Rapid True Polar Wander: Revisiting the Debate on a Possible Poleshift

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In summary: It just seems like there's more evidence for a true polar wander than against it, but I'm not really sure what it is.Well, the evidence for the rapid true polar wander comes from the megafauna that were present in Siberia during the last glacial maximum. The evidence against the rapid true polar wander comes from the lack of evidence for a temperate climate during the last glacial maximum.
  • #1
Andre
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Whenever the Frozen Mammoths emerge, the debate about a possible poleshift is revisited. Sine 100 years ago ideas of Hugh Auglingson Brown, Charles Hapgood, John White, Flavio Barbieri, etc, address some sort of poleshift.

However, nothing is more stable than a spinning axis and any attempt to disturb it, results in precession and or nutation wobbling. So physicists must deny the posibilitly of a spin axis change. But a fast spinning egg erects itselfs on the pointy end. It did not change the direction of the spin axis but the whole egg wandered around the spin axis to erect itself, a true polar wander.

Could Earth have done the same? Fast enough that a warm Steppe- Siberia loaded with mega fauna around 25.000 years ago gradually changed into a frozen tundra around 10.000 years ago? And how? Is it coincidence that this period is also known as the coldest part of the ice ages? Could it be that the evidence and signs of the "ice age" in fact were evidence and signs of the Rapid True Polar Wander instead?
 
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  • #2
I don't know whether this has come up before, but it's definitely an interesting possibility. We never had much time to measure much change, but I think the ice age, and where it occurred depends on both that and the movement of the continents.

I'm coming down with a flu, or something bad, so I can't really think now. I'll get back to it later, but it's a good idea.
 
  • #3
Well, the problem with the egg analogy is that the "wandering" occurs near the beginning of motion when the surface is not yet reached an equilibrium orientation.

It's hard to imagine how the Earth could have spent billions of years in unstable rotation until it started to right itself 25,000 years ago... so if polar wandering occured, it would have required some catastrophic cosmic event to knock the Earth out of equilibrium spin, one that would surely leave its mark in some other fashion.

Hurkyl
 
  • #4
Thanks for the interest.

Yes a mechanism is intrigueing. The egg mechanism is nowhere near what the Earth is doing since the friction of the egg and the surface on which it is spinning is playing a major role. It was just an illustration that a polar wander is about migration of the Earth mass over the poles while the direction of the spin axis itself is not affected.

So what do you want first, some compelling evidence for recent Polar wanders or a possible mechanism for it. The problem with the latter though that it is not provable at any given time. We just can't look inside the Earth.
 
  • #5
My question is what sort of effects would a polar shift have. Would we expect, for instance, that a polar shift would have a profound affect on the magnetic field, thus leaving traces we could detect? Would such an event leave any long term traces on the orbit of the moon? Could, perhaps, the Earth have captured the moon during the ice age which triggered a polar shift? (I imagine that 25000 years isn't long enough for the moon to have synchronized, though).


So, I guess, it's the compellnig evidence I want first. :smile:

Hurkyl
 
  • #6
OK, extraordinary claims need extraordinary substantiation. And that's available.

The hypothesis is that the Pleistocene (from 1,7 Million years ago till 10,000 years ago) is not about ice ages but about multiple rapid true polar wanders and instead of waxing ice sheets we have migrating ice sheets, following the poles, as they wander.

There must be big differences between wandering ice sheets and growing and shrinking ice sheets so we should be able to isolate them, at least that of the so called "Last Glacial Maximum" (LGM). The first outstanding evidence is the megafauna that proves that Siberia was a grass steppe at moderate temperatures during the last Glacial Maximum during which America suffered in ice conditions of the Winconsin Glaciation. See also the mammoth thread that wasn't considered too interesting since mammoths were out of fashion again.

I declare the Siberian mammoth steppe as first evidence for the Rapid True Polar Wander, your witness, counselor.

Next evidence: dating of the ice migrating during the last glacial maximum.
 
