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Is earth growing?

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General interest discussions, not necessarily related to depletion.

Re: Is earth growing?

Unread postby The Practician » Wed 17 Aug 2011, 12:35:04

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('seahorse3', 'I') was curious about certain "facts" put forth in the video, to see if those are in fact "facts." The video states as fact that all the continents, including the poles, fit perfectly together. Is that true? The video then states as fact that the sea floor is 70 millions years old while the continental land masses are over 100 million years old, thus implying the earth is expanding. Is it fact that the sea floor is much younger than the continents? It states the gorge marks on the ocean floor point direction of movement (east and west). True? The video states that certain forest in the upper continents are all of the same type, even though now separated by oceans and that remnants of those forest have been found in the north pole (I believe it said). Is that a fact?


My plate tectonics is a little rusty, but I am pretty sure the sea floor is generally younger than the land masses, as it is on the sea floor where the surface of the earth is created-- where the plates are "spreading apart" this does not necessarily imply the earth is expanding however, because there are also "subduction zones, like the coastal area of BC where I live, where the crust dives under the opposing plate back into the mantle.

As for the Taiga, Yeah, i think its pretty much the same in Canada/alaska and Russia, certainly less genetically diverse than the tropical rainforests of south america vs. africa. They were probably connected longer than the lower continents. I see no reason they could not have extended further into the arctic circle during a warmer period of the earths climate.
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Re: Is earth growing?

Unread postby Sixstrings » Wed 17 Aug 2011, 12:54:34

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('seahorse3', 'W')ell, I'm still interested in verifying the "facts" put forth in the video that I posted earlier. The benefit of forums like this is people with vast experience and knowledge in particular areas. I'm not even close to a geologist, so, I would hope that some of our resident geologist would indulge me for a second here. There are many things I find interesting for fun.


All due respect, you don't have to be a geologist to know the earth can't grow.

Fill a cup halfway with sugar. What you have is a half cup of sugar. That's a quantifiable amount of mass. It will never, ever, grow to a full cup unless more mass is added.

The planet is mass. It can't grow unless you add in mass from an external source. I.E. a very large planet colliding with us, setting the whole crust afire in molten lava, melting down the crashing planet too, plus an explosion, and when it all cools down you've added some extra mass by combining the two planets and now you have a nifty moon with the leftover bit.

That's only way to add mass to a planet. Other than planets still growing in a nebula.
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Re: Is earth growing?

Unread postby ian807 » Wed 17 Aug 2011, 13:10:31

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oakley', 'T')he gravitational force at the surface of the earth places a limit on the size of land animals with elephants being the largest today. Elephants are significantly smaller than the largest known dinosaurs of 65 million years ago, which were huge by comparison; these dinosaurs could not possible have lived if the gravity was the same or greater back 65 million years ago. Their massive bodies could not have been supported by their bone structure. The logical conclusion is that gravity was less 65 million years ago.

Ummmm..., no.

The far simpler and more likely solution is that larger dinosaurs like the brontosauri, were largely aquatic, like hippos, sea turtles or walruses. Most of their weight was supported by water. They probably only came out of the water to bear young, again, much like hippos, sea turtles or walruses.

In today's relatively oxygen poor environment, animals don't grow as large. After we manage to de-sequester all of the carbon in the earth's crust and enough of this turns into biomass, this situation may change. Who knows, humans may even live to see it.
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Re: Is earth growing?

Unread postby The Practician » Wed 17 Aug 2011, 13:28:02

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oakley', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('steam_cannon', '
')Yep and if they post poor quality ideas they are going to openly get knocked down. I know you're responding to my bold text about this being a geology and economics website. Of course we don't need to discuss only Geology or Economics. Personally I think other topics that relate to the community are worth discussing. But tinfoil hat topics like the old "out of this world" section took away from the forums quality and the subject of peak oil in general which has had a lot of good research go into it. So I'm glad the "out of this world" section is gone and I'd rather the open discussion section doesn't turn into the same thing. Tinfoil science is bad science and conspiracy talk makes me itch.


