
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


We tend to think of continental tectonic plates as rigid caps that float on the asthenospheric mantle, much like oceanic plates. But while some continental regions have the most rigid rocks on the planet, wide swathes of the continents are not rigid at all. In the podcast, Alex Copley explains how this differentiation comes about and points to evidence that the responsible processes have been operating since the Archean.
By Oliver Strimpel4.8
145145 ratings
We tend to think of continental tectonic plates as rigid caps that float on the asthenospheric mantle, much like oceanic plates. But while some continental regions have the most rigid rocks on the planet, wide swathes of the continents are not rigid at all. In the podcast, Alex Copley explains how this differentiation comes about and points to evidence that the responsible processes have been operating since the Archean.

5,576 Listeners

743 Listeners

756 Listeners

321 Listeners

543 Listeners

544 Listeners

331 Listeners

739 Listeners

1,258 Listeners

323 Listeners

116 Listeners

384 Listeners

242 Listeners

223 Listeners

68 Listeners