Terrawatch: Earth’s ‘boring’ plate tectonics period

Curious report suggests calm thousand millennia of ‘Boring Billion’ was more lively than thought

Today our planet is a lively place: the climate swings from greenhouse to icehouse and back again, while earthquakes, volcanoes, mountain ranges and ocean trenches are all signs of its restless surface. But if you go back far enough, you reach a period where Earth was a very dull place. Nicknamed the “Boring Billion”, the period between 1850m and 850m years ago appears to have had hardly any plate tectonic movement, very little change in climate and a stalling of biological evolution. But was this period more interesting than we think?

Geologists have been studying the geochemistry and makeup of continental rocks from the Boring Billion. The geochemistry suggests that the continental crust was hot and thin (40km or less) – not suitable for plate tectonics or building mountain ranges. But curiously the structure and composition of continental rocks indicate that crust did shimmy around and that low mountain ranges existed. The findings are published in Geophysical Research Letters.

Instead of the dodgem-car style of plate tectonics we have on Earth today, the Boring Billion seems to have been more like a waltz on a slippery dancefloor. This gentle form of plate tectonics has long since vanished, but understanding it may give us a clue as to how contemporary plate tectonics got started.

Contributor

Kate Ravilious

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Terrawatch: is this how plate tectonics gets started?
Planetary scientists studying images of Venus noticed remarkable similarities between lava plains on Venus and areas on Earth where tectonic plates interact

Kate Ravilious

31, Dec, 2017 @9:30 PM

Article image
Terrawatch: Montserrat's volcano remains a risk
Instruments show that Montserrat’s volcano is still inflating underground, despite no sign of it on the surface

Kate Ravilious

06, Mar, 2018 @9:30 PM

Article image
Terrawatch: is Earth’s core going rusty?
Rusty bits on Earth’s core could explain how the atmosphere became oxygenated

Kate Ravilious

25, May, 2022 @5:00 AM

Article image
Terrawatch: Kilauea being closely watched by volcanologists
Fuego’s fury may be over now, but Kilauea might still produce a dramatic finale

Kate Ravilious

05, Jun, 2018 @8:30 PM

Article image
Terrawatch: Lombok anxious after four big earthquakes
Similarities to Italian quakes in 2016 give scientists hope of accurate predictions for Lombok

Kate Ravilious

04, Sep, 2018 @8:30 PM

Article image
Terrawatch: Katla volcano may erupt - but not just yet
Scientists are monitoring CO2 released by the Icelandic volcano, which may help predict an eruption more accurately

Kate Ravilious

06, Nov, 2018 @9:30 PM

Article image
Terrawatch: the reawakening of Öræfajökull
While the world watches Agung, thousands of kilometres away another volcano is shaking and geologists are beginning to feel jittery

Kate Ravilious

03, Dec, 2017 @9:30 PM

Article image
Terrawatch: why did the quake in Sulawesi cause a tsunami?
Earthquake may have triggered underwater landslide, and tsunami was magnified by narrow shape of Palu bay

Kate Ravilious

02, Oct, 2018 @8:30 PM

Article image
Terrawatch: lasting legacy of Taiwan's 2009 typhoon season
Typhoon Morakot left country with more quakes after changing stress pattern in Earth’s crust

Kate Ravilious

04, Aug, 2020 @8:30 PM

Article image
Terrawatch: how Earth's conveyor belt hides rare metals
Researchers analysed volcanoes to discover some minerals go round deep earth loop many times

Kate Ravilious

03, Dec, 2019 @9:30 PM