If
you become conversant with Geology, you soon learn to treat all age
suggestions as tentative at best. You have to be always ready
for outright reconsideration. This is particularly true when it
comes to understanding physically reshaped rock. There is a reason
that you can artificially age an artifact by treating it to
accelerated weathering.
Let
me give you a great example. The Sphinx experienced intense
weathering. It has been suggested that this means we have to go back
several thousands of years. Let me propose something else. It was
built inside a thousand years of the Great Pyramid or during the
thousand year run up to the beginning of the fully mature European
Bronze Age that culminated in the actual building of the Great
Pyramid.
Why
then? Because that period is the period in which agriculture
deforested the Sahara. A forested Sahara would have brought humid
conditions and ample rainfall more that sufficient to give us our
weathering history. We have simply forgotten to connect the dots and
have possibly misdated the desiccation of the Sahara likely because
someone made the assumption that it was driven by a slow natural
change that needed centuries of desiccation.
With
an already established population, the advent of the goat would have
done its work inside of a century.
Physical
geology is profoundly altered by storm surges, freshets, and floods,
all of which do all the work and then go away. Left to its devices,
Hurricane Sandy has left a new sedimentary layer that is feet thick
in places. Prior to that the underlying ground went untouched for
decades.
In
the end it requires the type of detailed sleuthing as shown here to
begin to approach a correct answer. It usually does not happen and
all such claims are always tentative. An outsider does not really
know that.
Grand Canyon 70
million years old, formed during era of dinosaurs, new study claims
The canyon isn’t
6 million years old, some scientists say, but more like 70 million
years old. If this order-of-magnitude challenge to the othodoxy holds
up, it would mean the Grand Canyon has been around since the days of
T. rex.
To stand on the South
Rim and gaze into the Grand Canyon is to behold an awesome immensity
of time. The serpentine Colorado River has relentlessly incised a
280-mile-long chasm that in some places stretches 18 miles wide and
more than a mile deep. Visitors to Grand Canyon National Park will
encounter an exhibit titled the Trail of Time, and learn that
scientists believe the canyon is about 6 million years old —
relatively young by geological standards.
Now a few contrarian
scientists want to call time out. The canyon isn’t 6 million years
old, they say, but more like 70 million years old. If this
order-of-magnitude challenge to the orthodoxy holds up, it would mean
the Grand Canyon has been around since the days of T. rex.
“Our data detects a
major canyon sitting there about 70 million years ago,” said
Rebecca Flowers, 36, a geologist at the University of Colorado and
the lead author of a paper published online Thursday by the journal
Science. “We know it’s going to be controversial.”
About that she is
quite correct. Her research, which reconstructs the ancient landscape
using a technique called thermochronology, is being met with a cool
reception from veteran geologists who study the Colorado Plateau.
“It is simply
ludicrous,” said Karl Karlstrom, 61, a professor of geology at the
University of New Mexico who has made more than 50 river trips
through the canyon — one with Flowers, when she chipped her samples
off the canyon walls — and helped create the Trail of Time exhibit
for the National Park Service.
“We can’t put a
canyon where they want to put it at the time they want to put it,”
said Richard Young, a geologist at SUNY Geneseo who has been studying
the Grand Canyon for four decades.
Wondrous though it is,
Grand Canyon doesn’t seem terribly mysterious at first glance. It’s
a gash in the landscape with a river at the bottom. The causality
seems obvious. But Flowers and her fellow Old Canyon theorists say
that what we see today in northern Arizona was originally carved, in
large degree, by two rivers — neither of which was the Colorado
River.
The western part of
the canyon, they say, was largely incised about 70 million years ago
by what has been dubbed the California River, which drained a
mountain range to the west and flowed to the east, in the opposite
direction from today’s Colorado River. The eastern part of the
canyon, they say, was created later, around 55 million years ago, by
a different river.
Under the Old Canyon
scenario, the Colorado River, which originates in the Rocky
Mountains, is a bit of an opportunist, and about 6 million years ago
took advantage of the pre-existing canyons and linked them in a
fashion that creates the sinuous canyon of today.
The debate to some
extent hinges on the semantic question of whether “an Ancient Grand
Canyon” (as the Science paper calls it) is the same thing as the
Grand Canyon of today. The Flowers paper says the depth of the
ancient canyon was within a “few hundred” meters — roughly a
thousand feet — of today’s canyon.
Karlstrom warns that
the Old Canyon theory threatens to confuse the park’s 5 million
annual visitors: “To them, it seems like dinosaurs might have lived
with humans (like the Flintstones) and that geologists do not know if
Grand Canyon was carved by the Colorado River or not (it was),” he
wrote in an informal note crafted in response to the new paper.
