Recent revelations have shed light on the enigmatic rise of Earth's escarpments and plateaus. For years, scientists have puzzled over how certain stable continental regions gradually ascend to form dramatic topographical features. A breakthrough study conducted by researchers from the University of Southampton, in collaboration with the Helmholtz Centre Potsdam, GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences and the University of Birmingham, has unveiled the underlying processes responsible for these geological phenomena.
The study, published in the prestigious journal Nature, provides insights into how the stretching of continental crust during tectonic plate rifting leads to the formation of escarpments and plateaus. The researchers, including Dr. Thea Hincks, Dr. Derek Keir, and Alice Cunningham, have discovered that when continents fracture, the stretching of the crust generates significant disturbances in the Earth's mantle. This disturbance triggers the upward movement of the continental surfaces, which can rise by over a kilometer in some cases.
Professor Tom Gernon from the University of Southampton, a key figure in the research, explains that the rise of these features can be compared to a hot-air balloon shedding weight to ascend. He elaborates that as tectonic plates rift, powerful waves propagate through the Earth's mantle, analogous to sweeping motions that disturb the deep foundations of the continents. These waves, traveling at speeds of 15–20 kilometers per million years, contribute to the observed vertical movements of the continental crust.
Further analysis by Professor Sascha Brune and Dr. Anne Glerum from the GFZ Potsdam reveals that the speed of these mantle waves closely aligns with the rates of erosion observed in landscapes such as Southern Africa following the breakup of the supercontinent Gondwana. The researchers have pinpointed the origin of the Great Escarpments to the edges of ancient rift valleys, suggesting that the rifting events set off a cascade of deep mantle waves that drive the uplift of the continents.
The study also introduces the concept of isostasy, wherein the loss of continental material due to tectonic stretching results in the continents rising, similar to a balloon ascending as it releases weight. This phenomenon underscores the dynamic nature of Earth's surface and the complex interplay between tectonic forces and mantle processes.