Damian Nance on What Drives the Supercontinent Cycle

Geology Bites

24-02-2024 • 35 mins

Perhaps as many as five times over the course of Earth history, most of the continents gathered together to form a supercontinent. The supercontinents lasted on the order of a hundred million years before breaking apart and dispersing the continents. For decades, we theorized that this cycle of amalgamation and breakup was caused by near-surface tectonic processes such as subduction that swallowed the oceans between the continents and upper mantle convection that triggered the rifting that split the supercontinents apart. As Damian Nance explains in the podcast, newly acquired evidence suggests a very different picture in which the supercontinent cycle is the surface manifestation of a process that involves the entire mantle all the way to the core-mantle boundary.


Damian Nance draws on a wide range of geological evidence to formulate theories about the large-scale dynamics of the lithosphere and mantle spanning a period going back to the Archean. A major focus of his research is the supercontinent cycle. He is Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Geological Sciences at Ohio University.

You Might Like

StarTalk Radio
StarTalk Radio
Neil deGrasse Tyson
Curious Cases
Curious Cases
BBC Radio 4
The Naked Scientists Podcast
The Naked Scientists Podcast
The Naked Scientists
That UFO Podcast
That UFO Podcast
That UFO Podcast
Farming Today
Farming Today
BBC Radio 4
Paranormal Mysteries
Paranormal Mysteries
Nic Ryan Media | Unexplained Supernatural Stories
Sasquatch Chronicles
Sasquatch Chronicles
Sasquatch Chronicles - Bigfoot Encounters
Science Weekly
Science Weekly
The Guardian
Hidden Brain
Hidden Brain
Hidden Brain, Shankar Vedantam
Radiolab
Radiolab
WNYC Studios
Space Nuts
Space Nuts
Professor Fred Watson and Andrew Dunkley