth for cooling model
- No layered structure
- No convection allowed – only conduction through solid
- No additional heat source allowed (as main sense at the time)
- Assumes a homogeneous earth for cooling model
- Radioactivity
- Basic assumption of no additional source of heat energy removed
- Gave rise to another tectonic model (Joly – see next class)
Chamberlin
- Follows from the American tradition of the permanence of ocean versus continent tying back to Dana
- Another attempt to use cooling-driven contraction and isostasy
- Basic idea
- Earth consolidates into pyramidal prisms
- Oceans are underlain by denser material (basalt) with broad bases at the surface
- Continents are less dense material (granite) with narrow truncated tops at surface
- Each prism maintains an isostatic balance
- Slow cooling causes stress to build up
- Released as prisms shift so that oceans sink relative to continents
- Causes pulsed deformation along boundaries of continents
- Sea level drops (regression) are world-wide; slowly creep back as oceans fill
- Normal erosion can cause some readjustments due to isostasy but deformation is pulsed.
- Earth consolidates into pyramidal prisms
- Widely adopted in the US. Reflects many aspects of American thinking about tectonics
Tectonics circa 1900-1910
- Many different tectonic ideas by the beginning of the 20th century.
- Very hard to see which is most applicable!
- Here are some for the interval 1870-1910
- Cooling-driven compression
- Suess and the nappists: one-sided compression
- Heim: two-sided compression (original Glarus interpretation)
- Dana: permanent ocean basins leveraging against continental blocks; geosynclines, borderlands and continental accretion
- Haug: former huge continents with narrow geosynclines; relatively recent floundering of some continental areas to make oceans
- Isostacy-driven – modifications of Herschel
- Reade: temperature pulsations disrupt equilibrium as heat expands rocks
- Dutton: classic isostacy with equilibrium adjustments to erosion, intrusion, etc.
- Earth physics
- Fisher: thin, mobile crust with isostacy; contraction inadequate to explains observed shortening
- Kelvin: limits age of the earth
- Composite models
- Reymer: nappes slide off isostacy-driven uplifts
- Willis: large-scale cooling-driven compression with more localized isostacy
- Chamberlin: Dana-style tectonics with addition of continent and ocean blocks that adjust due to isostacy and cause orogenies.
- Radioactivity-driven
- Joly: deformation of marginal geosynclines with radioactive heating; continental accretion