The story begins from the Tethyan tectonic evolution, represented by the opening and closure of the succession of the Proto-, Paleo-, and Neo-Tethys oceans. These three oceans opening and closing allowed continental fragments of Gondwana to drift northward one after the other. Such latitudinal movement of continents will change the sea-land distribution in the warm and humid tropical region. How Earth's surface environments respond to such sea-land changes in the tropics is still poorly known, according to the authors.
First, the authors have found a temporal linkage between significant increases in continental area at low latitudes and global surface cooling effects during the past 500 million years. The authors then go further beyond temporal connections to causal linkages between the two surprisingly connected phenomena.
Bo Wan explains it in this way: "Low-latitude regions receive more solar energy influx on Earth's surface than high latitude areas. Therefore, an increase of landmass in low-latitude regions attenuates the net energy absorption by the Earth's surface, consequently impeding the conduction and convection of absorbed energy toward the poles. The eventual result is a decrease in global surface temperature."
Following such logic, the authors used subduction-driven plate tectonics in the Tethys realm to explain significant ice ages over the past few hundreds of millions of years.
Second, the authors also found that the surface environmental changes can affect the mineral resources in the Tethyan realm.
The tropical regions are ideal for the flourishing of marine plankton species and therefore the generation of organic-rich sediment. Massive biological debris is therefore deposited on continental margins when a continent drifts across the tropics. This creates favorable conditions for subsequent hydrocarbon and reservoir formation. Moreover, northward subduction of organic-rich sediments during the closure of the Tethyan oceans could result in the generation of mafic arc magmas with low oxygen fugacity. This chemical environment helps the mineralization of reduced-type ore deposits such as tungsten, tin, and lithium.
In sum, subduction-driven plate tectonics in the Tethys realm changes the distribution of oceans and landmass, subsequently affecting the balance and distribution of solar energy across Earth's surface. These changes trigger consequential environmental shifts which in turn, impact the composition of rocks and minerals along the Eurasian margin due to subduction. Altogether, the Tethyan realm and its history is an ideal natural laboratory for comprehending the processes and changes of the entire Earth's system.
Research Report:The influence of Tethyan evolution on changes of the Earth's past environment
Research Report:Metamorphic evolution of the East Tethys tectonic domain and its tectonic implications
Related Links
University of Science and Technology of China
Explore The Early Earth at TerraDaily.com
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