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Plate Tectonics Spectra of Science Amole 2013 Continental Drift • Proposed by Alfred Wegener in 1915. • Supercontinent Pangaea started to break up about 200 million years ago. • Continents "drifted" to their present positions. Evidence • Some continents coastlines seem to “fit” together • Fossils match across oceans • Rock types and structures match across oceans • Ancient glacial features Evidence Evidence Plate Tectonics In 1965, J. Wilson Earth’s lithosphere is broken into sections called plates. Plates are always shifting and moving. Movement is driven by convection currents in the mantle. Earth’s Layers The Plates Types of Plate Boundaries • Convergent – Push together • Divergent – Pull apart • Transform – Slide past one another Convergent Boundaries Oceanic- Continental Oceanic is denser and sinks below continental Creates a subduction zone Creates trenches, volcanic mountain arc Mt. St. Helens, Washington Convergent Boundaries Oceanic- Oceanic Oceanic being of equal densities both “sink” Creates a subduction zone Creates trenches, island arc Japanese Islands- Island Arc Convergent Boundaries Continental- Continental Continentals being of equal densities both “push up” Creates folded mountains Himalayas, Asia Divergent Boundaries Plates move away from each other Create gaps that new magma rises through making new crust Cause of sea-floor spreading Creates rift valleys and the Mid-Oceanic Ridge Transform Boundaries Plates slide past each other Creates earthquakes San Andres Fault, CA Animations • http://www.seed.slb.com/flash/science/featu res/earth/livingplanet/plate_boundaries/en/i ndex.html?width=570&height=475&popup=t rue