The Asian Age

Scientists set sail to find ‘lost continent’

Zealandia is an underwater landmass located in Oz

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Melbourne: Scientists on Friday set sail on an expedition to solve the mysteries of the “lost continent” Zealandia, an underwater landmass bigger than the Indian subcontine­nt, located to the east of Australia.

Zealandia, a five million square kilometre region submerged under the Pacific Ocean, was once part of the Gondwana super-continent but broke away some 75 million years ago.

The drill ship JOIDES Resolution is undertakin­g the two- month expedition to Zealandia and the Pacific ‘Ring of Fire’ which is a hotspot for volcanoes and earthquake­s.

Professor Neville Exon from Australian National University said the expedition would help scientists better understand the major changes in the global tectonic configurat­ion that started about 53 million years ago as the ‘Ring of Fire’ came into existence.

“Zealandia, including today’s Lord Howe Rise, was largely part of Australia until 75 million years ago, when it started to break away and move to the northeast. That movement halted 53 million years ago,” said Exon from the ANU Research School of Earth Sciences.

Scientists will study the cores on board and onshore to address problems in fields such as climate and oceanograp­hic history, extreme climates, sub-seafloor life, plate tectonics and earthquake-generating zones, and the dynamics of island arcs and ocean basins.

Zealandia covers five million square kilometres, and extends from south of New Zealand northward to New Caledonia and west to the Kenn Plateau off Rockhampto­n.

Researcher­s said the drill ship would collect five kilometres of sediment to discover how a region hundreds of kilometres east of Australia had behaved during the past 53 million years.

“The continenta­l crust of Zealandia was thinned by stretching before it separated from Australia so that it lies lower than Australia,” said Professor Rupert Sutherland from Victoria University of Wellington in New Zealand.

“Zealandia’s continenta­l crust is thicker than the surroundin­g oceanic crust, and so it lies higher than that,” said Sutherland.

 ?? — AP ?? Kelsey Grammar, left, and his daughter, Greer Grammar, arrive at the Los Angeles premiere of The Last Tycoon on Thursday.
— AP Kelsey Grammar, left, and his daughter, Greer Grammar, arrive at the Los Angeles premiere of The Last Tycoon on Thursday.

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