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SEA-FLOOR SPREADING TXT: PG. 97 CHAPTER 3, SECTION 4 Background • Deep ocean parts don’t receive a lot of sunlight • Cold---temp near freezing • Areas where there is space between the plates allows water down into the crust, then brings it back up. • These warm areas provide a great area for life to thrive, and support information given by Wegener’s “continental drift” theory. Mid-Ocean Ridges • Ridge: Area of higher relief on the ocean floor (underwater mountain range). • Sonar: Device used to bounce sound waves off of objects deep in the water. • Time it takes for echo to return=distance to the object • Ridges curve around the ocean floor, going into all oceans • They connect in a system that forms the world’s longest mountain chain (60,000 km) Sea-Floor Spreading • Places where the sea floor spreads apart along an ocean ridge. • Convection currents push new magma up into the crack. • Magma cools at the surface, causing “new crust” to form and making the older ocean floor move. Evidence • Eruptions of molten material • Scientists used “Alvin”—small sub used to dive into high pressure areas of the ocean • Found rocks that indicated molten material was present and hardening quickly • Magnetic stripes in the rock • Last reversal of the earth 780,000 years ago. • New layers of rock have formed above this reversal, indicating new rock in the area. • Older rock lines up one way • New rock lines up opposite • Ages of the rocks • Scientists used the Glomar Challlenger to drill into the ocean floor • Scientists dated the rocks and determined that older rocks were further away from the mid-ocean ridge. • The youngest of the rock was in the center of the ridge. Deep-Ocean Trenches • This is what keeps the ocean floor from getting wider and wider • In this area, the ocean floor dips down • After tens of millions of years, the trench allows part of the ocean floor to sink back to the mantle. Subduction • Definition: Process where the ocean floor sinks under a deep-ocean trench and back into the mantle • As the new crust moves away from the ridge, it cools…what does that do to it’s density? • Right, it gets more dense…eventually so dense that gravity pulls it down beneath the trench. • This process changes the size and shape of the ocean floor… • Ocean floor is renewed every 200 million years (time for new rock to become old, dense, and sink) • Pacific ocean: New crust isn’t being produced as fast as it’s sinking-----the ocean is shrinking • Atlantic Ocean: Old crust isn’t sinking as fast as new is forming---the ocean is growing causing the continents on it’s edges to move.