logo
400-mile-long chain of fossilized volcanoes discovered beneath China

400-mile-long chain of fossilized volcanoes discovered beneath China

Yahoo4 days ago
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission.
Researchers have discovered a 400-mile-long chain of extinct, fossilized volcanoes buried deep below South China. The volcanoes formed when two tectonic plates collided during the breakup of the supercontinent Rodinia hundreds of millions of years ago, the scientists reported in a new study. The ancient volcanoes extend the region of past volcanism in this area by several hundred miles and may have affected Earth's climate.
About 800 million years ago, during the early Neoproterozoic era, South China sat at the northwestern margin of Rodinia. Shifting plate tectonics caused this area to break off into what is now the Yangtze Block plate, pushing it toward the China Ocean plate. As the two plates collided, the denser oceanic crust sank beneath the more buoyant continental crust and slid deep into Earth — a process known as subduction.
As oceanic crust subducts, it heats up and releases water, which generates magma. The magma rises to the surface, creating a long, narrow chain of volcanoes that follow a curved line above the subduction zone. This is known as a volcanic arc.
Volcanism and mountain building in arc systems create new crust and modify the existing crust. Therefore, researchers study ancient volcanic arcs to understand how crust formed on early Earth.
Geologists previously discovered remnants of an extinct volcanic arc along the edge of the Yangtze Block dating back to the early Neoproterozoic. In the new study, published June 30 in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, Zhidong Gu, a senior engineer at PetroChina, Junyong Li, a researcher at Nanjing University, and colleagues tested whether these arc volcanoes extended further inland.
Fossil mountains can be difficult to find because they're gradually worn down by wind and water and buried beneath layers of sediment. Today, several kilometers of sedimentary rocks blanket the interior of the Yangtze Block, forming the Sichuan Basin.
Gu and Li's team used an airborne magnetic sensor to "see" the crust beneath these sedimentary rocks. Different rock types contain different magnetic minerals, so geophysicists use magnetic signals to map underground rock formations.
They found a strip of iron-rich rock with a stronger-than-average magnetic field located about 4 miles (6 kilometers) beneath the surface. It formed an approximately 430-mile-long (700 km), 30-mile-wide (50 km) belt stretching from the northeast to the southwest of the Yangtze Block and reaching as far as 550 miles (900 km) inland. Iron-rich rocks like these are generated above subducting oceanic crust.
The team also analyzed rocks from seven deep boreholes drilled into the uppermost crust below the Sichuan Basin. They verified that these rocks came from magma and were chemically similar to new crust formed by arc volcanoes. They dated the magmatic rocks to between 770 million and 820 million years ago, confirming that the rocks had formed during the early Neoproterozoic.
The researchers concluded that plate subduction during the breakup of Rodinia formed a ring of volcanoes extending hundreds of miles into the Yangtze Block's interior.
This finding is surprising, the team said, because most volcanic arcs form narrower belts along the continental margin. For example, the Cascades form a single mountain chain above the Juan de Fuca Plate as it subducts beneath the coast of North America.
Gu and Li attributed the wide Yangtze arc to a different style of tectonics, called flat-slab subduction. In flat-slab subduction, the oceanic plate moves horizontally beneath the continental plate at a shallow angle for hundreds of miles before sinking into the Earth. This process produces two distinct volcanic ridges — one near the boundary where the oceanic plate first slips under the continent, and one farther inland, where it finally sinks. Similar shallow subduction of the Nazca Plate beneath the west coast of South America forms the parallel mountain ranges of the Andes today.
Peter Cawood, an Earth scientist at Monash University in Australia who was not involved in the study, agreed this was one way the inland volcanoes could have formed. However, he proposed an alternative explanation. "It could be that the two belts are not part of one broad arc system and flat slab, but represent two independent but time-equivalent systems that were sutured together," he told Live Science.
RELATED STORIES
—Lava erupts from gigantic fissure in Iceland following earthquake swarm — and the photos are epic
—Melting glaciers could trigger volcanic eruptions around the globe, study finds
—Indonesia's Lewotobi Laki-laki volcano erupts twice in 2 days, unleashing 6-mile-high ash cloud
Regardless, Cawood said the work presents an "exciting new set of data in a region that has been difficult to study." He added that it "shows that the volume of magmatic activity along this boundary may be considerably greater than previously realized," and its impact on Earth's past climate should be evaluated.
Scientists think the global carbon cycle underwent a major shift during this time interval, based on geochemical records from 720 million to 1 billion-year-old sedimentary rocks. Volcanoes release carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, but chemical weathering of mountains consumes it. Both processes work to regulate Earth's carbon cycle and climate over millions of years. It remains unclear how the rings of fire in South China could have contributed to this perturbation and any resulting climate instability.
Solve the daily Crossword
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Healthy Living Helps the Aging Brain
Healthy Living Helps the Aging Brain

