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Transcript
September 30
Question: Why do scientists
on p
age think all the continents
6
were once connected?
Notebooks: Katie & Brennan
Timekeeper: Logan
Write the following on the Goal Sheet in your
notebook.
October 3 Goal: I can explain the evidence for the
Theory of Continental Drift (LT # 1-2)
Rate your understanding of this topic at this
moment, and how much effort you plan to give
to class today.
Plate Tectonics
Learning Targets
Indicator: Earth’s crust consists of major and minor tectonic plates that move relative to each other. Learning Targets:
I can …
1. Explain how our understanding of plate tectonics has developed through the contributions of Alfred Wegener, Harry Hess, and Robert Dietz
2.
3.
4.
5.
Explain 4 pieces of evidence for the theory of continental drift.
Describe the process of seafloor spreading
Explain at least three pieces of evidence for seafloor spreading
Explain how evidence of polar wandering supports plate tectonics
6. Explain which layer of earth is divided into tectonic plates
7. Tell that the tectonic plates float on the asthenosphere
8. Identify and describe the geothermal movements that cause plate motion.
Vocabulary:
continental drift, seafloor spreading, convection, tectonic plate, Mesosaurus, Glossopteris, Pangaea, mantle, asthenosphere, lithosphere, magnetic field, trench, subduction, rift valley, mid­ocean ridge, polar wandering, geothermal
continents have slowly
moved to their current locations.
Alfred Wegener
1912
Pangaea
all continents
200 million
Mesosaurus
South America
not swim
Africa
ocean
joined
Glossopteris
Africa
India
Australia
South America
Antarctica
Glossopteris
warm
Arctic
Spitsbergen
Glacial
glaciers
Africa
Australia
ice
south pole
rocks
similiar
connected
eastern U.S.
Greenland
western Europe
rocks
Africa
joined
Why didn't scientists accept the hypothesis of continental drift?
Because it didn't explain HOW continents could move
Theory of Continental Drift
Proposed by Alfred Wegener in 1912
Theory of
States that all land was once joined together in supercontinent called (Pangaea) that slowly drifted apart Scientists didn't believe continents
could move, so theory wasn't accepted
Evidence: Puzzle­like fit of the continents
Theory of
Rocks and mountains match up where continents would be joined
Same fossils found on different continents
that they couldn't travel between
Climate ­ fossils found in areas they couldn't survive
evidence of glaciers found in warm areas
Freshwater ponds and lakes; needed to breathe air from surface
No; Ocean is salt water.
Mesosaurus traveled to or lived in these areas when the continents were still joined together.
Yes, since the Mesosaurus could not travel the ocean between these continents, it had to have lived in these areas when the continents were still joined.
While more than one piece of evidence is needed to "prove a theory", the Mesosaurus does seem to support Continental Drift. The Mesosaurus could not swim between the two continents; it lived before humans; thus, a boat did not take it between the continents; it is highly unlikely that the same organism could have independently came into being in two different places. Consequently, the only way it could have ended up on both continents is if it traveled there while the continents were still joined.