Sometimes it can be hard to tell when it's outside of your domain.
Really appreciate the first sentence of the article having a pithy summary of what the whole thing is all about.
'Our continent keeps on dripping, dripping, dripping, into the mantle...'
Doo-doo dah doo-doo.
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Is there currently any type of ground penetrating radar or other device which could physically confirm the model's output?
Maybe that reduces audience engagement time.
But, let's not worry, because Trump will build a wall, er, heat shield, and no more pesky nuclear fusion-based heat will ever penetrate our 1%-er bunkers, er i mean, our atmosphere to melt our continent....and if some heat should get in, well, then ICE will be there to help save the day! /s
:-D
To me, dripping requires liquid drops that travel through air or a vacuum. Maybe through another liquid if the drops cohere. But solids can't drip, and substances can sink or travel or migrate through a solid but they can't drip through it.
Is there some special geological meaning of "dripping"? Or is this just bad English?
Solids can indeed "drip". The mantle is a solid, but it still very much flows. "Fluid" means no shear strength, but fluids are not the only things that flow and flowing is separate from having a shear strength. Fluids do not behave elastically. If you stress them at all, they permanently deform. Elastic materials behave like a spring up until a point. When you stress them, they deform, but will pop back. The mantle is viscoelastic. Strain rate matters in how it deforms. When you stress at high strain rates it, it deforms, but pops back (i.e. shear waves from earthquakes can pass through). If you maintain those stresses at a low strain rate, it will slowly permanently deform. That's, by definition, flow.
This is a good analogy for what's being discussed: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pitch_drop_experiment
The reason "mantle drip" is used is to evoke a mental image similar to that experiment.
Still seems a little weird to include in an article meant for a general audience, but I appreciate that geology uses these as technical terms.
Since you know the field, can you explain what the difference is between a solid flowing and a solid dripping? Thinking about it more, my mental model of dripping requires surface tension for drops to even exist. But surface tension doesn't exist for solids, right? What defines a solid "drop" as opposed to, I don't know, just a layer or pieces?
Or am I overthinking this and it was just chosen as a silly fun word to use?
Was hoping to find a source to back up my memory on this,FWIW, Google's AI summary states it well:
> On geological timescales (millions to billions of years), rocks, even those that seem brittle, can deform plastically, or flow like wax, due to the immense pressures and temperatures deep within the Earth, allowing for slow, gradual deformation