Perhaps the world is more complex than your single minded attribution of dinosaur size to higher oxygen levels alone. I say single explanation because the second explanation you offer, genetics, simply begs the question and is not an answer at all; genetics is simply the means through which their size is transmitted from generation to generation. I seriously doubt that oxygen alone would explain why the largest land animal today is 7 tons while some of the dinosaurs were estimated to be 90 tons. Bone and muscle have limitations which place limitations on size; what those limitations are is better left to the minds of those who study kinesiology and paleontology.

Often it helps to understand things better to think of extremes. What do you think land animals would look like on a planet with 50 or 100 times the gravity of earth? Do you think that even in an environment more rich in oxygen that such creatures even the size of elephants, much less dinosaurs, could exist under those surface gravity conditions? I think your dismissal of gravity as a possible factor defies logic.


"The deepest sin against the human mind is to believe things without evidence"-- Oakleys Sig, believe it or not.

There is no evidence to suggest that the earths gravity was significantly less in the time of dinosaurs as it is today. Your insistence that it must defies Physics: earths mass would have to have been significantly less than it is now, and there is just no evidence to suggest that was so, even when you factor in the millon or so kg in mass the earth gains a year from space dust and the like. The limitations of muscle and bones you vaguely refer to have a lot to do with how efficiently they can exchange gases and nutrients. It follows that significantly higher concentrations of oxygen in the atmosphere would allow larger animals. C02 concentrations were also much higher back then, which must have been quite the boon to certain plant life. I have read that one of the benefits to being large is having a large and complex digestive tract that can break down and exctract the most nutrients from low quality sources, like the leaves of trees. This goes a long way towards explaining why are largest land animals today inhabit environments with an emphasis on quantity rather than quality. The big herbivorous dino's probably had a lot of trees to eat, because the CO2 rich atmosphere would have been a boon to them, and they also had a lot of oxygen in the air to make running their larger bodies possible.
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Re: Is earth growing?

Unread postby Oakley » Wed 17 Aug 2011, 13:43:52

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Sixstrings', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('seahorse3', 'W')ell, I'm still interested in verifying the "facts" put forth in the video that I posted earlier. The benefit of forums like this is people with vast experience and knowledge in particular areas. I'm not even close to a geologist, so, I would hope that some of our resident geologist would indulge me for a second here. There are many things I find interesting for fun.


All due respect, you don't have to be a geologist to know the earth can't grow.

Fill a cup halfway with sugar. What you have is a half cup of sugar. That's a quantifiable amount of mass. It will never, ever, grow to a full cup unless more mass is added.

The planet is mass. It can't grow unless you add in mass from an external source. I.E. a very large planet colliding with us, setting the whole crust afire in molten lava, melting down the crashing planet too, plus an explosion, and when it all cools down you've added some extra mass by combining the two planets and now you have a nifty moon with the leftover bit.

That's only way to add mass to a planet. Other than planets still growing in a nebula.

One of the recognized theories of the origin of the universe is the "big bang" which recognizes the universe itself is expanding. Of course it may have always existed and just fluctuates from periods of expansion and contraction; perhaps it reaches an expansion limit and then falls back to a central point where the next "big bang" occurs. Alternatively the energy and mass that comprises the universe may have come out of some other process we do not understand.

We know that energy can be converted to mass and mass can be converted to energy. There is a huge amount of energy arriving on earth each day both from the sun and from deep space. One such conversion of this energy into mass is photosynthesis which ultimately gave rise to the storehouse of coal, oil and natural gas. Whether this alone is sufficient to provide the added mass is another question. We are also bombarded constantly with house size chunks of ice from outer space and by solids of all sorts such as meteors.

It is not inconceivable that other processes are at work that allow for the creation or conversion of an unknown, unmeasurable factor into energy or mass within the earth itself. After all, we are hardly at the point in our exploration that we have discovered everything that can be discovered; quite the opposite as there is much more to be discovered than had been, and if we continue to have excess economic production the search will continue. We have only cleared a small part of the forest of knowledge.

You cup of sugar reference is hardly convincing. And any planetary collision that earth experienced would have predated the time frame discussed by Neal Adams. He says a doubling of the diameter occurred over the last 65 million years while the moon producing collision was billions of years ago.

