Boiling rocks from the Earth’s crust ruptured an ocean in Mongolia 410 million years ago

More than 400 million years ago, an upwelling of hot rock from the Earth’s mantle caused the Earth’s crust in Mongolia to tear apart. This created an ocean that lasted for 115 million years.

The geological history of this ocean could help researchers understand the Wilson cycles, or the process by which supercontinents break apart and come together. These are slow, large-scale processes that progress at less than a centimeter per year, according to the study’s co-author Daniel Pastor-Galana geoscientist at the National Spanish Research Council in Madrid.

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