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Chapter 20: The Earth Through Time Introduction: Tracking Past Plate Motions (2) Evidence includes: y y y 1 Introduction: Tracking Past Plate Motions (1) The evidence in support of plate motions comes from measurements made with the Global Positioning System (GPS). However, evidence of past plate motions is not obtained through GPS. 2 Printed with FinePrint - purchase at www.fineprint.com Great arc-shaped belts of metamorphic rocks formed by continental collisions. The eroded remains of island-arc volcanic rocks. Traces of Earth’s past magnetic field preserved in old lava flows. Plates have been moving and changing Earth’s surface for at least 2 billion years. 3 Former Ideas About Continents (1) In the sixteenth century, it became apparent that the coasts were approximately parallel. During the nineteenth century, the favored idea was that Earth was originally a molten mass that is cooling and contracting, with the crust being gradually compressed. 4 Former Ideas About Continents (2) Scientists discovered at the beginning of the twentieth century that the Earth’s interior is kept hot by radioactive decay. y y y The Earth might not be cooling but heating up (and therefore expanding). Heating would cause the Earth that had been covered largely by continental crust to expand and then the continental crust would crack into fragments. As expansion continued, the cracks would grow into ocean basins and basaltic magma from the mantle would rise through the cracks to form the oceanic crust. The New Idea: Plate Tectonics (2) The energy needed to move plates comes from the Earth’s internal heat energy, which causes convective flows in the mantle. Plate tectonics is the only theory ever developed that explains all of the Earth’s major features. 5 7 The greatest shortcoming of continental drift was the lack of an adequate mechanism for moving the continents. Wegener proposed that the Earth's spin caused the continents to move, plowing through the oceanic plate and producing mountains on their leading edges. Geologists at that time understood enough about the strength of rocks to know that this was highly unlikely. The New Idea: Plate Tectonics (1) By the middle of the twentieth century, a totally new approach was developed: plate tectonics. When the lithosphere (岩石圈), called plate, slides sideways across the asthenosphere(軟流圈): y y y Some parts of the lithosphere can be in compression. Others can be in tension (that is, being pulled apart). When a plate split in two, the broken edges of continental crust match perfectly. from Cox and Hart, 1986 6 Printed with FinePrint - purchase at www.fineprint.com 8 300 My BP Pangaea (1) Alfred Wegener’s theory of continental drift originated when he attempted to explain the match of the shorelines on the two sides of the Atlantic, especially along Africa and South America. He hypothesized an ancient land mass called Pangaea. The northern half of Pangaea is called Laurasia, the southern half Gondwanaland. Figure 20.1 A white area: covered by ice solid lines: contours of 2000-m below sea level, along which the continental crust meets oceanic crust black area: overlapped region; red area: gaps 9 11 Present Pangaea (2) Laurasia includes: y y Eurasia. North America. Gondwanaland includes: y y y y y India. Africa. Antarctica. Australia. South America. Figure 20.1B white area: old ice sheets arrows: direction of movement of the old ice dashed lines: connecting the glaciated regions if the continents were in the present positions at 300 My BP. 10 Printed with FinePrint - purchase at www.fineprint.com 12 Pangaea (3) During the late Carboniferous Period, about 300 million years ago, a continental ice sheet covered parts of South America, southern Africa, India, and southern Australia. y Apparent Polar Wandering (1) This is explained by continental drift: 300 million years ago, the regions covered by ice lay in high, cold latitudes surrounding the south pole, while north America and Eurasia were close to the equator From the mid-1950s to the mid-1960s, geophysicists discovered paleomagnetism (古地 磁). y Certain igneous and sedimentary rocks can preserve a fossil record of the Earth’s magnetic field at the time and place the rocks formed. It remained unconvinced that how the solid rock of a continent could possibly overcome friction and slide across the oceanic crust. 