North America’s ‘broken heart’: The billion-year-old scar from when the continent nearly ripped apart

by oqtey
Sunrise above Michigan's Lake of the Clouds. We see a ridge of basalt in the foreground.

QUICK FACTS

Name: The Midcontinent Rift

Location: U.S. Midwest

Why it’s incredible: The rift nearly broke North America in half around 1 billion years ago.

North America’s “broken heart” is an ancient rift valley in the Midwestern United States. The rifting began roughly 1.1 billion years ago due to tectonic forces pulling what is now the North American continent in opposite directions. Evidence suggests the rifting process stalled about 100,000 years after it began, but scientists aren’t sure why.

The rift valley is shaped like a horseshoe, stretching from Kansas north to Lake Superior and south again to Michigan, according to maps from a 2013 article in Nature — although some evidence suggests the rift might extend farther south. Geologists estimate that the rift once measured around 1,900 miles (3,000 kilometers) long and created a basin as wide as the Red Sea, but most of the structure is now buried beneath a thick layer of sediment, according to the National Park Service (NPS).

A map of the Midcontinent Rift, which opened 1.1 billion years ago. (Image credit: U.S. Geological Survey)

The only parts of the rift that are visible today are near Lake Superior, where huge blocks of basalt and other rift-related rocks are exposed, according to the NPS. Basalt is a dark, fine-grained — and, therefore, dense — rock formed from rapidly cooling lava. As Earth’s crust was ripped apart during the rifting process, magma rose to fill the crack, creating a belt of solidified lava and magma in the valley.

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