The world will be covered with a whole new set of life forms, humans will be long gone, and there will be no evidence that we ever existed.
They’ll be fossils and a band of pollution akin to the oxygen catastrophe.
A thin layer in the fossil record of iron oxide, microplastic particles, and the occasional Nokia phone.
It’s good to know Brexit is only temporary.
Scandinavia south of Paris.
Apparently New Zeland is still off the map… Just like nowadays.
New Zealand is the Gen X of countries.
As it is written in the ancient texts.
We aren’t going to be around to see it. Shit, the way we’re doing things nothing else will be around to see it either.
Pacific Ocean feeling pretty smug right now about maintaining its status as the largest ocean.
And the Pacific Rim? It’s the only rim, baby!
And it goes aaaaaaaalllll the way ‘round.
fyi there are many proposals for future continents, it’s basically unknowable
Sure, but its fun to speculate!
The English language has words and grammar for speculation, “will” is not one of them.
???
Sorry I was being unecessary obnoxious. I just meant they could have written it saying “this could happen” rather than presenting it as “this will happen.”
I’m just really triggered lately by everything online being exaggerated for clicks.
“The South will rise again” folks were right. They just had a much longer timeline than we imagined.
Tamriel! Or at least Cyrodiil+Elsweyr
this made me realize how great this map would be for an alternate history or fantasy setting
the mountain range between north america and africa creates the super interesting situation where the sides are almost entirely separated save for the coast and a teensy tiny bit near cape town that’s sort of crossable, so the coast would see an insane amount of traffic and i could see there being a capital nestled in the mountains next to the passage to cape town.
And of course the indian ocean would be where basically everyone lives, as others have said.I DMed a D&D campaign a few years ago for which I drew a map that was just North America with the water level up 300 meters and rotated 90 degrees counterclockwise. Nobody noticed it after I let the characters discover the map.
I guess no point in climbing Mount Everest if it’s not going to be the tallest in 250M years. That’s a relief.
Imma use this as world map for my next Pen&Paper campaign.
Numenera is actually (mostly) set on a far future Earth in which the continents have moved to form a new
pangaeasupercontinent. It’s actually way too far in the future for it to be this one, and there has been a whole bunch of continent-scale terraforming at some point, but still!Pangea is the name of only one supercontinent. The others have other names.
I had an Archaeology prof who had a “Reunite Gondwanaland” bumper sticker on his car. I was riding with him one time when a redneck in a big truck pulled up next to us, stuck his head out of his window and yelled “yo, fuck Gondwanaland!” and roared off.
Good point! I think I saw the name “Pangaea Proxima” and forgot that they weren’t all variations on that
That’s exactly what I was thinking! Going to save it for my daughter’s games.
I thought the pacific was getting smaller and the Atlantic was getting larger? I would expect the America’s to meet with east Asia.
This scenario is one possible projection; it assumes the eventual development of a subduction zone in the West Atlantic that would overcome the spreading at the mid Atlantic ridge, eventually sealing the basin. I don’t understand the mechanisms well enough to know how that prediction was made, so someone with more experience on the subject can chime in.
I’m, unfortunately, likely in the same boat, as far as expertise is concerned. I have a degree in geochemistry, and I agree with your analysis of the assumptions made to produce this model, but all of the projections I’ve seen until this one suggested the closing of the pacific basin.
Consider that much of the pacific mid-ocean ridge (the only thing preventing the closure of the pacific basin) is already being actively subducted under the eastern pacific boundary. Think about that: the spreading boundary itself is being subducted. This makes one wonder how it would be conceivable that the pacific basin widens in the future, despite the vast majority of the world’s active subduction boundaries being along the pacific rim.
Im gonna guess, from your response, you have the most experience on the subject of anyone we will find in this thread.
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Okay. Glad I’m not the only one and I can’t believe I had to scroll so far.
From what the wikipedia page tells, under this hypothesis atlantic will stop widening in about 125 millions years, and begin to shrink.
The mongols would rule the shit out of this supercontinent
Hail Ming!
Yuan
Solves the Florida problem at least.
Americans still won’t want to visit anywhere else…