We've updated our Privacy Policy to make it clearer how we use your personal data. We use cookies to provide you with a better experience. You can read our Cookie Policy here.

Advertisement

Argoland, "the Lost Continent", Found Under Indonesia and Myanmar

Partial reconstruction of Argoland.
Credit: Utrecht University.
Listen with
Speechify
0:00
Register for free to listen to this article
Thank you. Listen to this article using the player above.

Want to listen to this article for FREE?

Complete the form below to unlock access to ALL audio articles.

Read time: 2 minutes

Geologists have long known that around 155 million years ago, a 5000 km long piece of continent broke off western Australia and drifted away. They can see that by the ‘void’ it left behind: a basin hidden deep below the ocean known as the Argo Abyssal Plain. The underwater feature also lends its name to the newly formed continent: Argoland. The structure of the seafloor shows that this continent must have drifted off to the northwest, and must have ended up where the islands of Southeast Asia are located today. But surprisingly, there is no large continent hidden beneath those islands, only the remnants of small continental fragments that are also surrounded by much older oceanic basins. So what happened to Argoland? Geologists at Utrecht University have now managed to reconstruct the history of the lost continent. As it turns out, Argoland is in fragments, but is still there. “Otherwise, we would have been faced with a major scientific problem.”

We were literally dealing with islands of information

Geologists differentiate the earth’s crust into the heavier oceanic crust and lighter continental crust. These lighter continents may be partially hidden below sea level, as was also the case with another ‘lost’ continent, Greater Adria. Like Argoland, it also consisted of different fragments separated by narrow ocean basins, which eventually became part of a single tectonic plate. At some point in the past, Greater Adria plunged into the earth’s mantle, but the top layer stayed behind and was folded to form the mountains of Southern Europe. Argoland, however, left no such trace in the form of folded rock strata.

Want more breaking news?

Subscribe to Technology Networks’ daily newsletter, delivering breaking science news straight to your inbox every day.

Subscribe for FREE

Traces from foregone eras

“If continents can dive into the mantle and disappear entirely, without leaving a geological trace at the earth’s surface, then we wouldn’t have much of an idea of what the earth could have looked in the geological past. It would be almost impossible to create reliable reconstructions of former supercontinents and the earth’s geography in foregone eras”, explains Utrecht University geologist Douwe van Hinsbergen. “Those reconstructions are vital for our understanding of processes like the evolution of biodiversity and climate, or for finding raw materials. And at a more fundamental level: for understanding how mountains are formed or for working out the driving forces behind plate tectonics; two phenomena that are closely related.”

The splintering of Argoland started around 300 million years ago

Argopelago

That splintering is typical for the microcontinent. There was never a single clearly delineated and coherent continent of Argoland, but rather an ‘Argopelago’ of microcontinental fragments separated by older oceanic basins. In that it resembles Greater Adria, which by now has almost entirely subducted into Earth’s mantle, or Zeelandia, the largely submerged continent east of Australia. “The splintering of Argoland started around 300 million years ago”, Van Hinsbergen adds.

Seamless

The puzzle that Advokaat and Van Hinsbergen have solved fits seamlessly between the neighbouring geological systems of the Himalayas and the Philippines. Their detective work also explains why Argoland is so fragmented: the break-up accelerated around 215 million years ago, as the continent shattered into thin splinters. The geologists conducted field work on several islands, including Sumatra, the Andaman Islands, Borneo, Sulawesi and Timor, to test their models and determine the age of key rock strata.


Reference: Advokaat EL, Van Hinsbergen DJJ. Finding Argoland: reconstructing a microcontinental archipelago from the SE Asian accretionary orogen. Gondwana Research. October 2023:S1342937X23002769. doi: 10.1016/j.gr.2023.10.005


This article has been republished from the following materials. Note: material may have been edited for length and content. For further information, please contact the cited source.