Editing 2616: Deep End
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==Explanation== | ==Explanation== | ||
− | + | {{incomplete|Created by A SUBDUCTING SWIMMING POOL - I don't know how to get this to work, but I beat the bot to making it! Please finnish the explanation (Emphasis on the transcript and title text) - Please change this comment when editing this page. Do NOT delete this tag too soon.}} | |
− | + | Pools, like oceans, contain water. This comic produces a schematic for the former, derived from science about the latter. On Earth, the surface consists of tectonic plates which move around. In this comic, [[Randall]] equates Swimming pools with {{w|plate tectonics}}, to explain how deep ends form in said pools. Unfortunately, swimming pools aren't really formed by plate tectonics{{Citation needed}}. | |
− | {{w| | + | A {{w|swimming pool}} is a pool, typically used for swimming {{Citation needed}}. Most of these have a deep end and a shallow end. This is intentional, likely to accomadate for new swimmers to have somewhere to stand while accommodating for more confident swimmers for whom the floor would get in the way{{Actual citation needed}}. |
− | + | {{w|Subduction}}, a geological process in which one plate slips beneath another and is forced down into the mantle, is shown here as the reason swimming pools have deep ends. This usually takes place between continental plates and oceanic plates, although it could happen with two oceanic plates. The comic depicts the former; an oceanic plate subducting under a continental one. | |
− | + | On the left image, there is the shallow end. The water is the shallow end is the shallowest in the pool, about the height of [[Megan]], excluding her head. Going right from there, the pool floor (Representing the oceanic plate) begins to curve downwards towards the subduction zone. As the floor goes down, the water gets deeper{{Citation needed}}. In the deepest area, it is labeled "Deep End" | |
− | + | At the bottom of the deep end, there is a curve and a deposit on the plate/pool floor. This is likely sediment buildup from waterborne debris that has settled there. Under the sediment, there are some small bubbles of trapped water. This implies that the plate is moving left-to-right across the image. Some of the bubbles are dragged along by the oceanic plate, while others float up through continental plate until they reach the "Splash zone" | |
− | + | A splash zone is an area of a waterpark with water{{citation needed}} being sprayed around, causing splashed{{Actual citation needed}}. In this comic, the splash zone is actually geysers, fed by the bubbles of water from the subduction. In reality, subduction zones do create similar effects: water moving up from subducting plates is the origin of many {{W|volcanic arc|volcanic arcs}}. Volcanic systems sometimes include features such as the geysers depicted in the comic. | |
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− | : | + | While it may seem a little far-fetched, [https://www.earthmagazine.org/article/thirsty-mantle-subduction-zones-swallow-more-water-thought/ subduction zones do actually swallow large amounts of water]. This causes a lot of interesting effects, like new types of rocks and other stuff. These are probably explained in [https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0016703714002610 this scientific paper], although I'm not 100% sure as I didn't actually read past the title. |
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− | + | Can someone else work out what a back-arc basin is please? | |
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− | :[ | + | Other comics that mention unusual tectonic plate motion include [[1388: Subduction License]] and [[1874: Geologic Faults]] |
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− | + | ==Transcript== | |
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− | + | {{incomplete transcript}} | |
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{{comic discussion}} | {{comic discussion}} | ||
[[Category:Comics featuring Cueball]] | [[Category:Comics featuring Cueball]] | ||
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