  • #7
Seems I've inherited the job of providing counterpoint! I'll confess now to this not being one of my better subjects, but I'll give it a shot!



After some brief searching on google, it seems that there is pretty good evidence that the region really was colder and drier, a cross between a steppe and a tundra. http://www.soton.ac.uk/~tjms/eurasia.html [Broken] seems to provide compelling reason to believe that western Sibera was a harsh cross between a tundra and a steppe...


Following the link you gave in the mammoth thread, even there they don't conclude a temperate climate, just that the environment was more of a steppe than a tundra with temperatures still hovering around freezing.

I don't really see how any of this could plausibly lead to evidence of polar shifting.

Hurkyl
 
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  • #8
Thanks Hurkyl for playing counterpoint.

So the first thing is about a warm northerly Siberia during the coldest part of the ice age when the ice even decended below the great lakes.

As you may see, your link is based on elder references mostly pre 1995 but the former black box Siberia is opening rapidly. Have a few very recent reports:
PALEOECOLOGY OF NORTHWESTERN BERINGIA: RECONSTRCTION BASED ON MACROFOSSIL PLANT REMAINS FROM ZHOKHOV ISLAND, SIBERIA
AUTHORS

SMITH, LEDA . Center for Northern Studies / Middlebury College.

A buried peat deposit from Zhokhov Island (76°. 06'N, 152°.42'E, northeast of the New Siberian Islands chain, Russia) contains a variety of well preserved plant material. The calibrated radiocarbon dates for the
sample indicate that it was deposited about 14,000 to 15,000 years ago (average calibrated radiocarbon age of 14, 410 BP [Beta Analytic]). The sample thus represents a botanical assemblage from the Late Pleistocene of Northwestern Beringia. Identification and analysis of the plant macrofossils indicates that several vascular plant species occurred on Zhokhov at that time, but have since disappeared from the area. It is clear that the assemblage would be typical of a warmer environment than that which is current on Zhokhov Island...
(no link found at the moment)

YANA/RHS SITE: GEOLOGY, STRATIGRAPHY, DATING, AND ARCHAEOLOGY.
AUTHORS

PITULKO, VLADIMIR V. Institute for the History of Material Culture, RAS.
Anisimov, Mikhail A. Arctic and Antarctic Research Institute.
Basilyan, Alexander E. Institute for Geology, RAS.
Giria, Evgeny Yu. Institute for the History of Material Culture, RAS.
Nikolsky, Pavel A . Institute for Geolgoy, RAS.
Odess, Daniel . University of Alaska Museum.
Pavlova, Elena Yu. Arctic and Antarctic Research Institute, RAS.
Tumskoy, Vladimir E. Moscow State University.


During a recent survey by the ZHOKHOV 2000 project, a locality where geologist Mikhail Dashtseren found a foreshaft made of woolly rhinoceros horn in 1996 was revisited to assess its research potential. The site is located on the left bank of the Yana River about 100km south of its’ entrance into the Laptev Sea (73º NL). ...

At the Yana/RHS site the cultural material (fragmented/broken bones of Pleistocene animals and lithic artifacts) were located in several exposures along the riverbank. ...

...Although nearly 300 faunal specimens were collected at the site, only a few were found associated with the artifacts. Among the animal species represented by the bones were reindeer, horse, mammoth, bison, musk ox, polar fox, wolf, and birds...

...These dates are in agreement with the AMS date run on the foreshaft and suggest that the site is around 27,000 years old.

We stress that the significance of the Yana/RHS site is that this is the earliest evidence of human occupation north of 71º degrees NL, and the first evidence that humans inhabited the Eastern Siberian Arctic during the last interglacial.
http://www.colorado.edu/INSTAAR/ArcticWS/get_abstr.html?id=75

A remarkable vivid area, so close to the North Pole, where there is now only an icy arctic tundra. Even Rhino's seemed to be roaming well North of the present day pole circle.

I don't want to post to be too long. How many more do you want?

