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[ Written September 1997 ]
As I have just recently read in the German version of the Scientific American - Spektrum der Wissenschaften - scientists have known for long that the sun's photosphere rotates faster at the equator than at the poles.
Now here is a theory I have been working on as a hobby for the last 10 to 15 years, since around 1982: that this is a common trait of all rotating stellar objects which are able to do so, be they liquid or gaseous, big and small, from galaxies to planets.
This would be because when rotating objects contract due to their own gravity, their core, becoming more compact, begins rotating faster than their surface, a difference that is necessarily most marked at the equator and least at the poles, maybe even forming a vortex there. 1
It's a pirouette effect.
I came across this idea by looking at a map of our own planet and
trying to trace the continental drift by retracing the spreading zones on the earth's surface
as shown on the globe.
| One strange fact is that there are no mountains on either side of the Atlantic or Africa or to the south of India, where in plate tectonics theory they should be, opposing the mid-ocean ridges . | |
| By retracing the sea floor spreading and running it forward again, the startling effect is a clear eastward flow of the continents along the equator, with a circular hole at the north pole ( more continental mass being in the northern hemisphere ) and a circular land mass at the south pole. |
My idea now
is that the continents are being carried along by an eastward equatorial
stream in the earth's mantle, driven by the earth's core rotating faster
than the surface.
There is a
sinus
overlay to this magma flow, which runs - complete with
swirls and eddies -
The "scars" of this process are distinctly visible on the ocean floors.
Weirdly, this magma flow seems to follow the projection of the
"ecliptic"
[ This gravitational pull of the sun, together with that
of the moon and the rest of the solar system, may even
contribute to the effect of slowing down the outer shell of the earth.
Perhaps even the fact that the earth passes nearest the sun when the Northern
Hemisphere (and the arctic) is facing it due to the inclination of the earth's
axis is contributing to the fact that there is more land mass concentrated
in the north than in the Southern
Hemisphere ] 2
outer core
( the
"Vogel-Bumps" )
as proposed by Prof. Dr. Vogel of the Free University, Berlin?
Or is it just purely mathematical?
Is it just my preconceived impression, or do series of tremors sometimes
seem to run around the world from west to east?
This, if born out by data, might help to forecast earthquakes, if one knows the spots to be monitored closely.
What are the consequences?
I don't know.
It's just an ideé fixe.
( I haven't been able to work this out on a computer yet, just a crude paper model on a Xerox machine years ago. I have made a scan of it which works quite well as an animated gif and can be disassembled again. )
How to get to the results:
The simple trick is to reduce bit by bit the sea floor spreading in relation to the mid-ocean ridges.
This only works if the Alpine - Andean mountains are allowed
to spread out in consequence, and the continents themselves are allowed to
deform in the process.
Who says they always have had the same shape as today? Neev and Hall 3 of Israel did some research on this aspect many years ago but as far as I know have met with very little response.
Let me put it this way:
| Karachi and Daressalam, had they existed at the time,
would have been neighboring cities; |
|
| as were | Kapstadt, Colombo, Djakarta and Perth; |
| further east, | Sydney, Wellington and Santiago; |
| up north, | Mexico and Singapore; |
| the former | Saigon, Manila, Honolulu and Los Angeles; |
| above, | Peking, Tokyo, Seoul and San Francisco; |
| and finally, | Miami, Monterrey and Dakar, Boston and Lisbon, Rio de Janeiro and Luanda. |
| The Cape of Good Hope and Cape Horn were one, but no cape. The Drake Street was closed by Antarctica. |
|
| All island chains to the east of the continents were once eastern
coastal regions of these continents, torn away by the eastern magma flow
postulated by me. There are NO island chains ( or basins, for that matter ) to the west of continental shelves! This observation cannot be sufficiently stressed. Just as there are no real subduction zones or consequent mountain chains on the eastern regions of the continents. |
|
| Mountain chains in the eastern
regions of continents, as in North and
South America, or Asia and Australia, are not subductive, but former rift
rims; they always ( ! ) have their counterpart further
east across the ocean, symmetrically divided by a mid - ocean ridge
or basin. Some of these counterparts have, indeed, turned into the above mentioned island chains. The Indonesian island chain down to the island of Bali, which seems to be in the west of the Australian Continent, apart from being volcanic, in my model in reality is continental debris that once belonged the eastern coast of Africa, resp. the western coast of North America ( some of it even found in the Rocky Mountains ), and the islands south - east of Bali to the eastern coast of Australia resp. the western coast of South America. I do not know if there is a marked difference geologically in those two parts of that Indonesian island range, but there is a marked biological divide between the Islands of Bali and Lombok, indicating a long separation between the two parts of that island chain which off-hand looks like it has always been strung together. - back - |
|
| This process can be seen developing in the East African Rift Valley. | |
| To put it even more bluntly: the surface of this planet has
but two true subduction
zones; southern Eurasia and western America. And I am not even sure if they cannot be counted as one, maybe excepting the branch to New Zealand. |
|
| All have traveled far, but not as far as Africa itself; although this is difficult to state, considering it is a round trip; and more than once Africa will be or has been, like the moon sailing around the world, in the place it started from. | |
| The eastern flow then is not weak, but very strong. | |
I am forever trying to find someone who could and would try this out with
a sophisticated computer program, which in principle should be simple, given
the geomorphological data; but so far nobody seems
interested. What do you say? *View*
Juergen Hinrichs, c/o
JHR@gmx-topmail.de.