Bloomberg

time9 hours ago

  • Bloomberg

Healthy Living Helps the Aging Brain

A new study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association makes a compelling case that a healthy lifestyle does an aging brain good. That might sound obvious. Eat well, exercise, challenge yourself mentally, have an active social life and you'll be better off for it. Yet researchers are just starting to offer concrete data to support the theory that making conscientious lifestyle changes can lower the risk of dementia, which is estimated to affect some 6 million Americans.

Wearable devices helped spot postsurgical complications in kids
Wearable devices helped spot postsurgical complications in kids

Washington Post

time11 hours ago

  • Washington Post

Wearable devices helped spot postsurgical complications in kids

Wearable devices like Fitbits can help health care providers spot postsurgical complications in kids, a new analysis in Science Advances finds. About 1 in 7 children will have postoperative complications, but diagnoses can be delayed because they can be difficult for caretakers outside the hospital to spot. To determine if data recorded by wearable devices can help predict recovery in children, researchers gave Fitbits to 103 children ages 3 to 18. All were recovering from an appendectomy, a common surgery in kids. The devices monitored heart rate and step-count data, sleep and other biometrics. They recorded 2,163 total monitoring days. The researchers used the data to find circadian patterns in the children's biometrics during each day after their surgery. Of 94 children whose data could be used, 58 had a normal recovery, 23 had abnormal symptoms such as diarrhea but no ultimate complication, and 13 had a postoperative complication. The researchers used a machine-learned model to predict complications using the Fibits and biorhythms. Daily patterns associated with activity, such as step count, ended up being the most important to predicting post-appendectomy recovery, followed by heart rhythms. Tracking biorhythms for as little as 120 minutes produced robust enough data for the model to analyze. Overall, the researchers were able to predict postoperative complications using the wearable data with 91 percent sensitivity and 74 percent specificity. 'In our data, 89% of patients who had complications after discharge were readmitted and were all correctly predicted by the biorhythm model,' they write. Other research suggests biorhythms may not be as effective at tracking adults' postoperative recovery. It might be easier to use biometrics to predict children's recoveries because their lives are more structured, making it easier to establish a typical baseline for analysis, the researchers add. Other studies should focus on other childhood procedures including tonsillectomies, the researchers suggest. But overall, the researchers write, the study shows that consumer wearables and monitoring could help 'address key challenges in postoperative monitoring of children.'

Dolphins in the Potomac River? There are a lot more than you think.
Dolphins in the Potomac River? There are a lot more than you think.

Washington Post

time11 hours ago

  • Washington Post

Dolphins in the Potomac River? There are a lot more than you think.

REEDVILLE, Va. — Aboard a small motorboat, the trio of researchers navigated the waters of Chesapeake Bay. It was two hours into their trip, and there was no sign of what they'd come looking for. They watched and waited, at one point plucking a plastic bottle from the water. The researchers, based out of Georgetown University, were accustomed to long stretches with nothing but birds and fishing boats as far as the eye could see.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store