Stella_Omega
No Gentleman
- Joined
- Jul 14, 2005
- Posts
- 39,700
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The Carterets are an atoll. Atolls form when a volcano erupts and forms an island. Then coral reefs from around the island. As the volcanic island erodes and sinks into the crust only the top of the reef remains. Yes, the world is getting warmer and possibly the sea level is rising but it hasn't shown up on the data, yet. After all, if all the sea ice melted the ocean levels wouldn't change because ice displaces the same volume whether frozen or liquid. Elementary school physics, that.
Not quite. Ice floats. Thus it increases in volume [4% IIRC] as it freezes.
Yes, the world is getting warmer and possibly the sea level is rising but it hasn't shown up on the data, yet. After all, if all the sea ice melted the ocean levels wouldn't change because ice displaces the same volume whether frozen or liquid. Elementary school physics, that.
Thanks guys, I was browsing when I saw that article.
So manque, you're saying that the land is dropping-- not the sea rising? I can easily see how that would happen, the porous tufa compacting into soil.
That's very possible. Look at the Hawaiian Archipelago. It starts in the southeast with the Big Island but if you follow it northwest across the ocean you see that the islands get smaller and smaller until there's nothing left but ring-reefs of coral around what used to be a volcano. I strongly suspect that the same thing is happening here. Not that it matters to the poor people involved. Either way they have to abandon their homes.
Interesting thought. The big island is the largest and is the site of active volcanos. In fact, perhaps every ten years there's a major eruption and the TV shows a river of lava flowing to the sea. It's an accepted geological fact that the Hawaiian islands were formed from basically one hot spot in the Pacific tectonic plate.
Yup, and the sinking of the central island after it moves off the hot spot to leave an atoll is standard geological dogma.
It makes sense. The core of an active volcano is lava, supported by pressures from the core of the earth. The volcano grows until the weight of the core equals the pressur from below. Once an island moves off a 'hot spot' or the hot spot begins to fill with solid, rather than molten lava, there remains less force to support the solid lava core. It would seem likely that the solid lava core would then sink over time.
Yup, and the sinking of the central island after it moves off the hot spot to leave an atoll is standard geological dogma.
I heard that some of atols are the rim of the crater after it has collapsed.