13 15 Reunite of Pangaea backward in time Breakup of Pangaea from 200 My BP to the present 14 Printed with FinePrint - purchase at www.fineprint.com 16 Figure 20.2 Apparent Polar Wandering (2) Three essential bits of information are contained in that fossil magnetic record: y y y The Earth’s polarity (the magnetic field was normal or reversed at the time of rock’s formation). The location of the magnetic poles at the time the rock formed. The magnetic inclination (磁傾角, I) (indicating how far from the point of rock formation the magnetic poles lay). blue lines: horizontal surface red diamonds: magnetic inclination 17 The earth’s magnetic field is nearly a dipole field, with the dipole axis tilted about 11° away from the earth’s rotation axis. 19 θm: colatitude φm: latitude = 90°-θm Apparent Polar Wandering (3) The paleomagnetic inclination (I) is a record of the place between the pole and the equator (that is, the magnetic latitude (φm) where the rock was formed (use the dipole formula: tanI=2tan φm). In the 1950s, geophysicists determined that the strange plots of paleopole positions indicated apparent polar wandering. Inclination (I) : the angle between the horizontal and the magnetic field direction measured positive downward (-90°~90°) Declination (D) : the angle between geographic north and the field direction measures positive clockwise (0°~360°) G Assume the earth is a sphere with radius of a, the best dipole magnetic field B : G µm B = 0 3 (1 + 3sin 2 ϕ m )1/ 2 4π a tan I = 2 tan ϕm μ0: permeability of free space(=4π×10-7tesla/A) m: dipole moment (Am2) 18 Printed with FinePrint - purchase at www.fineprint.com 20 If the continents were not moved in the past, the paleopole of the earth’s magnetic fields would wander along the track denoted by solid lines. Seafloor Spreading (2) Hess postulated that magma rose from Earth’s interior and formed new oceanic crust along the midocean ridges. Three geophysicists (Frederick Vine, Drummond Matthews, and Lawrence Morley) proposed that lava extruded at any midocean ridge becomes magnetized and acquires the magnetic polarity that exists at the time the lava cools. Figure 20.3 21 23 Seafloor Spreading (1) Seafloor Spreading (3) In 1962, Harry Hess of Princeton University hypothesized that the topography of the seafloor could be explained if the seafloor moves sideways, away from the oceanic ridges. His hypothesis came to be called the theory of “seafloor spreading,” and was soon proven to be correct. 22 Printed with FinePrint - purchase at www.fineprint.com The oceanic crust contains a continuous record of the Earth’s changing magnetic polarity. Successive strips of oceanic crust are magnetized with normal and reversed polarity. The magnetic striping allows the age of any place on the seafloor to be determined. Magnetic striping also provides a means of estimating the speed with which the seafloor had moved. 24 Relative velocity of plate motion v can be determined by distance to the ridge d divided by age of the seafloor t, i.e., v = d / t. Magnetic Record And Plate Velocities (1) The most recent magnetic reversal occurred 730,000 years ago. The oldest reversals so far found date back to the middle Jurassic, about 175 million years ago. From the symmetrical spacing of magnetic time lines it appears that both plates move away from a spreading center at equal rates. Figure 20.4 25 27 Figure 20.5 26 Printed with FinePrint - purchase at www.fineprint.com 28 Magnetic Record And Plate Velocities (2) Magnetic Record And Plate Velocities (4) All that can be deduced from magnetic time lines is the relative velocity of two plates. Absolute velocities requires information from GPS measurements (for present-day plate motions), or hot spot tracks, or past plate motions; y y y One consequence of different plates velocities is that the width of new oceanic crust bordering a spreading center increases with the distance from the rotation pole. Each transform fault lies on a line analogous to a line of latitude around the rotation pole. Plates with only oceanic lithosphere tend to have high relative velocities (Pacific and Nazca plates). 29 31 Magnetic Record And Plate Velocities (3) y y Plates with a great deal of thick continental lithosphere, such as the African, North American, and Eurasian plates, have low relative velocities. Plate velocities vary with the geometry of motion of a sphere. Plates of lithosphere are pieces of a shell on a spherical Earth. The motion of a rigid plate on the surface of a sphere can be described by a rotation pole (Euler pole) and a constant angular velocity rotating around the pole. Figure20.6 30 Printed with FinePrint - purchase at www.fineprint.com 32 Relict Plate Boundaries In The Geologic Record (2) The paleomagnetism of continental rock can be used to follow plate motion further back in time, but without the breadth and continuity of seafloor data. Today’s continents were assembled from many distinct plates or plate fragments. Small fragments of continental crust that have drifted as a single unit in the Earth history are called terranes. Figure 20.7 Figure 20.8 33 Relict Plate Boundaries In The Geologic Record (1) Seafloor magnetic strips help us reconstruct plate motion only as far back in time as the Jurassic, some 175 million years ago. All large expanses of older oceanic crust have been subducted back into the mantle at convergent plate boundaries. 