Superocean
A superocean is an ocean that surrounds a supercontinent. It is less commonly defined as any ocean larger than the current Pacific Ocean.[1] Named global superoceans include Mirovia, which surrounded the supercontinent Rodinia, and Panthalassa, which surrounded the supercontinent Pangaea. Pannotia and Columbia, along with landmasses before Columbia (such as Ur and Kenorland), were also surrounded by superoceans.
As surface water moves unobstructed east to west in superoceans, it tends to warm from the exposure to sunlight so that the western edge of the ocean is warmer than the eastern. Additionally, seasonal changes in temperature, which would have been significantly more rapid inland, probably caused powerful monsoons. In general, however, the mechanics of superoceans are not well understood.[2]
List of superoceans
- Nealbara/Gyrosia (Vaalbara/Ur) (4.404–1.071 Ga)
- Lerova (Kenorland) (2.523–1.805 Ga)
- Atlanta-Pacifica Ocean (Columbia) (1.41–1.065 Ga)
- Mirovia (Rodinia) (1,380–600 Ma)
- Pan-African Ocean (Rodinia/Pannotia) (987.5-605 Ma)
- Panthalassa (Pannotia/Pangaea) (750–173 Ma)
Possible Future Superoceans
See also
- World Ocean – The interconnected system of Earth's oceanic waters
References
- McMenamin, Mark A.S.; Schulte McMenamin, Dianna L. (1990). The Emergence of Animals: The Cambrian Breakthrough. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-06647-1. LCCN 89035459.
- Martin, Ronald E. (1998). "Cycles and Secular Trends". One Long Experiment: Scale and Process in Earth History. Perspectives in Paleobiology and Earth History. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-10905-5. LCCN 97027821.
External links
- The dictionary definition of superocean at Wiktionary