Results up to now:
( Made by cutting up and re-pasting and lastly painting over that famous map of the ocean floor
from the 1960's by Bruce Heezen and Marie Tharpe )
SWF |
View the complete moving continents animated
gif as SWF - flash movie ( Size: 1.2 mb ) |
| Download the moving continents animated gif SWF - flash movie with
right mouseclick ( Size: 1.2 mb ) |
|
| Download the animated GIF image with right mouseclick
( Size: 1.2 mb ) |
|
Slides |
View the complete moving continents animated
Interactive Slide Show and Globe And perhaps compare it with the animation found here. There are quite a few similarities. ( Alas, the size of the continents is greatly exaggerated in my rather rough animation; but in both cases the result is an elongated form of Pangea reaching over the poles. ) |
| Or visit the whole thing on
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| If there is any one out there who would like to try to
work this out directly as a proper
I would be most glad to publish any results on this page. Please contact me. |
|
| For more details, see my next page |
PS:
| I also believe that the moon , for
similar reasons, must have a displaced center of gravity facing earth,
being part of a spiraling gravitational system
that has its center in the earth's core ( and this indeed seems to be
the case ).
For more on that aspect, see spacedaily.com or wikipedia on tidal locking See also nature.com for an idea on how thin the earth's crust really is, compared with it's massive interior; and how mountain chains, though the may seem high to us, and indeed have their peaks almost up in the stratosphere, they are but shallow crumples that can easily be formed by the huge forces that hold this planet in it's path. |
|
| Furthermore: The earth's atmosphere
may in prehistoric times have had 2-3 times the volume, pressure
and density of today, enabling bigger and heavier creatures to breathe and
fly ( dinosaurs, pterodactyls and before
that, gigantic insects and other arthropods), as well as forming a different
climate. Maybe even allowing for higher mountains by elevating the erosion
levels. More details to that point can be found here. Questions remain:
For your comments:
|
At the moment, this page
is no longer an
****************************************************************************
Zbigniew
Zwolinski, Ph.D.
Quaternary Research Institute, Adam Mickiewicz University,
Fredry 10, 61-701 Poznan, Poland e-mail: zbzw@hum.amu.edu.pl
With two references to this page:
The
Great Globe Gallery on the World Wide Web
( look for "Question for the next Century" )
and
The
Virtual Geomorphology
( look in chapter "Theoretical Geomorphology" )
****************************************************************************
http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/mgg/mggd.html
look for
"Images",
especially
this
one !
Using this, all you need to have is the specific ages of the corresponding
mountain ranges,
then try to reduce the ocean floor in reverse according to its age!
( It would not yield exactly the same results as my above first try,
but near enough to prove my point; or wouldn't you
agree? )
- back -
1) Precise measurements by satellites
seem to show that the earth is bulged out slightly at the North Pole, while
being indented slightly at the South Pole. This, if correct, gives the earth
a somewhat pear-shaped appearance. This could be a sign of material being
transported from one pole to the other, probably from South
to North Pole via the core.
Supplementary: Some wayward thoughts on
thermodynamics,
gravity and human economics
- back -
****************************************************************************
Lennart
Widmark's site:
http://www.acc.umu.se/~widmark/lwgeolog.html
Some of the very nicest ones are here:
http://www.acc.umu.se/~widmark/lwgeo-ww.html
****************************************************************************
Lutz, T.M., and K.A. Foland 1987, Meridional pattern of the
oceanic rift system.
Geology v.6, p. 179-183.
Busse, F.H., and C.R. Carrigan 1976, Laboratory simulation of
thermal convection in rotating planets and stars.
Science v.191, p. 81-83. >
Kane, Martin F. 1972, Rotational inertia of continents: proposed
link between polar wandering and plate tectonics.
Science v.175, p. 1355-1357.
