New research helps us understand the incredible forces and
oil and gas reserves that lie hidden beneath the Earth’s
surface
12 Februar 2009
It was the geological collision between India and Asia
millions of years ago that created one of the world’s most
distinctive places: The area around Lake Baikal in Siberia,
which contains 20 per cent of the world’s fresh water
reserves and a unique display of plant- and wildlife.
That is the conclusion reached by two Danish researchers
from the University of Copenhagen, Professor Hans Thybo and
PhD Christoffer Nielsen, after many seismic examinations,
including blowing up tons of dynamite, and five years work
of analysing the data.
In the middle of Siberia lies the 2000km long Baikal Rift
Zone, where, over the last 35 million years, a gigantic
crack in the Earth’s crust has developed. In the middle of
this rift zone lies the world’s deepest lake, Lake Baikal,
which is almost 1700m deep and contains 20% of the world’s
freshwater. Due to Lake Baikal’s isolated location, far from
the world’s oceans the microbial and animal life found here
has undergone a unique evolution over the last 30 million
years. The Baikal Rift Zone, or fracture zone, is also
special because it is located 3000km away from the nearest
tectonic plate boundary. Therefore, it has been difficult,
until now, to explain the origin of the Baikal Rift Zone
using commonly accepted geological premises and methods.
However, two Danish researchers from the University of
Copenhagen, Prof. Hans Thybo and Dr. Christoffer Nielsen, in
collaboration with Eastern European colleagues, have
succeeded in uncovering what happened, and what is still
happening, under the surface of one of the most special and
distinctive areas on Earth. More than that; the results from
the experiment in Siberia have lead to a new understanding
of, and model for, the formation of and activity in rift
zones, which are found in locations around the globe,
including between the continents.
Lots of dynamite
In Siberia the Danish research team lead a seismic
experiment known as BEST (Baikal Explosion Seismic Transects)
carried out around Lake Baikal. The experiment included
setting off of tons of dynamite so the scientists could
follow the sound waves from the explosion as they travelled
through the ground, using them to determine the structure of
the Earth’s crust and the upper mantle and thus gain an
understanding of the processes driving the rift zone’s
development.
The fieldwork at Lake Baikal was carried out in 2003-2004
with financial support from the Carlsberg Foundation and the
Danish Natural Science Research Council and in collaboration
with geologists and geophysicists from the Russian Academy
of Science’s Siberian departments and the Polish Academy of
Science. Since then the scientists have spent 5 years
interpreting the huge amount of data they collected and have
ended up with sensational seismic results related to the
general formation of, and activity in, rift zones around the
world.
The sensational results from Siberia now form the basis
for a new model for understanding the formation of rift
zones on a global plan. The results from Lake Baikal show
that the 40-50km wide crack in the Earth’s crust is around
10km deep. All previous models of rift processes have
assumed that the bottom of the Earth’s crust would have a
corresponding bulge. However to the researchers’ great
surprise it turned out that the bottom of the crust is flat
across Lake Baikal. The two scientists explain this
phenomenon by a greater thinning of the crust than expected
but at the same time also by an intrusion of magma (liquid
rock from the Earth’s mantle) into the bottom part of the
crust layer. The volume of the magma corresponds to the
thinning of the crust. The research group has therefore
reinterpreted data from a number of other rift zones around
the globe, including from the East African rift in Kenya
where writer Karen Blixen had her African farm and from an
older rift zone in the Ukraine. In both places the
researchers see the same phenomenon found in Siberia. This
plays an import6ant role for the new results.
Rift zones can divide continents
Rift formation is a fundamental process of plate
tectonics, which can, given time, split a continent in two.
Up until 60 million years ago, what is currently Europe and
North America was one large continent. The northern Atlantic
appeared when a rift zone developed between what is now
Norway and Greenland. The rifting process continued and ca
55 million years ago a new ocean arose.
Rift zones are also important for oil exploration as many
oil rich areas have arisen as a result of rift processes.
This is true, for example, of the area around the Central
Graben in the North Sea which is a former rift zone whose
development halted. The Central Graben is the location where
the countries bordering the North Sea obtain most of their
oil. It is therefore important to understand the processes
that lead to rift formation, as it may give us an
opportunity to pump more oil up from underground.
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