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Geology; May 1977; v. 5; no. 5; p. 313-318; DOI: 10.1130/0091-7613(1977)5<313:AEEOTB>2.0.CO;2
© 1977 Geological Society of America
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An expanding Earth on the basis of sea-floor spreading and subduction rates

J. Steiner1

1 Department of Geology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada

Measurements of areas of sea floor broken up into age groups show that apparent areal global sea-floor spreading rates increase exponentially from Jurassic to Holocene time, proving that subduction has taken place in that time. The sea-floor spreading phenomenon is a coordinated global process where, at a given time, high spreading rates in one ocean basin are compensated for by low rates in another. Sea-floor spreading is symmetric within 15% over periods of 60 to 165 m.y. This study shows that both global sea-floor spreading and subduction rates have increased with the passage of time. It is estimated that during the past 165 m.y. sea-floor spreading exceeded subduction by 33%. This is interpreted as an increase of the Earth's surface area by expansion, which yields a Jurassic paleoradius of 5,668 km ± 13% (0.89 of the present radius). In spite of the high error margin, due to global extrapolation of subduction and spreading in the time dimension, an expanding earth is strongly indicated.







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