ChatterBank1 min ago
Why doesn't the world
12 Answers
collapse inwards?
Did not know where to post this so have gone for nature.
The question ---- as we extract things from the earth , gas , oil minerals and so on , and there is more weight on the earth's surface buildings , people and so on.Why doesn't the earth as the globe we know it to be manage to stay in shape. Why doesn't it all collapse, and everything fall inwards.?
Sorry but I know absolutely nothing about the structure of the earth, and feel as though I have asked a very child like question.Any info would be well received . Many thanks.
Did not know where to post this so have gone for nature.
The question ---- as we extract things from the earth , gas , oil minerals and so on , and there is more weight on the earth's surface buildings , people and so on.Why doesn't the earth as the globe we know it to be manage to stay in shape. Why doesn't it all collapse, and everything fall inwards.?
Sorry but I know absolutely nothing about the structure of the earth, and feel as though I have asked a very child like question.Any info would be well received . Many thanks.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by brenda. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Let's take the quake today as an example. It occurred 15 miles underground. That is considered really shallow - the world is quite huge!
Now, all the weight that's on the earth has always been here, every brick is made from material that was on the surface (relatively speaking) already. The amount of gas, oil etc is barely scratching the surface - literally.
Now, all the weight that's on the earth has always been here, every brick is made from material that was on the surface (relatively speaking) already. The amount of gas, oil etc is barely scratching the surface - literally.
Oil and gas comes from the spaces between rock grains, so they stay there and support the rocks above them as before. Some exhausted mines remain as holes in the rock which hasn't been weakened enough to collapse. Some mines like coal mines are allowed to collapse in a controlled way as the material is removed. So in some areas the earth does get just a little bit smaller (dimensionally).
The seabed in the Norwegian Ekofisk oil and gas field was found to have sunk by approximately 3 metres after 10 years of operation. This was blamed solely on the extraction of oil and gas. As Jomifil has said, the oil and gas comes from the spaces between the grains in the rock. But at Ekofisk, the extraction reduced the pressure within the underlying rock causing it to slowly collapse in on itself. It's what's known as 'pore compaction'.