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CONCEPT CHECKS CH. 15 PLATE TECTONICS 15.1 1. Briefly contrast the view held by most geologists regarding ocean basins and continents prior to the 1960s with their perspective a decade later. 15.2 1. What was the first line of evidence that led early investigators to suspect the continents were once connected? 2. Describe the four kinds of evidence that Wegener and his supporters gathered to substantiate the continental drift hypothesis. 3. Explain why the discovery of the fossil remains of Mesosaurus in both South America and Africa, but nowhere else, supports the continental drift hypothesis. 4. Early in the 20th century, what was the prevailing view of how land animals migrated across vast expanses of open ocean? 5. How did Wegener account for the existence of glaciers in the southern landmasses at a time when areas in North America, Europe, and Asia supported lush tropical swamps? 15.3 1. To which two aspects of Wegener’s continental drift hypothesis did most Earth scientists object? 15.4 1. Compare and contrast the lithosphere and the asthenosphere. 2. List the three types of plate boundaries, and describe the relative motion at each of them. 15.5 1. Sketch or describe how two plates move in relation to each other along divergent plate boundaries. 2. List four facts that characterize the oceanic ridge system. 3. Briefly describe the process of continental rifting. Where is it occurring today? 15.6 1. Why does the rate of lithosphere production roughly balance with the rate at which it is destroyed? 2. Compare a continental volcanic arc and a volcanic island arc. 3. Why does oceanic lithosphere subduct while continental lithosphere does not? 4. Briefly describe how mountain systems such as the Himalayas form? 15.7 1. Sketch or describe how two plates move in relation to each other along a transform plate boundary. 2. Differentiate between transform faults and the two other types of plate boundaries. 15.8 1. What is the age of the oldest sediments recovered by deep-ocean drilling? How do the ages of these sediments compare to the ages of the oldest continental rocks? 2. Assuming hot spots remain fixed, in what direction was the Pacific plate moving while the Hawaiian Islands were forming? When Suiko Seamount was forming? 3. Describe how Fred Vine and D. H. Matthews related the seafloor-spreading hypothesis to magnetic reversals. 15.9 1. When did the supercontinent of Pangaea begin to break apart? 2. What two continents were the first to separate? 3. During the break-up of Pangaea, which continent was actually growing in size through the accretion of other landmasses? 15.10 1. Briefly describe how hot-spot tracks can be used to determine the rate of plate motion. 2. Refer to Figure 15.27 and determine which three plates appear to exhibit the highest rates of motion. 15.11 1. Describe slab pull and ridge push. Which of these forces appears to contribute more to plate motion? 2. What role are mantle plumes thought to play in the convective flow of the mantle? 3. Briefly describe the two models proposed for mantle-plate convection. What is lacking in each of these models? 15.12 1. Briefly describe some major changes to the globe when we extrapolate present-day plate movements 50 million years into the future.