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Deep Time
What is Deep Time?
by Andrew Alden
"Deep time" refers to the time scale of
geologic events, which is vastly, almost unimaginably greater than the time
scale of human lives and human plans.
It is one of geology's great gifts to the world's set of
important ideas.
Deep Time and Religion
The concept of cosmology, the study of the origins and
eventual fate of our universe, has been around as long as civilization itself.
Before the advent of science, humans used religion to
explain how the universe came into existence.
Many ancient traditions asserted that the universe is not
only much larger than what we see but also much older.
The Hindu series of yugas, for example,
employs lengths of time so great as to be meaningless in human terms.
In this way, it suggests eternity through the awe of large
numbers.
On the opposite end of the spectrum, the Judeo-Christian
Bible describes the history of the universe as a series of specific human
lives, starting with "Adam begat Cain," between the creation and
today.
Bishop James Ussher, of Trinity College in Dublin, made the
definitive version of this chronology in 1650 and announced that the universe
was created starting in the evening of 22 October in 4004 BCE.
The biblical chronology was sufficient for people who had
no need to concern themselves with geologic time.
Despite overwhelming evidence against it, the literal
Judeo-Christian creation story is still accepted as truth by some.
Enlightenment Begins
The Scottish geologist James Hutton is credited
with exploding that young-Earth chronology with his painstaking observations of
his farm fields and, by extension, the surrounding countryside.
He watched the soil being washed into local streams and
carried out to sea, and imagined it slowly accumulating into rocks like those
he saw in his hillsides.
He further supposed that the sea must exchange places with
the land, in a cycle designed by God to replenish the soil, so that
the sedimentary rock on the ocean floor could be tilted and washed
away by another cycle of erosion.
It was obvious to him that such a process, taking place at
the rate he saw in operation, would take an immeasurable amount of time.
Others before him had argued for an Earth older than the
Bible, but he was the first to put the notion on a sound and testable physical
basis.
Thus, Hutton is considered the father of deep time, even
though he never actually used the phrase.
A century later, the age of the Earth was widely considered
to be some tens or hundreds of millions of years.
There was little hard evidence to constrain speculation
until the discovery of radioactivity and 20th-century advances in
physics that brought about radiometric methods of dating rocks.
By the mid-1900s, it was clear that Earth was about 4
billion years old, more than enough time for all of the geologic history we
could envision.
The term "deep time" was one of John McPhee's
most powerful phrases in a very good book, Basin and Range,
first published in 1981. It first came up on page 29: "Numbers do not seem
to work well with regard to deep time.
Any number above a couple of thousand years — fifty
thousand, fifty million — will with nearly equal effect awe the imagination to
the point of paralysis."
Artists and teachers have made efforts to make
the concept of a million years accessible to the imagination, but it's hard to
say that they induce enlightenment rather than McPhee's paralysis.
Deep Time in the Present
Geologists do not talk about deep time, except maybe
rhetorically or in teaching. Instead, they live in it.
They have their esoteric time scale, which they use as
readily as common folk talk about their neighborhood streets.
They use large numbers of years nimbly, abbreviating
"million years" as "myr."
In speaking, they commonly don't even say the units,
referring to events with bare numbers.
Despite this, it's clear to me, after a lifetime immersed
in the field, that even geologists can't really grasp geologic time.
Instead, they have cultivated a sense of the deep present,
a peculiar detachment in which it is possible for the effects of
once-in-a-thousand-year events to be seen in today's landscape and for the
prospect of rare and long-forgotten events to occur today.
Andrew
Alden
Introduction
Professional
geologist, writer, photographer, and geological tour guide
Thirty-seven
years of experience writing about geological subjects
Six
years as a research guide with U.S. Geological Survey (USGS)
Experience
Andrew
Alden is a former writer for ThoughtCo who contributed hundreds of
articles for more than 17 years. Andrew works as a geologist, writer, editor,
and photographer. He has written on geological subjects since 1981 and participates
actively in his field. For example, Andrew spent six years as a research guide
with the U.S. Geological
Survey, leading excursions on both land land and at sea. And since 1992, he
has hosted the earthquakes conference for the online discussion platform, The Well,
which began as a dialogue between the writers and readers of the Whole Earth
Review.
In
addition, Andrew is a longtime member of the member of the Geological Society of
America — an international society that serves members in
academia, government, and industry; and the American Geophysical Union — a community of
earth and space scientists that advances the power of science to ensure a
sustainable future.
Andrew
lives in Oakland, California; and though he writes about the whole planet
and beyond, Andrew finds his own city full of interest too and blogs about its
geology.
Education
Andrew
Alden holds a bachelor's (B.A.) degree in Earth Science from the
University of New Hampshire, College of Engineering and Physical Sciences, in
Durham, N.H.
Awards
and Publications
Andrew Alden on Earthquakes (The Well Group, Inc., 2011)
Assessment of River — Floodplain Aquifer Interactions (Environmental
and Engineering Geoscience, 1997)
Andrew
Alden on Hosting (The Well Group, Inc., 1995)
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