Some 85 million years ago, a small landmass was sandwiched somewhere between what's now India and Madagascar. This ancient continent
 — Mauritia — was long the stuff of near legend, with geologists not 
totally sure if it ever even existed. But now, new evidence suggests the
 long-lost prehistoric continent is actually buried — in pieces — 
underneath the waves of the Indian Ocean.
The world was a very different place back when Mauritia was around. Remember, until just 750 million years ago, our planet's landmasses were all joined in a supercontinent called Rodinia.
 But Rodinia was eventually busted up, and millions of years of volcanic
 eruptions and plate tectonics eventually cleaved thousands of miles 
between India and Madagascar, leaving Mauritia surrounded by 
ocean. Then, anywhere from 2 billion to 85 million years ago, the small 
desolate landmass vanished.
In a new study published in the journal Nature Geoscience, 
researchers from Norway, Germany, and Britain claim to have discovered a
 "hidden" ancient crust buried under certain parts of the Indian Ocean.
 This hidden crust has been obscured by younger, "fresh" lava from 
underwater volcanic activity, and in some places, exhibited slightly 
stronger gravitational fields. This could have been due to a natural 
thickening of the Earth's crust caused by magma, but scientists had a 
hunch it was something else.
Using a computer model, researchers traced back the movements of 
tectonic plates to pinpoint where these areas of intense gravity were 
located 50 million to 100 million years ago. Sure enough, the puzzle 
pieces were once attached to the western edge of India — where Mauritia was assumed to sit.
To test their findings, researchers took sand samples from several 
beaches in modern-day Mauritius, a small island nation a few hundred 
miles east of Madagascar that researchers think was once connected to 
the continent Mauritia. Once again, they found something strange: 
Zircons, a mineral associated with continental crust, were shown to be 
hundreds of millions years old; the island's crust itself, in contrast, 
was just 10 million years old — a baby by comparison.
According to ScienceNOW,
 the researchers, led by geophysicist Trond H. Torsvik of the University
 of Oslo, think the zircons got there when a volcano long ago "punched 
its way through pieces of preexisting continental crust on the 
seafloor," spreading the prehistoric minerals all over the modern 
beach. That means buried underneath the seawater and sea-crusts may be 
the ancient microcontinent of Mauritia.Of course, the results are far from conclusive. But Torsvik and his team are optimistic about what these initial findings suggest. "We need seismic data which can image the structure... this would be the ultimate proof [of Mauritia's existence]" Torsvik tells the BCC. "Or you can drill deep, but that would cost a lot of money."
source : Yahoo

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