
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission.
A newly identified tectonic "regime" may rewrite our understanding of how rocky worlds evolve, scientists report in a new study.
The findings may help to explain why Earth became geologically vibrant while Venus remained stagnant and scorching, with possible implications for our understanding of what makes a planet habitable.
When researchers used advanced geodynamic simulations to map diverse planetary tectonic regimes — distinct patterns that describe how a planet's outer shell deforms and releases heat under different conditions — they discovered a missing link they've dubbed the "episodic-squishy lid."
This striking new framework offers a fresh perspective on how planets shift between active and inactive states, thus reshaping scientific assumptions about planetary evolution and habitability, the team said in a statement explaining the study.
Tectonic regimes influence a planet's geological activity, internal evolution, magnetic field, atmosphere and even its potential to support life. The episodic-squishy lid builds on the traditional divide between plate tectonics or mobile lid regimes (like modern Earth) and stagnant-lid behavior (like Mars). It describes a state in which a planet's lithosphere cycles between relatively quiet periods and sudden bursts of tectonic motion. Unlike a classic stagnant lid, this regime permits intermittent weakening driven by intrusive magmatism and regional delamination, temporarily softening the crust before it stiffens again.
This on-again, off-again behavior could be a missing link in Earth's early evolution, the researchers said. The models suggest that Earth may have passed through a squishy-lid phase that gradually primed its lithosphere for full plate tectonics as the planet cooled.
The findings also help to clarify the "memory effect" — the idea that a planet's tectonic behavior is shaped by its past — by showing that as a planet's lithosphere weakens over time, as Earth's did, the transitions between tectonic states become far more predictable.
By mapping all six tectonic regimes under different physical conditions for the first time, the team constructed a comprehensive diagram revealing likely transition pathways as a planet cools.
"Geological records suggest that tectonic activity on early Earth aligns with the characteristics of our newly identified regime," study co-author Guochun Zhao, a geologist at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, said in the statement. "As Earth gradually cooled, its lithosphere became more prone to fracturing under specific physical mechanisms, eventually leading to today's plate tectonics. This provides a key piece of the puzzle in explaining how Earth became a habitable planet."
The episodic-squishy lid may also shed light on Venus's long-standing mysteries. Although Venus is roughly the same size as Earth, it lacks clear evidence of plate tectonics, instead displaying volcanically reshaped terrain and distinctive features called coronae. The new simulations reproduce Venus-like patterns by placing the planet in an episodic or plutonic squishy-lid regime, where magmatism and mantle plumes periodically weaken the surface without generating true plates.
"Our models intimately link mantle convection with magmatic activity," study co-author Maxim Ballmer, an associate professor of geodynamics at University College London, said in the statement. "This allows us to view the long geological history of Earth and the current state of Venus within a unified theoretical framework, and it provides a crucial theoretical basis for the search for potentially habitable Earth analogs and super-Earths outside our solar system."
Because tectonics govern how water and carbon dioxide circulate through a planet's interior and atmosphere, understanding how lithospheres weaken and transition between regimes could help scientists assess which distant worlds might support stable climates, or even life, and guide decisions on observational targets for future missions.
The findings were published Nov. 24 in the journal Nature Communications.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Displaced Palestinian families suffer as heavy rains flood Gaza tent camps - 2
These Are the Journalists Israel Has Killed Since the Start of the Iran War - 3
Find the Mysteries of Effective Objective Setting: Transforming Dreams into Feasible Targets - 4
Audits of 6 European Busssiness Class Flights - 5
'Yellowstone' made him a fan favorite. His biggest role isn't the one you see.
Don't fall for it: These common tourist scams in Rome are easy to avoid if you know what you're looking for
'A perfect storm': Airlines cut flights and increase airfares as jet fuel price spikes
The Craft of Computerized Detox: Individual Trials
NATO needs Ukraine's 'adaptation DNA' and an 'HOV lane' for new war tech, top commander says
Fact Check: Some Bridge Photos Circulating Do NOT Show The Hongqi Bridge That Collapsed In Southwest China Nov. 11, 2025
Hezbollah field commander killed in IDF strikes in Beirut
A Lone Wolf Outsmarted Hunters in the Black Forest and Then Vanished
This Asian country is the next hot travel destination, and this is one of its best hotels
Chicago reports first rabies-positive dog in 61 years. What we know.













