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  • By now, you've surely picked up on the idea that the study of natural history is basically

  • the study of how the world has changed.

  • The study of how we all got here.

  • And of course, the world continues to change, all the time.

  • I mean, literally.

  • I'm not just talking about how life adapts, or how the climate is changing.

  • I mean the planet itself, as an object, is in a constant state of flux -- because the ground beneath

  • your feet is always moving.

  • So, the place where you are right now was not alwaysthere.

  • For example, if you're watching me in California right now, then about 500 million years ago,

  • the place that you currently think of asherewas actually on the equatorand it was

  • underwater.

  • Likewise, if you're in the UK, then yourherewas almost at the South Pole.

  • And your next door neighbor was Africa.

  • We know all of this thanks to paleogeography, the study of how the physical face of

  • Earth has transformed over time.

  • And it's this movement of the continents that has driven many of the ma jor revolutions

  • in life's history -- its advances and its setbacks, its explosions of life and its extinction

  • events.

  • So, if natural history is the study of how we got here, then you also have to understand

  • how here got here.

  • If you wanna know how yourheregot to be where it is, you first have to know

  • where land comes from, and how it behaves.

  • And for a long time, we just didn't know.

  • The idea that the continents could actually move was first proposed in 1912, by German

  • scientist Alfred Wegener.

  • He spent years traveling the world, collecting geological and fossil evidence to argue that

  • all of the continents were once connected.

  • Wegener was the first to propose the idea of continental drift -- and the notion was

  • so outlandish at the time that it basically cost him his career.

  • And part of why no one accepted Wegener's theory was that no one in his day had ever

  • seen the bottom of the ocean.

  • Until the mid-20th century, most scientists assumed that the seafloor was basically featureless,

  • like a giant wading pool.

  • But in the 1950s and 60s, pioneering researchers like Marie Tharp and Bruce Heezen began studying

  • the bottom of the ocean.

  • And they found that there was an enormous mountain range running through the middle

  • of the Atlantic.

  • Eventually, more of these undersea mountain ranges, called mid-ocean ridges, were found

  • in all the world's oceans, and they all were volcanically active.

  • These ridges, it turned out, are where the seafloor is made.

  • Geologists realized that these mid-ocean volcanoes are actively creating the rocky material of

  • the seafloor and spreading it outward, in a process called seafloor spreading.

  • But what the sea gives, it also takes away.

  • Far from these ridges, at the edges of continents, researchers also found huge trenches.

  • And here, the dense rocks of the seafloor dive below the lighter rocks of the continents,

  • in a process called subduction.

  • So the denser, heavier crust that makes up the seafloor -- known as the oceanic crust

  • -- moves under the lighter landmasses, known as the continental crust, just a few centimeters

  • at a time.

  • And as the oceanic crust sinks back into Earth's interior, it begins to melt and mix with the

  • mantle.

  • So, seafloor spreading and subduction are the two primary mechanisms behind plate tectonics

  • -- the theory of how giant chunks of Earth's crust, called plates, move around the surface.

  • And together, they explain what Alfred Wegener never could -- they show us HOW the continents

  • of our planet come together and break apart.

  • But Wegener was right -- throughout the planet's history, land masses have been joining together

  • to form supercontinents, only to break up again millions of years later.

  • Supercontinents begin to separate when the mantle that's churning around beneath them

  • starts to change -- like, in direction, or temperature, or intensity.

  • These kinds of changes, we think, can cause plates that were once pushed together, to

  • gradually spread apart.

  • When plates separate, they first create a rift valley, like the Great Rift Valley in

  • Africa.

  • Then, as they keep spreading apart, they can form narrow seas, which is how the Red Sea

  • came to be.

  • Eventually, these gaps can open up to become a whole new ocean -- that's actually how

  • the Atlantic Ocean formed.

  • This whole process of continents coming together and splitting apart is known as the supercontinent

  • cycle, and IT is what has changed the face of Earth over the eons.

  • Now, you've probably heard of Pangaea, the landmass that contained almost all of Earth's

  • dry land about a quarter billion years ago.

  • For a long time, experts thought it was the world's first supercontinent.

  • But today we know it wasn't the first.

  • And it won't be the last!

  • One of the earliest supercontinents that scientists have evidence for is called Kenorland.

  • It existed 2.7 to 2.5 billion years ago, toward the very end of the Archaean Eon.

  • It was made of continental crust that would eventually become parts of North America and

  • Africa.

  • And even though we call it a supercontinent, Kenorland actually wasn't much bigger than

  • Australia is today.

  • Life on Earth at the time of Kenorland was probably mostly single-celled, like the photosynthetic

  • cyanobacteria that were starting to add oxygen to the atmosphere.

  • Then, 700 million years after Kenorland spread apart, another supercontinent began to form

  • called Nuna, or Columbia depending who you ask.

  • The northern reaches of Nuna included land that would eventually become North America

  • and Antarctica.

  • And in the south were the cores of South America and Africa.

  • Nuna existed from 1.8 to 1.4 billion years ago, in the middle of the Proterozoic Eon.

  • And it's here where we find fossils of the earliest plant-like organisms, red algae,

  • which lived in a shallow sea in what's now India.

  • Nuna broke apart, but the fragments came back together about 100 million years later.

  • This new continent, called Rodinia, was the first supercontinent that geologists found

  • had existed before Pangaea.

  • And geologists were able to reconstruct Rodinia after they noticed that Labrador on Canada's

  • east coast fit quite nicely into the west coast of South America.

  • Rodinia broke apart about 900 million years ago, and shortly after that, the world was

  • plunged into another long ice age.

