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'Lost' tectonic plate called Resurrection hidden under the Pacific - Space.com

'Lost' tectonic plate called Resurrection hidden under the Pacific - Space.com

'Lost' tectonic plate called Resurrection hidden under the Pacific - Space.com
Oct 24, 2020 1 min, 15 secs

Scientists have reconstructed a long-lost tectonic plate that may have given rise to an arc of volcanoes in the Pacific Ocean 60 million years ago. .

But the new reconstruction puts the edge of the rocky plate along a line of known ancient volcanoes, suggesting that it was once part of the crust (Earth's top layer) in what is today northern Canada. .

"Volcanoes form at plate boundaries, and the more plates you have, the more volcanoes you have," Jonny Wu, a geologist at the University of Houston, said in a statement.

Wu and his co-author, University of Houston geology doctoral candidate Spencer Fuston, used a computer model of Earth's crust to "unfold" the movement of tectonic plates since the early Cenozoic, the geological era that began 66 million years ago.

Geophysicists already knew that there were two plates in the Pacific at that time, the Kula plate and the Farallon plate. .

Because lots of magma is present east of the former location of these plates in what is today Alaska and Washington, some geophysicists argued there was a missing piece in the puzzle — a theoretical plate they called Resurrection.

All of these plates have long since dived beneath Earth's crust in a process called subduction.

"When 'raised' back to the Earth's surface and reconstructed, the boundaries of this ancient Resurrection tectonic plate match well with the ancient volcanic belts in Washington State and Alaska, providing a much sought-after link between the ancient Pacific Ocean and the North American geologic record," Wu said. 

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