Fixed quotations - sjn
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Re: Is earth growing?

Unread postby JohnRM » Wed 17 Aug 2011, 13:54:51

Yes, the Earth is getting bigger. Particles of all shapes and sizes hit Earth every day and thus add to its total size and mass. Given Mr. Adams claims, if the Earth were half its diameter 65 million years ago, it would have to have grown only 1/3 of a foot (10 cm) per year, since then. That is not at all unreasonable to believe. Considering some of the huge bodies that have impacted Earth in that time, it is very possible that this claim has some validity to it.
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Re: Is earth growing?

Unread postby steam_cannon » Wed 17 Aug 2011, 14:25:17

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oakley', 'P')erhaps the world is more complex than your single minded attribution of dinosaur size to higher oxygen levels alone...
I gave you a well studied example with proof for a group of insects studied in 2010. You want more complex explanations, you have to understand the simple examples first. And the earth changing mass and the physics of the universe changing are not simple explanations, they are wrong explanations.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oakley', 'I') seriously doubt that oxygen alone would explain why the largest land animal today is 7 tons while some of the dinosaurs were estimated to be 90 tons. Bone and muscle have limitations which place limitations on size; what those limitations are is better left to the minds of those who study kinesiology and paleontology.
The largest animals were related to birds which have extreme strength to weight ratios. As you might have noticed in history books, it has only been in recent times that we have been able to match their strength to weight ratios with machines that can fly. It's pretty simple.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oakley', 'I') think your dismissal of gravity as a possible factor defies logic.
You have no understanding of physics.

The reality is you visited some very appealing scam websites which scam people like yourself to sell books or promote other scammers. It's a business and you are confused. That's all.
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Re: Is earth growing?

Unread postby peeker01 » Wed 17 Aug 2011, 14:39:40

Why is there so much anger on this board?
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Re: Is earth growing?

Unread postby steam_cannon » Wed 17 Aug 2011, 14:40:58

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oakley', 'I')t is not inconceivable that other processes are at work that allow for the creation or conversion of an unknown, unmeasurable factor into energy or mass within the earth itself.
Now you're just making stuff up.
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Re: Is earth growing?

Unread postby steam_cannon » Wed 17 Aug 2011, 14:44:18

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('peeker01', 'W')hy is there so much anger on this board?
You've said this before. You seem to perceive any disagreement as anger. I think that's a very controlling attitude, but it doesn't change the facts nor does it mean anyone is angry. Sorry if that disappoints you.
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Re: Is earth growing?

Unread postby Sixstrings » Wed 17 Aug 2011, 14:44:27

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnRM', '[')size=125]Yes, the Earth is getting bigger. Particles of all shapes and sizes hit Earth every day and thus add to its total size and mass. Given Mr. Adams claims, if the Earth were half its diameter 65 million years ago, it would have to have grown only 1/3 of a foot (10 cm) per year, since then. That is not at all unreasonable to believe. Considering some of the huge bodies that have impacted Earth in that time, it is very possible that this claim has some validity to it.[/size]


Well..

I dunno, Earth has been around billions of years and it's not super-huge. Vast majority of impacts are in the early stage of a solar system. Thing settle down after a while, you run out of stuff to crash into. I would think the sun will expand and envelope our planet before additional meteorite impacts could add up to noticeable additional mass. Again, the trend line is *fewer* impacts over time.

What's the point of this thready anyway? We don't have to worry about peak oil, we'll just mine grapefruit-sized meteorite impacts?

Look Ma, I found new mass! Earth just grew!

Image

(that's a big meteorite actually, but what's it made of.. can you make fuel out of it.. any extra mass we're getting isn't useful other than museum displays / collectibles)
Last edited by Sixstrings on Wed 17 Aug 2011, 14:51:59, edited 4 times in total.
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Re: Is earth growing?

