A sleeping subduction zone could swallow the Atlantic
How It Works UK|Issue 190
A subduction zone below the Gibraltar Strait is creeping westward and could one day ‘invade’ the Atlantic Ocean, causing the ocean to slowly close up.
SASCHA PARE
A sleeping subduction zone could swallow the Atlantic

The subduction zone, also known as the Gibraltar arc or trench, currently sits in a narrow ocean corridor between Portugal and Morocco. Its westward migration began around 30 million years ago, when a subduction zone formed along the northern coast of what is now the Mediterranean Sea, but it has stalled in the last 5 million years, prompting some to question whether it’s still active today.

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