34 Printed with FinePrint - purchase at www.fineprint.com 35 Ophiolites (1) (蛇綠岩系) The igneous rock formed at a spreading center, known as midocean ridge basalt (MORB), has a distinctive chemistry; When MORB is found on land, it usually lies within a body of rock that appears to be a fragment of oceanic crust caught up in a continental collision. 36 Ophiolites (4) Ophiolites (2) The minerals that characterize basalt, if buried deep within the collision zone, transform into a assemblage dominated by a distinctive green fibrous mineral called serpentine (蛇紋石). These serpentine-dominated fragments of oceanic crust found on continents are called ophiolites, from the Greek word for serpent, ophis. 37 Subduction Mélange (混雜(成)岩) And Blueschists (1) Ophiolites (3) Their structure matches well the crustal structure expected at a midocean ridge: y y y y y 39 At the top is a thin layer of sediment that was deposited on the ocean floor. Beneath the sediment is a layer of pillowed basalt. Still deeper are sills of gabbro (輝長岩), the plutonic equivalent of basalt. Beneath the gabbro sills there is often a layer of peridotite. The contact between gabbro and peridotite (橄欖岩) is interpreted to be the former Moho at the base of what was formerly oceanic crust. 38 Printed with FinePrint - purchase at www.fineprint.com Along convergent margins, a distinctive feature is the development of a mélange: a chaotic mixture of broken, jumbled, and thrust-faulted rock. A sinking plate drags the sedimentary rock formed from accumulated sediment downward beneath the overriding plate. 40 Subduction Mélange And Blueschists (2) Back-arc Basins And Plate Extension (1) Caught between the overriding plate and the sinking plate, the sediment becomes shattered, crushed, sheared, and thrust-faulted, forming a mélange. As the mélange thickens, it undergoes metamorphism, common in many mélange zones, to form low-temperature metamorphism blueschists (藍片岩)and eclogites (榴輝岩). When the sinking of a subducting plate is faster than the forward motion of the overriding plate, the margin of the overriding plate can be subjected to tensional (pulling) stress. If the overriding plate is oceanic or if the extension of a continental margin has progressed to an extreme state, an arc-shaped basin forms behind and parallel to the magmatic arc of the subduction zone. 41 Figure 20.10 43 Figure 20.11 42 Printed with FinePrint - purchase at www.fineprint.com 44 Supercontinents And Vanished Oceans (1) The average composition of continental lithosphere is quartz-rich, compared to olivine and pyroxene-rich oceanic lithosphere. Continental lithosphere is always less dense than oceanic lithosphere and is not subducted. Seismic evidence suggests that a root of mantle rock is attached to the base of old, cool continental crust. Figure 20.12 45 Back-arc Basins And Plate Extension (2) Basaltic magma may rise into such a back-arc basin at a newly formed spreading center, and new oceanic crust may form. 47 Supercontinents And Vanished Oceans (2) Continental buoyancy can be enhanced by the detachment and loss of this dense mantle root during the final stages of a continental collision. When plate movement bunches continental fragments together, the heat of the mantle beneath still must escape Earth’s interior. y 46 Printed with FinePrint - purchase at www.fineprint.com A supercontinent impedes heat flow from the deep mantle to the surface, effectively forming a layer of insulation. 48 Supercontinents And Vanished Oceans (3) Convective motion within Earth’s mantle: y y Will accumulate heat and cause thermal buoyancy at the base of the continental lithosphere. Warms and softens the lithosphere, which begins to rift. Red strip marks the location of an orogen that once formed a common suture of several cratons. The opening of the Atlantic ocean was heralded by the eruption of large basalt flows; In some cases, these eruptions persisted and became hot spots (example: the Parana flood basalt in Brazil). Figure 20.13 49 Supercontinents And Vanished Oceans (4) Two supercontinents existed in the past: Pangaea, formed roughly 350 million years ago, y Rodinia, an earlier Proterozoic* (原古界) continent formed roughly 1100 million years ago and split apart roughly 750 million years ago. *see geological time scale in Figure 11.10 of page 286. 51 Supercontinents And Vanished Oceans (5) y The sutures between continental fragments can be found in the many mountain ranges and belts of ophiolites that formed in the late Paleozoic period, roughly between 450 and 350 million years ago. Examples include: y y y y 50 Printed with FinePrint - purchase at www.fineprint.com The Appalachian mountains in eastern North America. The Atlas mountains in Morocco. The Ural mountains in Russia. The Hercynian mountains in Europe. Each of these mountain ranges is heavily eroded now. 52 Supercontinents And Vanished Oceans (6) As Pangaea formed, sediment sequences on continental shelves around the world record evidence that global sea level fell, draining shallow continental seas and exposing large areas of continental shelves. Supercontinents And Vanished Oceans (8) Pangaea lasted as a supercontinent for at least 150 million years. New oceans formed when Pangaea separated: 53 Supercontinents And Vanished Oceans (7) Geologists interpret the sea level drop as evidence for: y y 54 Printed with FinePrint - purchase at www.fineprint.com The Atlantic. y Southern Oceans. 