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1 Plate Tectonics and Seafloor Spreading 2 Discovery of Subsea mountain ranges led to theories of: Plate Tectonics and Seafloor Spreading 3 • http://www.classzone.com/books/earth_scie nce/terc/navigation/chapter08.cfm Development of Plate Tectonics Theory 1666 Francois Placet: showed how the continental coastlines matched 1858 Antonio Snider showed how similar fossils appear on different continents 4 5 Alfred Wegener 1912-1922 Developed the theory of Plate tectonics or Continental Drift Proposed that the continents broke apart along plate boundaries 6 Permian 225 mya See Fig. 3-1b Triassic 200 mya 7 See Fig 3-1b Jurassic 135 mya Cretaceous 65 mya Present Day 8 9 Plate Movement See Fig. 3-7a 10 See Fig 3- 6a 11 Types of Plate Boundaries • Divergent (moving apart) • Convergent • Transform (moving together) (sliding past ) 12 1.Characteristics of Divergent or Spreading Zones • New oceanic crust is being made • This creates undersea mountain chains • Spreading rates: 1-2 cm/yr (slow) 6-15 cm/yr (fast) 13 14 Arabian Plate African Plate See Fig B3-4a 15 2.Convergent Boundary Types: 2 Types • Type I: Subduction- Ocean Crust slips below Continental Crust • Type II: Collision: 2 areas of continental crust meet each other and push together 16 Convergent Plate Boundaries 17 Island Arc: Mariana Islands See Fig. 3-6b 18 Oceanic- Continental Nazca See Fig. 3-6a PeruChili 19 20 Characteristics of Subduction Zones • Crust destroyed or deformed • Frequent earthquakes • Deep trenches • Major source of oil 21 Convergent Boundary Types • Type II: Collision •Occurs when 2 continental plates meet•Mountains formed Eurasian and Indian Plates Crunch Collision = 62 mya 22 23 Himalayan Mountain Formation See Fig 3-11b India China Type II: Continental-Continental Convergent Zone 24 25 Himalayan Mountains See Fig. 3-11c 26 3. Transform Plate Boundaries Plates Sliding past each other Transform boundary zones have many earthquakes both on land and under the ocean as well as volcanic islands . This part of the Plate Tectonics Theory was developed by John Tuzo Wilson, a Canadian scientist 27 Transform Plate Boundary 28 San Andreas Fault: See Fig. B3-2a 29 See Fig. 3-9a 30 See Fig. 3-9b 31 Hawaiian Island Chain 32 Continental Margins • These are the areas where the continents meet the oceans • There are two types: – Active: where 2 plates meet – Passive: where one plate continues out under the water to form a continental shelf 33 ACTIVE CONTINENTAL MARGINS PASSIVE CONTINENTAL MARGINS 34 Passive Continental Margins: East Coast of Canada Margin characteristics: •Few earthquakes shelf slope rise • Wide continental shelf (20-200km wide) • Economically rich- oil, gas, fisheries 35 Active Continental Margins mountains Example: West coast of North and South America Margin characteristics: • Frequent earthquakes • Active volcanoes in convergent zones) • Narrow continental shelf • Troughs • Trenches, Island arcs slope shelf (steep) No rise! trench 36 • http://www.windows.ucar.edu/tour/link=/ear th/interior/cooling_history_2.html