Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Paleoclimatology: Pangaea The distribution of continents and oceans on Earth’s surface has a profound effect on climate. Today the continents are spread around the globe, with oceans in between. Earth’s climate ranges from hot along the equator to cold at the poles. Some places on the continents are very dry, while others are wet. In some places weather changes throughout the year with the seasons. In others, weather stays about the same all year long. But Earth’s climate has not always been like it is today. It has gone through periods of higher average global temperatures, as well as periods of much lower temperatures. Areas that are now freezing, such as Antarctica, were once warm. Areas that are now dry, such as the Sahara Desert in Northern Africa, were once crisscrossed with lakes and rivers. Why do climates on Earth Many factors affect climates on Earth. The top map shows major and minor global change so dramatically climate zones today; the bottom map shows major climate zones approximately 230 million years ago, when all of Earth’s land formed a supercontinent called Pangaea, over time? A primary and ocean currents could travel uninterrupted from pole to pole. reason is that the locations of the continents and oceans, and the topography of the continents themselves, also change. What evidence do scientists have for these changes? To find the answer, let’s take a look at what Earth was like several hundred million years ago. As described by the theory of plate tectonics, oceans are continuously opening and closing. Continents “drift” from one part of the globe to another. Many times throughout geologic history, Earth’s land Page 1 of 3 Discovery Education Science Discovery Communications, LLC Paleoclimatology: Pangaea masses have come together to form supercontinents and have broken apart to form individual continents. Between about 300 and 200 million years ago, all of Earth’s continents were combined into one giant supercontinent known as Pangaea. (Pangaea comes from the Greek words pan, meaning “all,” and gaia, meaning “Earth.”) Paleoclimatologists, scientists who study ancient climates, study rocks that formed at that time and fossils of living things that were alive at that time to understand what life was like on this supercontinent. Fossilized mammals and reptiles that lived on Pangaea have been found around the globe. The diversity of fossils suggests that Pangaea had a variety of coastal regions and inland areas. Its land mass extended nearly from the South Pole to the North Pole. Large mountain ranges spanned the coasts, the results of collisions between tectonic plates. Many of Pangaea’s large inland areas were very dry. Scientists have found evidence for this arid climate in the rocks of the Triassic and Jurassic periods. Many thick layers of evaporite rocks, such as halite, formed during these periods. Evaporite rocks are formed in arid climates as rain in the mountains brings mineral-rich water down into the basins. When the water evaporates, the minerals are left behind, forming great, salty deposits such as those seen today in Death Valley, California. As Pangaea began to break up into the smaller continents Gondwana and Laurentia during the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods, climates around Much of inland Pangaea had an arid climate. Flat, the globe began to change. Why does the former lake beds—such as this region in Death Valley— distribution of continents and oceans on Earth’s would have been ideal places for evaporite minerals to surface matter? The placement of continents form. According to the principle of uniformitarianism, the same processes that shape Death Valley today would affects the movement of ocean currents. Ocean have shaped Pangaea millions of years ago. currents help to distribute heat from solar radiation throughout the planet, from the equator to the poles. When all the continents were joined together as Pangaea, heat was distributed more evenly, and climate differences between latitudes were less extreme. Water was not cold enough at the north pole for an ice cap to form there, though evidence does suggest that a continental ice cap existed over the South Pole. Today, the scattered positions of the continents interrupts and deflects the paths of ocean currents. Each ocean has different currents, and less heat from the equator reaches the frigid poles. Air temperatures are another crucial element of climate. As solar energy is absorbed by the land or water, some of it is re-radiated into the air. It is this re-radiated energy that determines air tempertures near Earth’s surface. Water has a much higher specific heat than land. In other words, if equal areas of land and water are exposed to the same intensities of sunlight, for the same lengths of Page 2 of 3 Discovery Education Science Discovery Communications, LLC Paleoclimatology: Pangaea time, the land would reach a higher temperature. Thus, during the day, the air over land will generally heat up faster and reach higher temperatures than the air over water. When the Sun goes down, however, the land will lose its heat more quickly than the water. Therefore, at night the air over land is usually cooler than the air over water. For the same reasons, coastal areas are usually cooler in the summer and warmer in the winter than inland areas at the same latitude. Comparing the maps on the first page of this passage, one sees large deserts in the interiors of both Pangaea and the modern continents. These are only a few examples of how the positions of the continents can have a significant effect on Earth’s climate. Understanding how the distribution of land and water has affected the climate in the past can help us understand the factors that are controlling global climate today. Page 3 of 3 Discovery Education Science Discovery Communications, LLC