55 Ice Ages in Earth History (1) A general slowdown in plate movement. A slowdown in the rate of formation of young, buoyant oceanic lithosphere at midocean ridges. The oceanic lithosphere at the time of Pangaea was, on average, older, colder, and denser, leading to a deeper world ocean. y Large continental ice sheets have existed several times during Earth’s history: y y In the Carboniferous period, 286 to 360 My ago. In the Ordovician and Silurian periods, roughly 450 to 425 My ago. Both of the glacial periods occurred at times when large continental landmasses lays over Earth’s south pole, providing a platform for the accumulation of vast quantities of snow and ice at high latitudes. 56 Figure 20.14 Phanerozoic (顯生宙(元)) Glaciations (1) Three major periods of high-latitude glaciation have been recognized in the Phanerozoic: y y y Rapid carbon burial and reduced volcanic activity because of slow plate motion and low spreading-ridge volcanism lower concentrations of CO2 in the atmosphere, reducing the greenhouse effect and encouraging glaciation. 57 Ice Ages in Earth History (2) Factors leading to an ice sheet: y y y y The amount of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. The tilt of the Earth’s axis. Changes in the Earth’s orbit around the sun. The height of continents and their positions in relation to the north and south poles. 59 Phanerozoic Glaciations (2) Carboniferous coal deposits occur within repetitive layered sedimentary sequences of marine and nonmarine sediments called cyclothems. Cyclothems indicate repeated transgressions and regressions by the sea. y y 58 Printed with FinePrint - purchase at www.fineprint.com Pleistocene (0 to 5 million years ago). Carboniferous (roughly 300 million years ago). Ordovician (roughly 455 million years ago). Timing connected to the longer Milankovitch orbital cycles of 100,000 years. glacial and interglacial climate may have alternated in a regular pattern. 60 Phanerozoic Glaciations (3) New continental glaciers: y y y Would have stolen water from the oceans, causing sea level to drop. Drained Coastal coal swamps as the sea level fell. Decreased carbon consumption because of reducing photosynthesis. Snowball Earth Hypothesis (I) Atmospheric CO2 levels could return to normal levels. y An increase in greenhouse warming would melt the glaciers and raise the sea level, rejuvenating the coal swamps and repeating the glacial cycle. 61 Phanerozoic Glaciations (4) There is evidence for continental glaciation near the end of the Proterozoic Eon, between 600 and 800 million years ago. y The extensive low-latitude glaciation occurred during a climatic extreme in which the whole Earth must have experienced glaciation. Extensive low-latitude glaciation did not occur at any time during the Phanerozoic. 62 Printed with FinePrint - purchase at www.fineprint.com A hypothesis attempts to explain a number of extreme phenomena in the geological record by proposing that the earth’s ocean was covered by ice for long periods 580-750 My ago. The extensive continental glaciation existed at low latitudes, possibly even at the equator near the end of Proterozoic Eon. Each glacial period lasted for millions of years and ended violently under extreme greenhouse conditions. These climate shocks triggered the evolution of multicellular animal life, and challenge long-held assumptions regarding the limits of global change. 63 Snowball Earth Hypothesis (II) Paleomagnetic evidence suggests that the continents were clustered around the Equator around 750 Myr ago, known as supercontinent of Rodinia. If CO2 in the atmosphere were to slowly drop over millions of years due to a slow reduction in volcanic activity, global temperatures would drop and glaciers would cover the high-latitude regions. The ice sheets prevent chemical weathering, the process that consumes CO2 to become carbonate. This stabilizes the levels of CO2 in the atmosphere. When all the continents were in the tropics, the consumption of CO2 would not work, as the continents would remain ice-free even as the Earth grew colder, approaching the critical threshold for a snowball. 64 Regional Structures Of Continents (1) Because the most ancient oceanic crust known to exist in the ocean dates only from the midJurassic Period (175 My ago), the only direct evidence concerning geologic events more ancient than the mid-Jurassic comes from the continental crust. Regional Structures Of Continents (3) An assemblage of cratons and ancient orogens that has reached isostatic equilibrium is called a continental shield. Because it is a stable platform, a continental shield is covered by a thin layer of littledeformed sediments. 