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CHAPTER 6 PLATE TECTONICS 6.1 EARTH HAS SEVERAL LAYERS Objectives •Learn about the different properties of Earth’s layers •Learn about the plates that make up Earth’s outermost layers. What are the layers of the Earth  Crust Thin layer of rock  Surrounds Earth like a shell surrounds an egg  Two types of crust   Continental crust   Makes up the continents and some major islands Oceanic crust  Makes up the ocean floor Between 6-70 km thick (about 3.7 – 43.5 miles)  Furthest we have ever been in 12.3 Km (7.6 miles)  Two Kinds of Crust  Continental Crust Thicker of the two  Less Dense  Composed mostly of Granite  Avg. of 30 – 40 Km thick (19 – 24.9 Miles)   Oceanic Crust Thinner of the two  More Dense  Composed mostly of Basalt  Avg. of 6 – 11 Km thick (3.7 – 6.8 Miles  Mantle      Thickest Layer of Earth Made mostly of Hot Molten Rock Very, Very top is cool ridged rock About 2900 Km (1802 miles) 870 – 4400 C (1598 – 7952 F) Outer Core  Layer of liquid metal  Iron    & Nickel 2300 Km (1429 Miles) 4400 – 6100 C (7952 – 11,012 F) There is more pressure than the mantle but less pressure than the inner core Inner Core  Solid ball of metal  Iron     & Nickel 2400 Km in diameter (1491 Miles) 7000 – 8000 C (12,632 – 14,432 F) Extreme pressure keeps it solid Densest layer of the Earth Lithosphere   Made up of the crust and very top rigid part of the mantle This is what the tectonic plates are made of  Most plates have both continental and oceanic crust   On continents it is believed to be an average of 150 Km (93 miles) In ocean it is believe 50-100 Km (31 – 62 miles) Asthenosphere    The hot soft layer of molten rock in the middle mantle on which the lithosphere rests Flows slowly like hot tar Estimated to be 85- several hundred Km thick (50 – several hundred miles) 6.2 Continents change position over time  1. 2. 3. Objectives Learn how the continental drift hypothesis was developed Learn about evidence for plate movement from the sea floor Learn how scientists developed the theory of plate tectonics Continental Drift     Hypothesis proposed by Alfred Wegener in 1915 The idea that Earth’s continents were once joined in a single landmass and gradually drifted apart. This was not believed until the mid-1900’s Wegener found many things that he claimed proved his hypothesis Evidence for Continental Drift  Fossils  Ancient reptile found in both South America and Western Africa - Mesosaurus Evidence for Continental Drift  Geology  Rocks in Brazil matched perfectly to rocks in Africa  Limestone in Appalachian Mts. (N.A.) same as Scottish Highlands Evidence for Continental Drift  Climate  The same glacial till of the same age is found in southern Africa, South America, India and Australia  Large coal deposits were formed from tropical swamps in both N. America and Europe at the same time Super Continent  Wegener named his super continent  Pangaea  From the Greek word meaning “all lands”  Was a continent that reached from pole to pole  Began to split apart 200 million years ago New Evidence   In the 1960’s scientists really started studying the sea floor Found underwater mountain ranges  Called mid-ocean ridges  Found in every ocean  Seemed to circle the Earth like the seams of a baseball  Sea-floor Spreading  Where the ridges form  Cracks in the crust where molten rock rises, cools, and forms new crust New Evidence  Age of the Sea Floor  Rock near the cracks are younger then rocks further away  Ocean Trenches  Where the oceanic crust sinks back into the Asthenosphere  Scientists put this new evidence together with Wegener's hypotheses to create the Theory of Plate Tectonics What causes Plate Movement  Convection Current  Motion that transfers heat energy in a material  As molten rock heats up it becomes less dense, as it rises it starts to cool becoming more dense and sinking again Convection Currents Create  Ridge Push  Happens at mid-ocean ridges  Pushes plates apart  Creates new sea floor  Slab Pull  Happens at Ocean Trenches  The denser plate sinks  Melts back into the Asthenosphere Theory of Plate Tectonics    States that Earth’s lithosphere is broken into huge plates that move over the surface of the Earth Driving force of this movement is the convection current in the Asthenosphere Most major earthquakes, volcanoes, and mountain ranges are where two plates meet. 6.3 Plates Move Apart    About different plate boundaries What happens when plates