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Subduction zones
Subduction zones

... plates. The oceanic plate is comprised of heavier basaltic rock and descends below the continental plate. The oceanic plate descends into the asthenosphere and the materials of the oceanic plate recycle back into the asthenosphere. The ocean plate was originally created at a mid-ocean ridge millions ...
Earth Matters Benchmark Study Topics
Earth Matters Benchmark Study Topics

Name - Duncanville ISD
Name - Duncanville ISD

... http://www.quia.com/jg/262313.html for review games! QUESTIONS: 1. Choose one to write about: Alfred Wegner, Harry Hess & Robert Dietz, or Fred Vine & Drummond Matthews How has this person (or these persons) contributed to the theory of plate tectonics? ...
Unit 4 Chapter
Unit 4 Chapter

... would come to the surface and fill the cracks and push the land away. _____________renamed the process as “Sea Floor Spreading”. Hess’s hypothesizes were proven with more evidence discovered in the mid 1960’s. The evidence was discovered through paleomagnetism which is the study of the magnetic prop ...
PART 1 - earth science!
PART 1 - earth science!

... top of the asthenosphere. As they float, they are in constant slow motion due to convection currents in the mantle. The moving of tectonic plates on the asthenosphere is the theory of plate tectonics. ...
From Plate Tectonics to Climate
From Plate Tectonics to Climate

8. Mid-Ocean Ridge
8. Mid-Ocean Ridge

... large landmass that broke apart about 200 million years ago and drifted slowly to their current positions. • German scientist Alfred Wegener was the first to come up with this theory. ...
Evolution of Australian Biota
Evolution of Australian Biota

... -There are three similar lung fish found in Australia, South America and Africa. ...
What is a plate boundary?
What is a plate boundary?

... Plate Tectonic Theory combines the theories of continental drift and seafloor spreading.  This theory states that all of Earth can be divided into sections called tectonic plates, and that these have the ability to move.  Over time, these tectonic plates, with the help of seafloor spreading, have ...
Dangerous Earth: a plate tectonic story
Dangerous Earth: a plate tectonic story

... the mantle. Underneath the lithosphere is a thin zone within the mantle called the asthenosphere. Because of radioactive decay deep in the Earth the asthenosphere is so hot that there are films of molten material between the crystals. This means the asthenosphere is solid but it can also flow. Slow ...
Dangerous Earth: a plate tectonic story
Dangerous Earth: a plate tectonic story

... the mantle. Underneath the lithosphere is a thin zone within the mantle called the asthenosphere. Because of radioactive decay deep in the Earth the asthenosphere is so hot that there are films of molten material between the crystals. This means the asthenosphere is solid but it can also flow. Slow ...
Dangerous Earth: a plate tectonic story
Dangerous Earth: a plate tectonic story

... the mantle. Underneath the lithosphere is a thin zone within the mantle called the asthenosphere. Because of radioactive decay deep in the Earth the asthenosphere is so hot that there are films of molten material between the crystals. This means the asthenosphere is solid but it can also flow. Slow ...
GTPlate Tectonics, Continental Drift and Seafloor Spreading
GTPlate Tectonics, Continental Drift and Seafloor Spreading

... • Many believed Wegener’s theory was just that, merely a theory. • Many said there was no mechanism to explain how the continents could have moved apart. • Until..... ...
8 Grade Science Homework - O. Henry 8th Grade Science
8 Grade Science Homework - O. Henry 8th Grade Science

... continents and ocean basins with them as they move. For example, North American and part of the Atlantic Ocean are on the North American Plate. Plates are thought to move because of convection currents in the mantle. Convection currents can cause the plates to collide, pull apart, or slide past each ...
Section Quiz - TheVirtualNeal
Section Quiz - TheVirtualNeal

... magnetized minerals that align with Earth’s magnetic field. When the Earth’s magnetic field reverses, the magnetized minerals align in the opposite direction. The record of magnetic reversals is carried away from each side of the spreading center of a midocean ridge, showing that the molten rock is ...
Plate Tectonics…What`s It All About?
Plate Tectonics…What`s It All About?

