Geologists challenge conventional view of Earth’s continental history, stability with new study

The seemingly stable regions of the Earth’s continental plates — the so-called stable cratons — have suffered repetitive deformation below their crust since their formation in the remote past, according to new research from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. This hypothesis defies decades of conventional plate tectonics theory and begs to answer why most cratons have remained structurally stable while their underbellies have experienced significant change.