move apart How the direction and speed of plates can be measured Types of plate boundaries  Divergent boundary  Where two plates move apart from each other  Convergent boundary  Where  plates push into each other Transform boundary  Where plates scrape past each other Sea Floor Spreading  Spreading Center   Another name for a divergent boundary in the sea floor What can form here  Rift Valley   Gap between mid-ocean ridges Mid-ocean ridges Longest chains of mountains in the world  Mid-Atlantic Ridge – Runs from Iceland to Antarctica    11,000 Km ( 6,214 mi) long Rift Valley – 24 Km (15 mi) wide, 9 Km (6 mi) deep Magnetic Reversal      Recorded in the sea floor Magnetic minerals in igneous rock lines up according to the direction of the poles Last one was about 760,000 yrs ago Flipped 170 times over the last 100 million years The prediction for it happening again is 1,500 – 2,000 yrs from now Divergent boundaries on Continents   Crust is to thick to pull apart like in the ocean Two plates still pull apart  Faults are created at the edges of these plates  Causes  Middle lots of earthquakes to occur sinks down  Eventually it will sink below sea level and fill with water  Red sea Divergent boundaries on Continents  The Great Rift Valley in Africa  Thousands  Iceland  Being  of Km long and 1800 m deep split into two islands Process takes millions of years Hot Spots    Area where hot molten rock rises to the surface in plumes (columns) from the mantle Usually found in the middle of tectonic plates but can be near boundaries Hawaiian Islands  Can tell the direction and speed of plate movement  Yellowstone National Park 6.4 Plates Converge or Scrape past each other What you will learn    What Happens when two continental plates converge What happens when an oceanic plate converges with another plate What happens when one plate scrapes past another plate Tectonic Plates push together at convergent boundaries   Crust is either folded or destroyed Subduction  When  one plate sinks beneath another Major geologic events occur at all convergent boundaries Continental-Continental Collision     When two plates carrying continental crust push together Because both crusts are the same density neither sinks Edges crumple and fold creating mountains Some of the worlds larges mountain chains are formed along these boundaries  Alps and Himalayas are examples As long as their plates keep moving these mountains keep getting bigger! Oceanic-Oceanic Subduction   This is where one plate with oceanic crust sinks beneath another plate with oceanic crust The older plate sinks  It is more dense and colder than the younger plate  When the plate reaches the asthenosphere it melts into magma What main features form at O-O Subduction  Deep-Ocean Trenches  Like deep canyons that form in the ocean floor as a plate sinks  Most are found in the Pacific Ocean  The Mariana Trench is where the Pacific Plate is sinking under the Philippine Plate  Deepest place in the ocean  Nearly 11,000 meters (36,000 ft) down  Oldest crust is found at these trenches  Earthquakes can occur here What main features form at O-O Subduction  Island Arcs  Chain of volcanic islands  These are violent volcanoes  Examples  Philippine Islands  Aleutian Islands of Alaska  Islands of Japan  Earthquakes often happen here Oceanic-Continental Subduction   This is when oceanic crust sinks under continental crust because it is colder and denser Deep-Ocean Trenches also form here  These are younger trenches than at O-O subduction  Earthquakes also happen here Oceanic-Continental Subduction Continued  Coastal Mountains  When the oceanic crust sinks it can cause the continental crust to buckle to form mountains  Run parallel to the deep-ocean trench  Many of these mountains will also be volcanic  Cascade Mountains in Oregon and Washington  Mount St. Helens – Active Volcano Transform Boundaries     The only boundary where crust is neither created or destroyed Plates scrape past each other at these boundaries Site of most major earthquakes Most occur on the sea floor but some are on land Transform Boundaries Continued  San Andreas Fault in California  Runs from the Gulf of California through San Francisco  Pacific Plate and part of the North American Plate are moving in opposite directions  If it keeps moving at its current rate  Los Angeles will be a suburb of San Francisco in about 10 million years
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            