[meteorite-list] Asteroid Impacts May Have Triggered Plate Tectonics(OT)
From: Mr EMan <mstreman53_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Wed, 16 Jan 2008 20:47:48 -0800 (PST) Message-ID: <223161.52615.qm_at_web51012.mail.re2.yahoo.com> There is no evidence-- direct or inferred-- that the trace of the eastern shoreline of North America is impact influenced. While much of what you relate is sequentially correct it co-mingles 700+ million years of geological history into a related event. The Connecticut River Valley is a rift valley and not a collision boundary--Otherwise it wouldn't be a Valley but the "Connecticut River Mountains" Perhaps you would like to "Muse this": Avalonia <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avalonia> And this link for the origins of the CRV Lava flows <http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/LivingWith/VolcanicPast/Places/volcanic_past_massachusetts.html> The lava flow, now seen as prominent ridgelines overlooking the valley lowlands, formed as basalt oozed out of faults associated with the Eastern Border Fault ... the Connecticut Valley sequence is determined to be early Mesozoic -- from late Triassic through early Jurassic Periods. Between 190 and 194 my North America and Baltica rifted and basalt erupted from where Patterson NJ lies now, through The Pallasides on the Hudson up through the Conneticut River Valley on through the Berkshires. This rift zone accumulated several hundred feet of basalt. Here is what is said by the USGS CVO page: Elton --- Jerry <grf2 at verizon.net> wrote: ...My musing only takes into account the fact that the Connecticut River Valley, 100 miles from the coast, is thought to be the result a collision of ancient plate boundaries. The fact the the much later break-up occurred not there, at the Berkshire Mountains margin, but 100+ miles from the CRV, just made me wonder if another mechanism might be at work. Granted, the coastal region, at least where glacial debris has not cover it up, is host to a string of ancient extinct volcanoes 30 miles south of Boston through the Canadian Provinces across the Atlantic through the Celtic isles into Scandinavia. And the "brittle" nature of these lavas may be provide sufficient explanation for the modern continental configuration given appropriate stresses applied through the mechanism of tectonics. But musing doesn't cost much and cataclysm "of the mind" doesn't hurt. > Jerry Flaherty Received on Wed 16 Jan 2008 11:47:48 PM PST |
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