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{{Infobox paper
{{Infobox book
| title = The Expanding Earth
| name = The Expanding Earth
| author = [[Alexander A Scarborough]]
| image = The Expanding Earth 404.jpg
| keywords = [[expanding earth]]
| author = [[Samuel Warren Carey]]
| published = 2009
| language = English
| journal = [[None]]
| subject = [[Expansion Tectonics]], geotectonics
| series = Developments in Geotectonics, vol. 10
| published = 1976
| publisher = [[Elsevier Scientific Pub. Co.,]]
| pages = 488
}}
}}


==Abstract==
'''''The Expanding Earth''''' is a 1976 book by the geologist [[Samuel Warren Carey]], published by Elsevier as volume 10 of the ''Developments in Geotectonics'' series.


To understand why Earth is undergoing its continuous expansion, some background is absolutely essential.  A plethora of substantiated evidence clearly supports the fact that Earth is expanding continuously, and has been growing in size (but not in mass) since its dynamistic placement in the third orbit around our Sun some five billion years ago, all in full accord with the Five Laws of Planetary Motion (three by Kepler, two by Scarborough).  Reason for expansion:  transformation of energy into expanded atomic matter (magma).
==Overview==


[[Category:Scientific Paper|expanding earth]]
The book is the major statement of Carey's case for an '''Expanding Earth''' — the hypothesis that the Earth's radius has grown substantially over geological time. Carey develops the principles and methodology of the idea, marshals empirical data accumulated since the 1958 Hobart symposium he had convened, and argues that continental fit, sea-floor spreading, and other observations are better explained by expansion than by the "subduction" of plate tectonics, which he called a "myth." He famously stated that he was "empirically satisfied that the Earth is expanding," while candidly acknowledging that he did not know the physical cause of the expansion.


[[Category:Expansion Tectonics|expanding earth]]
==About the author==
 
Samuel Warren Carey (1911–2002) was an Australian geologist and long-time professor at the University of Tasmania, internationally known for his early advocacy of continental drift and, later, for developing and championing the Expanding Earth hypothesis.
 
==Publication details==
 
* '''Author:''' [[Samuel Warren Carey]]
* '''Series:''' Developments in Geotectonics, vol. 10
* '''Publisher:''' [[Elsevier Scientific Pub. Co.,|Elsevier Scientific]]
* '''Published:''' 1976
* '''Pages:''' 488
* '''ISBN:''' 0444414851
 
==External links==
 
* [https://archive.org/details/expandingearth0000care Full text at the Internet Archive]
 
[[Category:Book|expanding earth carey]]
[[Category:Expansion Tectonics|expanding earth carey]]

Latest revision as of 12:52, 16 July 2026

The Expanding Earth
AuthorSamuel Warren Carey
LanguageEnglish
SeriesDevelopments in Geotectonics, vol. 10
SubjectExpansion Tectonics, geotectonics
Published1976
PublisherElsevier Scientific Pub. Co.,
Pages488

The Expanding Earth is a 1976 book by the geologist Samuel Warren Carey, published by Elsevier as volume 10 of the Developments in Geotectonics series.

Overview

The book is the major statement of Carey's case for an Expanding Earth — the hypothesis that the Earth's radius has grown substantially over geological time. Carey develops the principles and methodology of the idea, marshals empirical data accumulated since the 1958 Hobart symposium he had convened, and argues that continental fit, sea-floor spreading, and other observations are better explained by expansion than by the "subduction" of plate tectonics, which he called a "myth." He famously stated that he was "empirically satisfied that the Earth is expanding," while candidly acknowledging that he did not know the physical cause of the expansion.

About the author

Samuel Warren Carey (1911–2002) was an Australian geologist and long-time professor at the University of Tasmania, internationally known for his early advocacy of continental drift and, later, for developing and championing the Expanding Earth hypothesis.

Publication details

External links