Flowers began
advancing the Old Canyon scenario in 2008, and the idea has been
championed by Brian Wernicke, a geologist at Caltech.
“I see all the data
as aligning very nicely for an Old Canyon model,” Wernicke said.
Thermochronology
studies the interiors of tiny crystals of phosphate minerals known as
apatite. The crystals contain a record of uranium and thorium
decaying into helium. If the temperature of the crystals is above 158
degrees, as would be expected in rock buried deep in the warm crust
of the Earth, they retain no hint of helium. But if the rock has been
cooler, below 86 degrees — as you’d expect if it was relatively
close to the surface — the helium is abundant.
Scientists interviewed
for this article believe the technique is a robust method for
reconstructing ancient landscapes. But there are multi-fold
objections to the interpretation advanced by Flowers and Wernicke.
The consensus estimate
for the age of the Grand Canyon is based on multiple factors,
including well-dated gravel deposits on the western mouth of the
canyon where the river exits the Colorado Plateau and river sediments
deposited into the Gulf of California.
The river incises the
canyon at a known rate — about 150 meters per million years, or
about the thickness of a piece of paper annually, Karlstrom said. The
Old Canyon scenario doesn’t claim that the Colorado has been
grinding away in the canyon bottom for 70 million years, but it does
require that ancient, abandoned canyons remain dry for long periods
of time, Karlstrom said.
“Rugged topography
like that fills in with erosion in way less than a million years,”
he said.
Professor Young,
meanwhile, has an objection based on boulders and gravel that are
found on the south side of today’s canyon. They come from the cliff
face of the Shivwits Plateau at the canyon’s north rim. The
material eroded from that cliff face at least 24 million years ago,
Young said; in the years since, the cliff has receded to the north,
and the Grand Canyon formed as the river ran along the bottom of the
cliff.
In that scenario,
there can’t have been a canyon in that spot 70 million years ago;
the boulder and gravel from the Shivwits cliff would have had to jump
the canyon like Evel Knievel.
Young — who has
spent more than 40 years studying another paleocanyon, the Hindu
Canyon, which runs parallel to the Grand Canyon and is now filled
with sediment — believes the new Flowers research is recording the
gradual recession of the cliff, not the carving of a deep canyon.
“I think what’s
happened is the recession of the cliff is what’s caused the cooling
[of the minerals] to occur,” Young said. “Their calculation is
really measuring the fact that the surface was being eroded
backward.”
Joel Pederson, an
associate professor of geology at Utah State, applauds the new paper,
though he makes a semantic distinction when discussing the age of the
Grand Canyon.
“They are looking at
a really awesome precursor canyon that the Colorado River later in
time took advantage of,” Pederson said. “This new study really
adds teeth to the realization that those paleocanyons, they were
bigger and they were older than we thought they were.”
But as for the age of
Grand Canyon proper, Pederson is emphatic: “It is 6 million years
old.”
The Grand Canyon
controversy is in many respects a case of science at its most
vigorous, notwithstanding the grousing. Geologists have to find the
narrative in landscapes that do not always speak clearly. The Grand
Canyon provides a wonderful stratigraphic record, revealing
sedimentary rock that formed hundreds of millions of years ago, but
geologists struggle to discern the timing of the erosion that exposed
the formations.
“Erosion’s always
been the toughest problem in geology,” Wernicke said, “because
what you’re trying to study is all gone now.”
As for why it matters
at all — why we should care about when, and how, the canyon formed
— Wernicke has a ready answer: “It’s a fundamental question of
human curiosity. It’s about as basic a scientific thing as one can
imagine.”
Flowers will give a
talk next Wednesday in San Francisco at the big fall meeting of the
American Geophysical Union, as will her ally, Wernicke — and their
critic, Karlstrom. Back to back to back.
“To them, it seems like dinosaurs might have lived with humans (like the Flintstones) and that geologists do not know if Grand Canyon was carved by the Colorado River or not (it was),”
ReplyDeleteOh, dear. I hate to blow your mind but humans were around during the periods of roaming dinosaurs and one shouldn't expect geologists to always reveal the facts when they discover them. They might even deny them, if pushed enough. I hope more of our history comes into light.
I did a date-conversion analysis of the Dinosaur/man co-existence recently and got told I was a liar for my trouble. I won't repeat the same exercise - except to say it is provable through Physics etc that Man and the Dinosaurs MOST definitely co-existed.
ReplyDelete