What is the relationship with a true polar wander?
Anywhere from 60,000-25,000 years ago, Siberia was warm while America was freezing with a big polar ice sheet simultanously (Laurentian Ice Sheet). From 25,000 to 10,000 years ago this situation reversed gradually and NW Europe got some brief deep freezing as well in the proces.

It will be very hard to find a meteorological model that allows for deep freezing way down south in America while it allowed for a warm Siberia way up north. If we accept that poles can wander it is much more easy to assume that the pole is where the cold is. Obviously that was in Canada some 60-30,000 years ago.

So it looks like the Rapid True polar wander was from somewhere in Canada via a big curve over the Atlantic to the present position, It probable started between 40-30,000 years ago and ended 10,000 years ago.

The ultimate crackpot hypothesis? But it fits logically to the visible evidence.
 
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  • #9
Are you using "warm" in a relative sense? I.E. you're just saying that Siberia was warmer than North America, not that Sibera was actually somewhat warm with temperatures of 60 degrees farenheight or more?



And incidentally, do you know any web sites on the dynamics of glacial formation?

Hurkyl
 
  • #10
I cannot remrmber the details but there was a very popular and fairly comprehensive book published 30 to 40 years ago, in which the author used new charts of the cracks in the Earth's suface under the oceans, as the basis for claiming rapid pole reversal and related temperature change to magnetic pole reversal.
 
  • #11
Hurkyl, warm was meant as in grassy steppes with abundant wild life. Perhaps like the prairies. So certainly warmer as today. Of course harsh winters were possible, with the animals migrating. But certainly much warmer as the insolation energy allows for today.

Perhaps a useful link to ice age data in general:
http://college.hmco.com/geology/resources/geologylink/toc/topic17.html [Broken]
but a lot is based on older data and may be obsolete due to the newer discoveries.

Perhaps next time I go into more detail about ice sheet dynamics and migration.

Elas the book you mention may be:

Cataclysm!: Cosmic Catastrophe in 9500 BC
aka When the Earth Nearly Died
by D.S Allan and J.B Delair

Some remarkeble catastropism but based on obsolete data. Some good practice in out of the box thinking though.
 
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  • #12
That does not sound like the right book. The concept was about the upper layer of the Earth's structure (above the Moho?) storing up energy and then moving about five times faster than normal for a short period of years given rise to increase volcanic activity and a special type of surface cracking. The theory rapidly lost favour with the arrival of the comet theory, though why we should restrict a series of events to the same cause at each occurence is beyond me.
 
  • #13
It could be possible that the entire solar system is wobbling on it's own axis, maybe the whole galaxy is. In this case, the magnetic fields would shift, i think, but the rotations of planets would remain unchanged.

I think perhaps it is possible that Earth's direction of spin could have changed. Mantle currents are very powerful. The killer is the Earth's solid crust, denser and much harder to shift. But look at uranus. A gas giant whose axis is perpendicular, almost, to every other planet. perhaps this was not always so.
 
  • #14
Elas, If that's not the right book, we have a few more:

Hamlet's Mill, Giorgio De Santillana & Hertha Von Dechend
Earth in Upheaval, Immanuel Velikovsky
Pole Shift, John White
Not by Fire, but by Ice, Robert W. Felix
Path of the Pole, Charles Hapgood
Earth's Changing Axis, Mac B. Strain

But these are all highly speculative works, based on little evidence and little substantiation. Most are plainly wrong. And that's the problem of course. If a pole shift has been debunked several times over and over again, why do you still think that yet another attempt can be succesfull. Well this time we do have the evidence that was not available even five years ago.

BTW Have a look at a shifting pole, the North Pole of Mars:

http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/mgs/msss/c...ndSPO2_rel/9_19_98_npole_rel/550_1_2_proj.jpg
and
http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/mgs/msss/c...ndSPO2_rel/9_19_98_npole_rel/55001_15perc.gif

Pictures credit to Malin Space Science Systems/NASA

See the series of rings shifting to the pole position. As there seems not to be to much erosion, to me it appears that that pole wandering occurred quite recently.


why we should restrict a series of events to the same cause at each occurence is beyond me.