65 Regional Structures Of Continents (2) Two kinds of structural units can be distinguished within the continental crust: y y The craton is a core of very ancient rock that has attained tectonic and isostatic stability. Orogens are elongate regions of crust that have been intensely folded and faulted during continental collision. Only the youngest orogens are mountainous today. Ancient orogens reveal their history through the kinds of rock they contain and the kind of deformation present. 66 Printed with FinePrint - purchase at www.fineprint.com 67 (Green) Four young orogens: NE: the Caledonide E: Appalachian W: Cordilleran N: Innuitian Each is younger than 600 My. Canadian Shield consists of ancient orogens (brown) and cratons older than 2 billions years (orange). Figure 20.15 68 Regional Structures Of Continents (4) The fragmentation, drift, and welding together of pieces of continental are responsible for the five types of continental margins we know of today: y y y y y The rifting of continental crust formed a ocean basin bounded by passive continental margin. Passive. Convergent. Collision. Transform fault. Accreted terrane. Figure 20.16 69 71 Passive Continental Margins (1) A passive continental margin occurs in the stable interior of a plate. y The eastern coast of North America, for example, is in the stable interior of the North American Plate. Passive continental margins develop when a new ocean basin forms by the rifting of continental crust (for example, the Red Sea). Figure 20.17 70 Printed with FinePrint - purchase at www.fineprint.com 72 Passive Continental Margins (2) Passive Continental Margins (4) Passive continental margins are places where a great thickness of sediment accumulates. This accumulation apparently occurs in the following manner: y y Basaltic magma, associated with formation of the new spreading edge, splits the continent. Heating expands the lithosphere so that a plateau forms as the lithosphere expands, with an elevation of as much as 2.5 km above sea level. The formation of three-armed rifts with one of the arms not developing into an ocean is a characteristic feature of passive continental margins. The Gulf of Aden, the Red Sea, and the northern end of the African Rift Valley meet at angles of 1200. y Such a meeting point formed by three spreading edges is called a plate triple junction. 73 75 Pangaea Passive Continental Margins (3) y y y y y Tensional forces cause normal faults and form a rift with pronounced topographic relief between the plateau and rift. Before the rift floor sinks low enough for sea water to enter, clastic nonmarine sediments shed from the steep valley walls accumulate in the rift. Associated with these sediments are basaltic lavas, dikes, and sills that form by magma rising up the normal faults. As the rift widens, a point is reached where seawater enters. The high rate of evaporation results in the deposition of a strata of evaporate salts laid down on top of the clastic nonmarine sediments 74 Printed with FinePrint - purchase at www.fineprint.com SW Indian Ridge Triple junction Spreading is very slow Figure 20.18 Figure 20.17 76 Continental Convergent Margins (1) Continental Convergent Margins (3) At a continental convergent margin, the edge of a continent coincides with a convergent plate margin in which oceanic lithosphere is being subducted beneath continental lithosphere. Subduction produces intense deformation of a continental margin. Sediment subjected to deformation in such a setting forms a mélange (see slide 42 or Figure 20.10). y y Sediments subjected to high-pressure and lowtemperature metamorphism. Adjacent and parallel to the belt of mélange, the crust beneath the continental volcanic arc is metamorphosed, but here the metamorphism is regional. One distinctive feature of a continental convergent margin, therefore, is a pair of parallel metamorphic belts. 77 Continental Convergent Margins (2) The Andean coast of South America is an example. y y The Nazca Plate (capped by oceanic crust) is being subducted beneath the South American Plate. Wet partial melting in the mantle activated by water released by the subducted Nazca Plate produced the andesitic magma that formed the Andes ( a continental volcanic arc). 