
PS to mr. Edwards: as you can see, i have been stealing some of your clouds again. Please tell me if you are getting fed up with this behaviour...

-rthorvald
selden wrote:It's hard to criticize without knowing what evolutionary model you're basing your design on and what features you're trying to include.
selden wrote:One of the problems with cloud designs is that they're affected by the underlying topology, so clouds lifted straight off the Earth won't be the best match for a planet with a super-continent.
rthorvald wrote:selden wrote:It's hard to criticize without knowing what evolutionary model you're basing your design on and what features you're trying to include.
I want it to be eroded, worn down. So i made very smooth coastlines, and sampled most of the interiors from Africa. Exept for a small, but conspicious mountain range on the southeastern coast, that i put in for contrast (so that everything else looks really old),
I'd expect something like a gigantic Australia. The central regions of the continent are going to be dry.mostly dull, smooth features everywhere. One of the things i am concerned about though, is the green areas: i am not sure how much vegetation should be visible - how fertile would a really old Earth be?
Your planet seems to have plenty of water, so I'd expect plenty of clouds, too, at least over the ocean, mountain and coastal regions.selden wrote:One of the problems with cloud designs is that they're affected by the underlying topology, so clouds lifted straight off the Earth won't be the best match for a planet with a super-continent.
The weather pattern is what i am most interested in: i guessed that it would be less chaotic than on a younger world. So the cloudmap is sampled from the lighter areas of one of Edwards maps, but with more opaque white. Maybe it should be the other way around; more transparent - if the planet loses atmosphere with time? (Is that generally true?)
Well, maybeAll in all, i guess everything should look a bit dull, but how to have it look dull in an interesting way... Most important is, does the map look real?
Dollan wrote:However, if it is just the planet that is very old, and the sun is a low mass star and still well within its main sequence life span, then perhaps the geological cycle is slowing as the planetary core slowly looses energy and cools
selden wrote:I seem to recall that the Earth's plates tend to form a new super-continent every 250MYears or so. (Hmm -- that's about the same as the sun's orbital period around the galactic center, but I don't see how they could be related.)
Selden wrote:There's plenty of water, so I'd expect to see more green areas (and clouds over land) near those coasts where the prevailing blow inland than where it blows away from the land. In other words, more greenery on northwestern coasts (in the northern hemisphere) and on southeastern (in the southern) than on the southwestern or northeastern.
maxim wrote:2. I'm not sure that - as selden says - the land/water ratio will increase. Instead I would expect the continental crust/ocean crust ratio to increase. The material differentiation processes along the subduction zones will cause light materials to ascend, becoming new parts of continents, whereas the heavy materials will subside back into the mantle zone, forming new ocean crust in later times. In the very, very long range this might cause the ocean crust to become more and more heavy and so the ocean floor might become deeper in relation to the continents. But I believe it's more likely that the differentiated heavy material will sink deeper into the earth mantle and be replaced by lighter undifferentiated material in the upper mantle layer. The overall result would be bigger continents - but as the overall amount of water wouldn't change I would expect larger swallow sea areas instead of a larger visible land mass.
Maxim wrote:3. The plate movement won't stop as long as the core won't cool down considerably, and as long as there is water available. Some say plate movement may even increase in the future - don't know if this is true.
Maxim wrote:Plate movement as we know it is supposed to have started 800 million years ago - there are actual researches, based on the chemical structures of micro diamonds that predict that it might have started 2 billion years ago.
Maxim wrote:All in all I can't see any future planetary conditions that could be described by words like 'worn down' as long as geological processes remain dynamic, which they will for a very long time.
Ynjevi wrote:Plate movement have started much earlier than 800 million years ago, there is no doubt about that. It started probably when large oceans appeared on the Earth. There is some evidence of ancient supercontinents like Kenorland (2.45-2.10 Ga) and Hudsonland (1.83-1.50 Ga).
Arcturus wrote:And don't forget that a really old planet, with much reduced plate tectonics, will start collecting impact craters ! If the central star hasn't become a Red Giant by then...