Firstly, One of the problems is regularity. According to the ice sheet and the deep sea sediment core the true polar wander occurred roughly around every 100.000 years for the past 800.000 years but to pattern is too irregural to be attributed to fixed swarms of meteorites visiting with a very regular interval. On the other hand the pattern is too regular to be caused by random meteorite strikes for instance.

Secondly, Meterorites leave marks. Not only craters but also dust layers trapped in ice sheets. In the past 420,000 years record of the Antarctic Vostok ice core there has not been reported any prevailing indication of real catastrophic meteorite impacts. Furthermore there seem no recent iridium layers reported like that impact of 65 million years ago in Yucatan.

OMF,
I think perhaps it is possible that Earth's direction of spin could have changed. Mantle currents are very powerful. The killer is the Earth's solid crust, denser and much harder to shift.
From gyroscope behavior we note that changing directions of spinning axes is a though thing to do. Instead gyroscopes tend to wobble and precess if you push against them but the spin axis remains more or less fixed. We are thinking of wandering of the Earth body over the fixed spin axis as I posted in the start of the thread. The force for that is probably not external, where the crust has to push the mantle but from the inside, things that happen in the core and the mantle.

So what's next? More evidence first or more on that core mantle process?
 
  • #15
'Path of the Pole' by 'Hapgood' rings a bell, is the theory still regarded as valid?
 
  • #16
We just can't look inside the Earth

http://phoenix.liunet.edu/~divenere/notes/earth_int.htm [Broken]

[snippet]
What Causes the Earth's Magnetic Field?
Early ideas about what caused the compass needle to point toward the north included some divine attraction to the polestar (North Star), or attraction to large masses of iron ore in the arctic. A more serious hypothesis considered the Earth or some solid layer within the Earth to be made of iron or other magnetic material forming a permanent magnet. There are two major problems with this hypothesis. First, it became apparent that the magnetic field drifts over time; the magnetic poles move. Second, magnetic minerals only retain a permanent magnetism below their Curie temperature (e.g., 580ûC for magnetite). Most of the Earth's interior is hotter than all known Curie temperatures and cooler crustal rocks just don't contain enough magnetic content to account for the magnetic field.

The discovery of the liquid outer core allowed another hypothesis: the geodynamo. Iron, whether liquid or solid, is a conductor or electricity. Electric currents would therefore flow in molten iron. Moving a flowing electric current generates a magnetic field at a right angle to the electric current direction (basic physics of electromagnetism). The molten outer core convects as a means of releasing heat. This convective motion would displace the flowing electric currents thereby generating magnetic fields. The magnetic field is oriented around the axis of rotation of the Earth because the effects of the rotation on the moving fluid (coriolis force).
[/snippet]
 
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  • #17
Elas, about Charles Hapgood's "Path of the pole". It is not valid. Hapgood poses that the Earth crust could slide over the mantle due to imbalance (the pole ice sheets initially but abandonned later). Hapgood has been utterly despiced like this:
http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/mom/atlantis.html
and this:
http://www.intersurf.com/~chalcedony/wildside.shtml

What we surely can say now, is that his mechanism is wrong. The volcanic hot spots that originate deep in the Mantle like Hawaii, La Palma and Iceland for instance have been aligned with the crust for millions of years. If the crust had slipped over that, this alignment would be disrupted. Apart from that there is more solid geologic evidence.

Furthermore Hapgood used too much debatable evidence like the Piri Reis map for instance. When one piece of evidence can be debunked, so is the whole hypothesis.

One thing we believe, that he was right about, is in the original position of the North Pole, being in Canada, presumably the Hudson bay. One nice piece of evidence, for instance, are the locations of the found Mammoth remains, namely almost everywhere in the Northern hemisphere except for NE Canada and perhaps North Scandinavia.
http://land.sfo.ru/eng/images/maps/mnb.jpg [Broken]

Thanks for that link Daminc. Unfortunately it does not detract from the sad notion that we cannot look inside the Earth. We only can measure anything that there is to measure and then speculate on the possible causes. We may become very good at that, but never good enough.
 
