Zone1 Earth set to become planet Dune in 200 to 300 million years (except for the giant worms, likely)

peacefan

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Mar 8, 2018
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Hundreds of millions of years from now, Earth will look unrecognizable as the globe’s largest ocean vanishes, and researchers say the continent “Amasia” will form from the collision of North America and Asia.

A study recently published in National Science Review highlights the findings by a team of researchers at Curtin University in Australia.

According to researchers, every year the Pacific Ocean decreases in size by a few centimeters, and with depictions from a supercomputer, they expect a new continent will form in 200 to 300 million years.

“By simulating how the Earth’s tectonic plates are expected to evolve using a supercomputer, we were able to show that in less than 300 million years’ time it is likely to be the Pacific Ocean that will close, allowing for the formation of Amasia, debunking some previous scientific theories,” lead author Dr. Chuan Huang, from Curtin University, said in a statement.

The movement of tectonic plates is not a new trend, and Huang said over the last two billion years a supercontinent forms about every 600 million years.

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Amasia
Scientists expect America to collide with Asia forming the supercontinent "Amasia."Curtin University
Globe
Researchers believe the Pacific Ocean will close in 200-300 million years.Getty Images/Science Photo Libra
Pacific Ocean
A new study says the Pacific Ocean is shrinking.Getty Images/iStockphoto
If the latest research is accurate, Earth’s seven continents will slowly merge into one giant landmass, surrounded by what are known as the Atlantic and Indian oceans.

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Researchers said a key part of the new supercontinent would be the movement of Australia.

The continent is expected to first collide with Asia, before North America merges with Asia, ending the Pacific Ocean as we know it.

The research team said the Pacific Ocean is what is left of the Panthalassa super ocean and has been shrinking since about the era of dinosaurs.

Panthalassa surrounded the last supercontinent, which experts refer to as Pangaea.

Pangaea is thought to have started breaking apart more than 200 million years ago and led to the land and ocean formations we know today.

With the new continent, climate patterns will change, and a large part of “Amasia” could resemble a desert because of a lack of maritime influence.

“Earth as we know it will be drastically different when Amasia forms. The sea level is expected to be lower, and the vast interior of the supercontinent will be very arid with high daily temperature ranges,” co-author Zheng-Xiang Li, from Curtin University, said in a statement.

“Earth as we know it will be drastically different when Amasia forms. The sea level is expected to be lower, and the vast interior of the supercontinent will be very arid with high daily temperature ranges,” co-author Zheng-Xiang Li, from Curtin University, said in a statement.
 
If we give up our cars and light bulbs now ... can we avoid this disastrous future?!

How many days to the "tipping point"?!
 



“Earth as we know it will be drastically different when Amasia forms. The sea level is expected to be lower, and the vast interior of the supercontinent will be very arid with high daily temperature ranges,” co-author Zheng-Xiang Li, from Curtin University, said in a statement.
....because of global warming
 



“Earth as we know it will be drastically different when Amasia forms. The sea level is expected to be lower, and the vast interior of the supercontinent will be very arid with high daily temperature ranges,” co-author Zheng-Xiang Li, from Curtin University, said in a statement.
not sure if everyone knows this but continents dont float and cant collide into each other, and if all the water dried up they are still connected by land thats under the water,,,
 
not sure if everyone knows this but continents dont float and cant collide into each other

Actually, they don't float on the water, they "float" along with the ever-moving Earth's crust which is constantly in motion as pressure from the extremely hot Earth's mantle is forced to the surface.
 
Thank God that none of the scientists predicting this will be alive then to be laughed at..........they won't will they? Pelosi might.
 
Parthenogenesis reproduction.......asexual. and still they'll put a bag over their own head.
 
Actually, they don't float on the water, they "float" along with the ever-moving Earth's crust which is constantly in motion as pressure from the extremely hot Earth's mantle is forced to the surface.
the whole of the crust floats not the continents,, they are connected by land under the water,,

so as I said,, if the water goes away the continents will not collide with each other,,,
 
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Dune was all desert and made that way by the presence of the giant worms and their offspring which contained the water by trapping it beneath the surface.

The water on earth will still be there but just redistributed across its surface.

So if you want earth to be like Dune there's going to have to be sand worms to establish that type of ecology.

*****SMILE****



:)
 
not sure if everyone knows this but continents dont float and cant collide into each other, and if all the water dried up they are still connected by land thats under the water,,,
That's a bald faced lie! The continents are connected by tunnels and secret elevators without ushers!
 

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