2) View
here also: Some simple
facts about the interaction of bodies in our solar system
- back -
- The Aquatic Ape Theory ( AAT )
- with:
My personal contribution
to the AAT
and:
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The SECRET site of an astounded German in the USA
( speaking German, of course )
|
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Ein erstaunter Reisender in den USA ( deutsch )
|
|
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Weitere Kommentare zu dieser Seite ( deutsch ) | |
|
. . . sowie die Arbeit von Albin Fischer * über die Entwicklung des Klimas seit der Eiszeit - zum ersten Mal on-line! | |
| * Ich mache hier aufmerksam auf die Arbeit von Herrn Albin Fischer, Kassel, zur Klimaentwicklung seit der Eiszeit und sein schönes Poster, veröffentlicht im Orion - Verlag, Bärenreiter - Druck, Buchhandlung Lometsch, Kassel, ISBN 3-9800751-0-9, welches ich auf dieser Seite teilweise eingescannt habe. | ||
3) Dr. D. Neev,
Dr. J. K. Hall, Geological Survey of Israel, Marine Geology, Mapping
and Tectonics Division 30 Malchei Israel Street, Jerusalem
95 501, Israel
- back -
The URL of this page is:
http://home.pages.at/jhinrichs/trace.html
The
original URL of this page was:
http://www.uni-kassel.de/~roehring/Welcome.html,
which clocked up
hits
Sept. 1997 - Sept. 2002 before it sadly had to be abandoned.
Later:
http://www.geocities.com/Tokyo/Temple/5052/mirror.html
And:
http://www.geocities.com/Yosemite/Trails/9846/mirror.html
Mail
me!
© JHR
09/1997
Last revised on 15.12.2007 by
Hinrichs
4) It now seems
that my idea wasn't that crazy after all...
As it seems, while I was wrestling with plate tectonics and found that the
solution to the observed problems could really only be found in a postulated
superrotation of the earth's core, Paul Richards and Xiaodong
Song from Lamont-Doherty had concluded from analyzing seismic
waves from earthquakes that the earth's core must be rotating faster than
the surface.
And now this seems to have been confirmed by new research which apparently hit the news in the August 26 issue of the journal Science, 2005.
Well, well
They calculated that the core is rotating approximately 0.3-0.5 degrees faster
than the rest of the earth. In addition there apparently is an inhomogeneity
or "lumpiness" of the inner core. ( See the "Vogel
Bumps" )
The inner core has a diameter about three-quarters that of the moon, and a mass about 30 per cent greater than the mass of the moon.
This inner core rotates in the same direction as the earth, but seemingly completes its once-a-day rotation a little bit quicker than the planet as a whole. The studies also indicate that the fast-track axis is not exactly north-south but is tilted slightly at about 10 degrees from the earth's own axis and moves eastward. Over the years, it would trace a circular path around the north pole.
The so-called "superrotation" of the inner core is of the order of 0.3 degrees
to 0.5 degrees each year. This means that in about 900 years the inner core would
gain one full rotation on the rest of the planet, which would be about 50,000
times that of plate tectonic motion.
See
livescience.com
on this.
Remember, I did not know of this at the time
- - -
Does this really mean that the core of the earth is moving 50,000 times faster
than the surface?
No.
In 900 years, which are 900 x 365 or roughly 300,000 days or planetary
rotations, the core completes 1 extra rotation, giving it 1,000003 times
the speed of the planetary surface on the equator
line.
Or 20,000 extra rotations during the 20-odd million years it took that part of Africa once to become India and Tibet to be dragged across the Indian Ocean and rammed into central Asia.
Now that it seems established that there IS a superrotation of the earth's
core, as I had postulated some time last century, maybe someone will be able
to measure its influence on the earth's surface.
As far as I know, this has not yet been recognised as a possible motor for
the continental drift. One down, one to go.
Then perhaps we can throw some previous assumptions
out of the schoolbooks
- - - - -
Addendum 2011: The sad catastrophe of the earthquake and tsunami that hit the main island of Japan on March 11, 2011 seems to have moved parts of the east coast of that country eastwards by some 3-4 meters, expanding the country, and parts of the ocean floor to the east of it by as much as 20 meters.
Yes, that can be explained by a rebound effect. And yes, there is a subduction zone. Perhaps, though, Asia, and with it Japan, is being carried, pushed and torn ( south - ) eastwards, the effect being more marked the further east you go, opening the Sea of Japan basin, not closing it.
Go on to Tracing the Continental Drift
Page
II : Continental Drift:
Time and distance estimate
Page
III : Data basis for
flash or morphing experiments
Page
IV : Undulations of the earth's
core
[ "Descend into the crater of Yocul of
Sneffels, which the shade of Scartaris caresses, before the kalends of July,
audacious traveler, and you will reach the centre of the earth. I have done
it." ( Arne Sagnussem ) - Jules Verne, JOURNEY TO THE CENTER OF
THE EARTH ]
ARNE SAKNUSSEMM