... Divergent and Transform • Where plates move away from one another due to tension, a divergent boundary is created. An example is the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. • The most common feature at a divergent boundary is a mid-ocean ridge or rift zone. • Where plates move past each other horizontally, a transfor ...
Section 1.1 Outline
Section 1.1 Outline

... enormous pressure; remains a solid Outer core: layer of liquid metals that surrounds inner core; remains a liquid due to lower pressure Mantle: thickest layer (2900 km or 1700 mi); hot rock that is less dense than core; top part is cool & rigid; below that is hot, thick paste ...
Unit 3: Plate Tectonics Slideshow REGENTS
Unit 3: Plate Tectonics Slideshow REGENTS

... Developed the hypothesis of hot spots to explain islands like Hawaii & a third kind of plate boundary called a transform plate boundary ...
Geological Processes pgs 336 – 343
Geological Processes pgs 336 – 343

... ...
10.2 Dir. Reading Plate Tectonics
10.2 Dir. Reading Plate Tectonics

... 29. Where are most divergent boundaries located? _________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________ 31. When oceanic lithosphere collides with continental lithosphere, the oceanic lithosphere is less dense than the cont ...
Name
Name

... 31. Mid-ocean ridges are found in all of Earth’s oceans. 32. The place where two plates come together is known as a convergent boundary. 33. A(n) unconformity is a gap in the geologic record where some rock layers have been lost because of erosion. 34. A fault is formed at a transform boundary. 35. ...
The Interior of the Earth
The Interior of the Earth

... An understanding of the interior of the Earth helps us to understand the driving force behind plate tectonics. (Click on image for a video – 5:42) ...
Plate tectonics 2014
Plate tectonics 2014

... • Hot columns rise to the asthenosphere • Spread out and push cooler material out of the way. • Cooler material sinks. • The cycle continues over and over again. ...
Snicker`s Science - The Science Spot
Snicker`s Science - The Science Spot

... & Core ...
Spreading Ridge Axis, Divergent Plate Boundary Subduction Zone
Spreading Ridge Axis, Divergent Plate Boundary Subduction Zone

... any way. At subduction zones, water released from the subducting slab lowers the melting temperature of the mantle rocks inducing a small amount of melting. At spreading centers, rocks that were stable at high pressures are unstable at lower pressures near the surface and so melt a small amount. Whe ...
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Plate tectonics



Plate tectonics (from the Late Latin tectonicus, from the Greek: τεκτονικός ""pertaining to building"") is a scientific theory that describes the large-scale motion of Earth's lithosphere. This theoretical model builds on the concept of continental drift which was developed during the first few decades of the 20th century. The geoscientific community accepted the theory after the concepts of seafloor spreading were later developed in the late 1950s and early 1960s.The lithosphere, which is the rigid outermost shell of a planet (on Earth, the crust and upper mantle), is broken up into tectonic plates. On Earth, there are seven or eight major plates (depending on how they are defined) and many minor plates. Where plates meet, their relative motion determines the type of boundary; convergent, divergent, or transform. Earthquakes, volcanic activity, mountain-building, and oceanic trench formation occur along these plate boundaries. The lateral relative movement of the plates typically varies from zero to 100 mm annually.Tectonic plates are composed of oceanic lithosphere and thicker continental lithosphere, each topped by its own kind of crust. Along convergent boundaries, subduction carries plates into the mantle; the material lost is roughly balanced by the formation of new (oceanic) crust along divergent margins by seafloor spreading. In this way, the total surface of the globe remains the same. This prediction of plate tectonics is also referred to as the conveyor belt principle. Earlier theories (that still have some supporters) propose gradual shrinking (contraction) or gradual expansion of the globe.Tectonic plates are able to move because the Earth's lithosphere has greater strength than the underlying asthenosphere. Lateral density variations in the mantle result in convection. Plate movement is thought to be driven by a combination of the motion of the seafloor away from the spreading ridge (due to variations in topography and density of the crust, which result in differences in gravitational forces) and drag, with downward suction, at the subduction zones. Another explanation lies in the different forces generated by the rotation of the globe and the tidal forces of the Sun and Moon. The relative importance of each of these factors and their relationship to each other is unclear, and still the subject of much debate.
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