Unread postby steam_cannon » Wed 17 Aug 2011, 14:47:29

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnRM', '.')..if the Earth were half its diameter 65 million years ago, it would have to have grown only 1/3 of a foot (10 cm) per year, since then. That is not at all unreasonable to believe...
Yes it is unreasonable to believe that since there is no evidence to support what you're saying. The mass from meteors raining down on the earth is hardly significant compared to the earths mass and there is no evidence to support 10cm per year of debris depositing on the earth. What you are saying is the very definition of unreasonable.
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Re: Is earth growing?

Unread postby steam_cannon » Wed 17 Aug 2011, 14:50:57

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Sixstrings', 'W')hat's the point of this thready anyway?
The point seems to be to drum out all the posters who couldn't pass a physics class to save their hiney. That or this thread has no point.
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Re: Is earth growing?

Unread postby Sixstrings » Wed 17 Aug 2011, 14:54:25

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('steam_cannon', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Sixstrings', 'W')hat's the point of this thready anyway?
The point seems to be to drum out all the posters who couldn't pass a physics class to save their hiney. That or this thread has no point.


Well I've never had physics how am I doing? :lol:

Common sense to me, yes meteorites hit the earth but it's not adding enough mass to make any useful difference. Whereas the impact that created our moon made ALL the difference in the world.. life on earth depends on the moon.
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Re: Is earth growing?

Unread postby sjn » Wed 17 Aug 2011, 15:09:45

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnRM', '[')size=125]Yes, the Earth is getting bigger. Particles of all shapes and sizes hit Earth every day and thus add to its total size and mass. Given Mr. Adams claims, if the Earth were half its diameter 65 million years ago, it would have to have grown only 1/3 of a foot (10 cm) per year, since then. That is not at all unreasonable to believe. Considering some of the huge bodies that have impacted Earth in that time, it is very possible that this claim has some validity to it.[/size]


Any good at math?

5cm increase in radius per year:
Current mean Earth radius = 6,371 km:
The average density of the continental crust is 2.7g/cm³, whilst the oceanic crust is 3.0g/cm³

Volume of a sphere V = (4/3)πr3

VD = VY+1 - VY

VD = (4/3)π x ((6,371 x 103 + 5 x 10-2)3) - (4/3)π x (6,371 x 103)3
VD = 2.55032238×1013m³ = 2.55032238×1019cm³

Using the lower continental crust density of 2.7g/cm³

2.7 x 2.55032238×1019 = 6.885870425×10¹⁹ g = ~6886×10¹⁰ metric tonnes per year.
Reasonable?

Please feel free to correct any errors.
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Re: Is earth growing?

Unread postby steam_cannon » Wed 17 Aug 2011, 15:16:06

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Sixstrings', 'W')ell I've never had physics how am I doing? :lol:

Sharp as a tack. :-D
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Re: Is earth growing?

Unread postby peeker01 » Wed 17 Aug 2011, 15:33:31

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('steam_cannon', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oakley', 'P')erhaps the world is more complex than your single minded attribution of dinosaur size to higher oxygen levels alone...
I gave you a well studied example with proof for a group of insects studied in 2010. You want more complex explanations, you have to understand the simple examples first. And the earth changing mass and the physics of the universe changing are not simple explanations, they are wrong explanations.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oakley', 'I') seriously doubt that oxygen alone would explain why the largest land animal today is 7 tons while some of the dinosaurs were estimated to be 90 tons. Bone and muscle have limitations which place limitations on size; what those limitations are is better left to the minds of those who study kinesiology and paleontology.
The largest animals were related to birds which have extreme strength to weight ratios. As you might have noticed in history books, it has only been in recent times that we have been able to match their strength to weight ratios with machines that can fly. It's pretty simple.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oakley', 'I') think your dismissal of gravity as a possible factor defies logic.
You have no understanding of physics.

The reality is you visited some very appealing scam websites which scam people like yourself to sell books or promote other scammers. It's a business and you are confused. That's all.


No, I perceive 20 point bolded text as anger.
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Re: Is earth growing?

Unread postby seahorse3 » Wed 17 Aug 2011, 15:45:30

steam cannon, such hostility. I never understood why people took board discussions so personally. But, be that as it may, there is some support for the idea that mass can be created out of nothing, and you as a self proclaimed physicist should know that. Many quantum physicists subscribe to the theory of quantum fluctuations, which mean energy, mass, can be created out of nothing. This is used to explain the origin of the universe, a big bang from nothing. They note that 70% of the mass of a proton is in fact related to fluctuations that appear out of "nothing." If this is a law of phsysics (and I'm not saying its true) then it could equally apply to a growing earth theory.

