Quick Granite Formation 8
Amphigory writes: "According to an
article at Scientific American scientists now think that large granite formations could form in only a few thousands of years instead of the hundreds of thousands or even millions previously thought. This may have some really interesting implications for everything from geology to cosmology to evolution."
errrr this is not a small discovery... (Score:1)
Yeah well... (Score:3)
(sorry, couldn't resist!)
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pb Reply or e-mail; don't vaguely moderate [ncsu.edu].
Let there be light (Score:2)
Re:errrr this is not a small discovery... (Score:2)
The big change is that it may not have taken millions of years for the initial granite crust to form. But since granite is the primary constituent of the crust, and the crust had to form before anything was done with it (like plate tectonics shoving it around), this just pushes the "start" line back a bit; it's not changing what the crust is made of, just how quickly it was emplaced. And considering that the oldest rocks are around 4 billion years old, this will turn out to be a change in maybe the fifth decimal place... not too serious, I think.
Eventually the geology books will change; dunno 'bout the geography texts, though.
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Re:Let there be light (Score:1)
How profound are the implications? (Score:2)
I am also not sure what the implications of these experiments have on cosmology. From a cosmological standpoint anything heavier than helium is not that important (unless the "missing mass" consists of blobs of granite floating around between the stars!). :)
This is a middlin' small discovery. (Score:4)
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Re:errrr this is not a small discovery... (Score:2)