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  • #18
How does the timing of magnetic inversions coincide with the alledged polar shifts?

Hurkyl
 
  • #19
The dating of the Paleo Magnetic Excursions and the hypothetical Rapid True Polar Wanders (sounds a bit better than the alleged pole shift).

This PDF file is describing the paleomagnetic events quite well. Notice the graph (bottom page 250) with the Earth magnetic field strength during the last 800,000 years. We're seeing paleo magnetic excursions about once every 100,000 years.

Now let's descend to the ocean bottom, where sediment cores (foraminifera and diatoms) are examined for a record of the geologic past. http://jlevine.lbl.gov/BenStackCompare.html [Broken] we're finding several records of the variation in ratio of heavy oxygen molecules (d18O) in the past 700,000 years. These spikes in the ratios have been interpreted as ice ages and interglacials. It’s a different story but we can identify several flaws in that assumption. An alternative view is just shaking up the isotopes when the hypothetical Rapid True Polar Wanders happen.

Now compare the graph of the oceanic stack with the graph of the paleo magnetic field. We notice that both curves seem to resemble vaguely, like the general frequency of the spikes. But there is a noticeable shift in spike dating. On the average there seems to be a magnetic dip roughly about 30,000 years before a d18O isotope peak although it seems not always consistent. Nonetheless, with more information from the ice cores, We are working on the hypothesis that the Paleo Magnetic Excursions may have triggered the hypothetical Rapid True Polar Wanders.
 
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  • #20
Andre
Thanks for the reply. I read both goelogy and map books when they were first published, but lost the thread when I went abroad. It just goes to show how the most interesting of books can turn out to be wrong; but if ideas were not put forward, there would not be any progress. I was not fooled by 'Chariot of the Gods' or 'Amityville', but Hapgood fooled me, or perhaps was fooled himself by the map forgers.
 
  • #21
Elas, Perhaps its good not to be too harsh about Hapgood. He was daring to challenge the established scholar view and risked his reputation as a eminent Historian.

Now, I was saying that there were no ice ages but Rapid True Polar Wanders and all available evidence fits much better to the RPTWs than to ice age. There are two possibilities. Either I get flushed down the crackpot, or some people would actually start believing me. And please recheck that I did not make any statements without some external substantiation. The believe in ice age is rather strong but the fundaments are corroding fastly nowadays. Suppose in the very remote case that I'm right then how many ice ages studies and books would turn out to be wrong? It would be disasterous. Also, in that case Hapgood was more right than all those ice age books.

So what would you like to look at next? There is plenty more where this is coming from.:wink:
 

1. What is Rapid True Polar Wander (RTPW)?

Rapid True Polar Wander is a geophysical phenomenon in which the Earth’s rotational axis shifts significantly in a relatively short period of time, resulting in a change in the location of the Earth’s geographic poles.

2. Is RTPW a real phenomenon or just a theory?

Rapid True Polar Wander is a well-established geophysical phenomenon that has been observed and studied for decades. While there is ongoing debate about the causes and frequency of RTPW, there is strong evidence to support its existence.

3. What causes RTPW?

The exact cause of Rapid True Polar Wander is still a topic of debate among scientists. Some proposed causes include changes in the Earth’s internal mass distribution, changes in the Earth’s mantle convection patterns, and external forces such as changes in the Earth’s orbit or interactions with other celestial bodies.

4. How often does RTPW occur?

Rapid True Polar Wander is a rare event, with only a few documented cases in the Earth’s history. The frequency of RTPW is still a topic of research and debate, but it is estimated to occur on a timescale of millions of years.

5. What are the potential effects of RTPW on the Earth?

If a Rapid True Polar Wander were to occur, it could have significant impacts on the Earth’s climate, ocean currents, and ecosystems. It could also affect the accuracy of navigation systems and cause changes in the Earth’s magnetic field.

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