Also, since you want me to relate this to peak oil, I will do my best. It is a basic geology question. If the earth is growing, then the energy contained within that earth would also grow, thus no PO problem (akin to the abiotic oil argument which I don't want to get into, but you asked).

However, I'm still interested in a basic fact put forth by the video. I just want to know if its true that all the plates fit together rather perfectly as alleged and form a ball, basically, much smaller than the current size of the earth.
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Re: Is earth growing?

Unread postby Outcast_Searcher » Wed 17 Aug 2011, 16:45:57

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('The Practician', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('seahorse3', 'I') was curious about certain "facts" put forth in the video, to see if those are in fact "facts." The video states as fact that all the continents, including the poles, fit perfectly together. Is that true? The video then states as fact that the sea floor is 70 millions years old while the continental land masses are over 100 million years old, thus implying the earth is expanding. Is it fact that the sea floor is much younger than the continents? It states the gorge marks on the ocean floor point direction of movement (east and west). True? The video states that certain forest in the upper continents are all of the same type, even though now separated by oceans and that remnants of those forest have been found in the north pole (I believe it said). Is that a fact?


My plate tectonics is a little rusty, but I am pretty sure the sea floor is generally younger than the land masses, as it is on the sea floor where the surface of the earth is created-- where the plates are "spreading apart" this does not necessarily imply the earth is expanding however, because there are also "subduction zones, like the coastal area of BC where I live, where the crust dives under the opposing plate back into the mantle.


How about injecting a little SCIENCE and brief RESEARCH here, instead of speculation dimmed by inaccurate knowledge or memory?

With a 5 second Google search (deep sea trenches plate tectonics), I found this on the very first hit:

http://www.marinebio.net/marinescience/ ... tonics.htm

Looks like a pretty nice presentation, and is in plain english, where plate tectonic terms are explained. There are even pretty pictures. I'm sure most fifth graders would get a decent understanding of the process from this.

What this says is consistent with a very nice 'Nova' documentary I saw on TV awhile back, which was based on a LOT of research.

The oceanic ridges are where the new crust is formed from mantle material:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')A cross-section of an oceanic ridge/rise shows its general features (above). Oceanic ridges/rises are called spreading centers because this is where two plates are moving apart. It is an area of plate divergence where new crust is added to the diverging plate edges.


The deep sea trenches are where the OLDEST crust is destroyed by being subducted back down into the mantle:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')A cross section of a deep sea trench shows the collision of two oceanic plates that results in a deep-sea trench. Deep-sea trenches are called subduction zones. This is where excess crust is subducted and melted as new crust is produced at oceanic ridges. Deep-sea trenches are areas of plate convergence.

.....
So the crust goes from newest at the oceanic ridges, to oldest as it approches the oceanic trenches. Both of these areas are on the sea floor, so the sea floor contains BOTH the newest AND the oldest crust.

(Pardon my exasperated tone, but since this discussion is occurring ON THE INTERNET, just a wee bit of effort would result in a far more productive discussion -- since plate tectonics is well established for anyone other than the serious tinfoil-hat crowd.)
Given the track record of the perma-doomer blogs, I wouldn't bet a fast crash doomer's money on their predictions.
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Re: Is earth growing?

Unread postby seahorse3 » Wed 17 Aug 2011, 17:20:38

Yes, I had 5th grade science and like to watch tv too for my science, like Nova. I have seen all the plate tectonic videos of the continents drifting apart. What captured my attention in this video is all the plates fitting together in a nice but smaller ball. So, do they all fit together as suggested by the video? The fact I'm asking means I don't necessarily believe of accept it. However, plate tectonic theory also says all the plates broke apart, but what it doesn't cover is did they all fit together in a nice little ball, north, south, east and west, as suggested by the video. Seems simple enough and I'm sure plate tetctonics must have covered it somewhere. Anybody?
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