79 An example of the continental volcanic arc is the Cascade Range. Each volcano has been active during the last 2 Myr. Magma to form the volcano comes from wet partial melting above the oceanic crust of the Juan de Fuca Plate subducting beneath the North American Plate. Where the volcanoes have been eroded, granitic batholiths, the remnants of the magma chambers that once fed the vocalnoes can be oberved Figure 20.19 78 Printed with FinePrint - purchase at www.fineprint.com 80 Continental Collision Margins (1) The edges of two continents, each on a different plate, come into collision at a continental collision margin. y Metamorphism and igneous activity are always present. y This results in intense folding and thrust faulting. Continental Collision Margins (2) The Himalayan Mountain chain. Within a fold-and-thrust mountain system, strata are compressed, faulted, folded, and crumpled, commonly in an exceedingly complex manner. The Appalachians and the Urals are older, Paleozoic-aged, examples. 81 Collision between the Australian-Indian Plate and the Eurasian Plate is an example of continental collision margins. The downgoing plate of lithosphere capped by oceanic crust breaks off and continues to sink, but the edge of the remaining segment of plate capped by buoyant continental crust is partly thrust under the edge of the overriding plate, causing further elevation of the collision zone. The Alps, the Himalayas, and the Carpathians are all young fold-and thrust mountain systems formed during the Mesozoic and Cenozoic eras. 83 Continental Collision Margins (3) -Fold-And Thrust Mountain System These systems develop from piles of sedimentary strata commonly 15,000 m or more in thickness. y Sediments are predominantly marine, accumulated along passive continental margins. The American geologist J.D. Dana coined the term geosyncline to describe a great trough that received thick deposits of sediment during slow subsidence through long geologic periods. One distinctive feature of mountain systems formed by collision is that an ocean disappears and a new mountain system lies in the interior of a major landmass. Figure 20.20 82 Printed with FinePrint - purchase at www.fineprint.com 84 Transform Fault Margins A transform fault continental margin occurs when the margin of a continent coincides with a transform fault boundary of a plate. y The San Andreas Fault. The San Andreas Fault apparently arose when the westward-moving North American continent overrode part of the East Pacific Rise. y The San Andreas is the transform fault that connects the two remaining segments of the old spreading center. Accreted Terrane Margins (1) An accreted terrane continental margin is a former convergent or transform fault margin that has been further modified by the addition of rafted-in, exotic fragments of crust such as island arcs. The northwestern margin of North America, from central California to Alaska, is an example of an accreted terrane margin. 85 San Andreas Fault (SAF) is an example of the transform fault continental margins. 20 My ago, the edge of N. America overrode the Farallon Plate creating two small plates, the Cocos and Juan de Fuca Plate. The SAF is the transform fault connects the two segments of East Pacific Rise. 87 Accreted Terrane Margins (2) Eventually, any fragment not consumed by subduction is added (accreted) to a larger continental mass. In the western Pacific Ocean, there are several examples: y y y Taiwan. The Philippine Islands. The many islands of Indonesia. Figure 20.21 86 Printed with FinePrint - purchase at www.fineprint.com 88 Accreted Terrane Margins (3) Mountain Building Each fragment, called a terrane, is a geologic entity characterized by a distinctive stratigraphic sequence and structural history. An accreted terrane is always fault-bounded and differs in its geologic features from adjacent terranes (also called suspect terranes). Some terranes have moved 5000 km or more. Today’s fold-and-thrust ranges are the orogens that formed during the last few hundred million years. Examples include: y y y 89 The western margin of N. America is a jumble of terranes accreted during the Mesozoic and Cenozoic eras. The Appalachians. The Alps. The Canadian Rockies. 91 The Appalachians (1) The Appalachians are a Paleozoic fold-andthrust mountain system 2500 km long, that borders the eastern and southeastern coasts of North America. They contain mud cracks, ripple marks, fossils of shallow-water organisms, and, in places, fresh water materials such as coal. The sedimentary strata thicken from west to east. Figure 20.22 90 Printed with FinePrint - purchase at www.fineprint.com 92 The Appalachians (2) Many of Pennsylvania’s oil pools were found in these gently folded strata. In the region known as the Valley Ridge Province, the strata have been bent into broad anticlines and synclines. In the west, the strata are nearly flat lying, but as one moves further east the strata dip more steeply to the east. Figure 20.23 93 95 Figure 20.25 Figure 20.24 94 Printed with FinePrint - purchase at www.fineprint.com 96 The Appalachians (3) The surface along which movement occurred is known as a detachment surface, and the slice that moved is commonly referred to by its French name, decollement. y y The style of deformation above the detachment surface is usually different from that below. The brittle sedimentary strata above the detachement surface has been fractured, moved along thrust faults, and stacked like a series of thin cards, while the older rocks below tend to have resisted faulting and largescale translation and to have been deformed by ductile deformation. The Alps (1) The Alps and associated mountain ranges in southern Europe were formed during the Mesozoic and Cenozoic eras, as a consequence of a collision between the European and African plates. The Jura Mountains, which mark the northwestern edge of the Alps, have the same folded form and origin as the Valley and Ridge Province in North America. 