  • About 650 million years ago, the next supercontinent, called Pannotia, came together.

  • And here the first animals are found in the fossil record, living in coastal waters from

  • the poles to the equator.

  • First came the mysterious Ediacaran fauna, and then the animals that mark the Cambrian

  • Explosion.

  • Animals probably didn't live on Pannotia, though, because no fossils have been found

  • in terrestrial rocks from that time.

  • But the land wasn't lifeless -- it had likely been colonized by pioneering bacteria, algae,

  • and then, the fungi!

  • After Pannotia broke up, about 550 million years ago, the continents began looking more

  • like the world we recognize.

  • 470 million years ago, in the Ordovician Period, the first plants began to live on land.

  • The earliest plant fossils have been found in South America, which was part of the continent

  • of Gondwana.

  • Then, 420 million years ago, in the late Silurian, the first millipedes crawled through the undergrowth

  • on a separate continent just north of Gondwana.

  • And it's known by the catchy portmanteau Euramerica, because it contained parts of both North America

  • and Europe.

  • Euramerica is also where the earliest fossils of insects have been found, about 20 million

  • years later.

  • Then, toward the end of the Devonian Period, 365 million years ago, the first amphibians

  • left the swamps to explore the ancient forests that would later form the coal deposits

  • of Europe and North America.

  • And the earliest amniotes, vertebrates that lay shelled eggs on land, showed up 310 million

  • years ago, right before the formation of the most famous and most recent supercontinent,

  • Pangaea.

  • Pangaea began to form 300 million years ago, at the end of the Carboniferous, when North

  • America and Eurasia, together known as Laurasia, collided with Gondwana.

  • And, because there were no oceans in their way, animals were free to roam all over Pangaea,

  • which is why similar species are found in areas all over the world in this time.

  • But life there wasn't exactly a picnic.

  • Because Pangea was so incredibly huge, moisture from the oceans couldn't reach the interior,

  • which made most inland regions pretty much uninhabitable.

  • And of course, making things even less picnicky were ... two really terrible mass extinctions.

  • First was the Permian-Triassic extinction 252 million years ago -- aka the Great Dying.

  • It was probably caused by a series of massive volcanic eruptions from fissures in Pangea

  • in what's now Siberia.

  • These eruptions likely set coalfields on fire and dumped massive amounts of CO2 into the

  • atmosphere and oceans.

  • The super-hot air and super-acidic rain and seas that followed killed almost everything.

  • Fifty million years later, the Triassic came to a close with another mass extinction, wiping

  • out a huge number of crocodile and mammal relatives.

  • This too seems to have been caused by volcanic activity, only this time as North America

  • started to break away from the rest of Pangaea.

  • But among the survivors were the dinosaurs, and as Pangaea broke apart, dinosaurs on different

  • continents became isolated and developed into vastly different forms.

  • The semi-aquatic spinosaurids, for example, lived on the remnants of Gondwana.

  • Meanwhile, horned dinosaurs like Triceratops almost all lived in North America.

  • Then, after the K-Pg Extinction wiped out the non-avian dinosaurs 66 million years ago,

  • it was mammals' turn.

  • Living on isolated continents like the dinosaurs once did, they too diversified into lots of

  • different and weird forms.

  • Finally, those isolated continents came into contact again in the last 5 to 10 million

  • years, allowing annimals to cross newly formed land bridges into new environments

  • ones we can recognize pretty well today.

  • But of course, things keep moving today, just like they always have -- at a rate of about

  • 2.5 centimeters a year in fact

  • And, scientists can predict how the world might look in, say, 50 million years, based

  • on how fast the continents are moving, and in which direction.

  • So, what will future Earth look like?

  • Well, North and South America are moving west, as the Atlantic Ocean continues to grow.

  • Africa is moving north and will collide with Europe, probably forming a huge mountainous

  • plateau, kind of like the Himalayas, where the Mediterranean Sea is now.

  • Australia's also moving north, and will eventually smash into the Indonesian archipelago.

  • But beyond the next 50 million years or so, the future becomes harder for us to see.

  • One theory, called Pangaea Ultima, proposes that a subduction zone will form off the east

  • coast of the Americas, closing off the Atlantic and forming another supercontinent like Pangaea

  • in about 250 million years.

  • Another theory, called Amasia, supposes that the Atlantic will keep getting bigger, and

  • that North America will join Europe and Asia at the North Pole.

  • And a third theory, called Novopangaea, envisions a future Earth that's similar to Amasia

  • but with the Pacific Ocean closed off, as Australia and Antarctica move into the former

  • ocean basin.

  • By then, of course -- a quarter billion years from now -- our descendents and the other

  • descendants of the modern world, will have evolved and diversified to occupy a planet

  • that looks totally different.

  • But they'll be along for the same ride that we're on today, as forces deep within the

  • Earth cause our idea ofhereto slowly drift, just as it has for billions of years.

  • You and I have been through a lot together today, so I appreciate you sticking around

  • for this whole saga of the supercontinents.

  • As always, I want to know what you want to learn, about the story of life on Earth, so

  • leave us a comment down below.

  • And if you haven't already, go to youtube.com/eons and subscribe.

  • And, if you're like me and I hope you are

  • and you're interested in the big picture things, then you should

  • really watch Space Time, a show that answers terrifyingly difficult questions, like how

  • big the universe is and what's up with dark energy.

  • Trust me, your brain WILL thank you.

By now, you've surely picked up on the idea that the study of natural history is basically

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超大陆的整个传奇(The Whole Saga of the Supercontinents)

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    joey joey 發佈於 2021 年 04 月 30 日
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