Will Continents Join Together in the Future?

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Continental drift may allow continents to merge into a supercontinent over geological timescales, similar to Pangea, but predicting this movement over a trillion years is uncertain. Factors like heat retention under continents contribute to their drift, as thicker crust traps heat, leading to geological upheaval. This mechanism is believed to have caused the breakup of previous supercontinents and could hinder future convergence. As heat from the Earth's mantle diminishes, tectonic activity may decrease, potentially locking continents in place. Erosion will eventually wear down mountains, resulting in a surface dominated by water. The discussion also touches on theories regarding the universe's fate, such as heat death, big crunch, and big rip, suggesting that the universe will not survive indefinitely.
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Sorry, very stupid question though, but will our continents drift and join together trillion years later on ? thank you.
 
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in a trillion years, the universe will cease to exist
 
Why do you think so ?
 
heat death, big crunch, big rip, other theories. All about the universe being 'destoryed'

nothing about the universe surviving

estimated life time is another 15 billion years
 
MillionYrsFromNow said:
Sorry, very stupid question though, but will our continents drift and join together trillion years later on ? thank you.

I don't know about a trillion years on, but continental drift could allow continents to merge back together to form a supercontinent, much like the old supercontinent of Pangea. Its not certain, as predicting the movement of tectonic plates in the distant future isn't possible.
 
matthyaouw said:
I don't know about a trillion years on, but continental drift could allow continents to merge back together to form a supercontinent, much like the old supercontinent of Pangea. Its not certain, as predicting the movement of tectonic plates in the distant future isn't possible.
I find it highly unlikely. One of the factors contributing to continental drift (one of the factors about which geologists are quite certain) is the fact that heat gets trapped under continents. Heat escaping from the mantle radiates outward through the crust of the earth. Where the continents protrude up out of the oceans, the crust is thicker, so the heat does not radiate out as rapidly as it does in places where the crust is thinner. The continents behave like a blanket, trapping the heat in.

This in turn causes greater upheaval under the spot where the continent rests. It is thought that this mechanism is responsible for the initial breakup of the original supercontinent. I think this same phenominon would push the continents apart if they ever started to occupy the same area together.
 
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accumulating heat under continents has and will continue to 'fracture' large continental masses. at some point in the future, that heat (which also drives plate tectonics) will diminish and the continents will be locked into place.

erosion will then erode all the mountains and then subsequent highlands and we will be left with an Earth's surface composed of water only.
 
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