97 A sequence of subduction, collision, thrusting, and accretion produced the present-day structure. Iapetus ocean disappeared ~350 Myr ago when Africa collided with N. America. 99 The Alps (2) The Jura Mountains were formed from shallowwater sediments deposited on an ancient continental shelf. In the high Alps, thrusting appears to have developed on a much grander scale than in the Appalachians. The high Alps are composed of deeper-water marine strata. Figure 20.26 98 Printed with FinePrint - purchase at www.fineprint.com 100 Figure 20.27 Figure 20.28 Revisiting Plate Tectonics And The Earth System (1) For more than 2000 years, Arab traders sailed to India during the hot summer months, because summer winds blow from the west. They sailed back while winter winds blow from the east. The Arabic name for this seasonal reversal of wind and weather is mausim, from which we derive our word monsoon. 101 The Canadian Rockies In the Canadian Rockies, a central zone has been intensely metamorphosed. The thrust sheets in the Canadian Rockies moved eastward away from the core zone. Each sedimentary unit becomes thinner from west to east. 102 Printed with FinePrint - purchase at www.fineprint.com 103 Revisiting Plate Tectonics And The Earth System (2) The monsoon winds of India and Southeast Asia are a consequence of the collision between the Eurasian Plate and the Australian-Indian Plate. The high mountains and plateau divert the normal flow of westerly winds. 104 Revisiting Plate Tectonics And The Earth System (4) Figure 20.31 Sediment cores from the northern Indian Ocean show rates of sedimentation until about 10 million years ago. y Two peaks in sediment supply (9 to 6 and 4 to 2 million years ago) are evidence of major intervals of Himalayan uplift. Some evidence suggests that monsoon winds started only during the second major phase of uplift. y In winter, the snow-covered plateau reflects Summer heating of high plateau solar radiation and cools down, creating a causes warm air to rise and form a low high pressure region from which dry cold air pressure region draws moist air inland flows outward and downward. About 8 Myr ago, fine dust eroded by strong winds from desert basins north of the Tibetan Plateau began accumulating in central China. An increase in the rate of dust accumulation occurred during 3.5 to 2.5 Myr ago. The onset of this vigorous wind erosion coincided with the beginning of the East Asian monsoon climate system. 105 Revisiting Plate Tectonics And The Earth System (3) Chinese geologists have discovered that these high lands are rather recent topographic features. y They base their conclusion in part on evidence of plant fossils of the Pliocene Epoch (5.3 to 1.6 million years ago), collected at altitudes of 4000 to 6000 m, that include many subtropical forms that today exist only at altitudes below 2000 m; 107 Summary (1) 106 Printed with FinePrint - purchase at www.fineprint.com How was paleomagnetic evidence used to prove seafloor spreading? How do we use it to measure the moving velocity of a plate? y magnetic strips, magnetization of extruded lava that form oceanic crust at a mid-ocean ridge How to quantitatively describe the movement a plate in a sphere? Why does velocity differ from place to place on a tectonic plate? y rotation pole, angular rotation rate Explain how the apparent wandering of magnetic poles throughout geological history can be used to help prove continental drift. y Dipole magnetic field, magnetic latitude What is a mélange and what kind of metamorphism is associated with mélange? 108 Summary (2) What evidence can be used to identify former convergent plate boundaries? y Ophiolites, relics of island arcs, mountain range Why did the Carboniferous ice sheets wax and wane? y Greenhouse effect, CO2 cycle What evidence leads to the hypothesis of a Snowball Earth? When did the Snowball Earth most likely occur in the geological history ? What are the main structural units of a continent? y Craton, orogens What are the types of continental margins we know today? Describe the characteristics and the place on Earth for each type of the margines. y Passive, convergent, collision, transform fault, and accreted terrane 109 Printed with FinePrint - purchase at www.fineprint.com