Continental drift
- 1 February 1964
- journal article
- Published by Geological Society of London in Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society
- Vol. 120 (1-4) , 1-33
- https://doi.org/10.1144/gsjgs.120.1.0001
Abstract
During the nineteen-twenties and thirties there was a vigorous controversy as to whether the continents have moved. The arguments largely concerned similarities between now-separated continents. These similarities did not provide direct evidence of motion. There is now direct evidence for motion of hundreds of kilometres and perhaps of over 1000 km on transcurrent faults. Palaeomagnetism also has provided strong evidence for movement, the only alternative being to suppose that before the Eocene the Earth's magnetic field was nothing like a dipole and was not related to the axis of rotation. Recent work on the oceans makes it difficult to believe in 'land bridges' or 'lost continents'. The only plausible mechanism for moving the continents is thermal convection in the mantle with rising currents beneath the oceans. This leads to the suggestion that the oceans may be widening by tension cracks along the crests of the mid-oceanic ridges.Keywords
This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- Heat flow data analysisReviews of Geophysics, 1963
- Geology and Geochronology of the Seychelles Islands and Structure of the Floor of the Arabian SeaNature, 1963
- Hypothesis of Earth's BehaviourNature, 1963
- Palæomagnetic Evidence Relevant to a Change in the Earth's RadiusNature, 1961
- Squantum “Tillite”, Massachusetts—Evidence of Glaciation or Subaqueous Mass Movements?GSA Bulletin, 1961
- Origin of the Gulf of CaliforniaGSA Bulletin, 1961
- HORIZONTAL DISPLACEMENTS IN THE FLOOR OF THE NORTHEASTERN PACIFIC OCEANGSA Bulletin, 1961
- The East Pacific RiseScience, 1960
- REVIEW OF PALEOMAGNETISMGSA Bulletin, 1960
- Continental drift, ein MaerchenAmerican Journal of Science, 1944