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Continental Drift-Plate Tectonics continents had once been together Chapter 2: The Earth’s Mobile Crust Plate Tectonics Alfred Wegener 1920’s The Earth’s interior Plate Boundaries Rejected (gravity Earth, Moon, Sun) Continental Margins Tectonic Classification of Coasts Tectonic effects on coastal sediment supply Continental Drift-Plate Tectonics New evidence Sea floor mapping Magnetic anomalies Earthquake distribution Heat flow Radiometric dating Satellites Theory of Mantle Convection (Hess, 1960s) Seismic refraction = change in speed of P & S waves Shallow epicentersCrustal movement Mid-deep epicenters subduction Layered Structure of Earth Factors Chemistry Density Physical State (liquid or solid) 1 Formation of the Universe, Solar System, Earth – – – – – Big Bang, 13 bya Formation of elementary particles Gravitational formation of dense regions 12 bya first stars 4.55 bya Rotating cloud of gas from which sun and planets formed, initiated by “supernova” = exploding star – Accretion (Gaining material) – Differentiation (Separating based on density) – Evidence of rocks and water- 3.9 bya Layered Structure of Earth Mantle: 70% Earth’s volume, 2866m thick, 100-3200C, Mg-Fe silicates, solid but can flow Mohorovicic discontinuity: chemical boundary between Mantle and Crust Layered Structure of Earth Inner core: r=1222km, primarily Fe & Ni T=4000-5500C Outer core: 2258km thick, 3200C, liquid (partially melted) Layered Structure of Earth Continental Crust: Primarily granitic type rock (Na, K, Al, SiO2) 40km thick on average Relatively light Oceanic Crust Primarily basaltic (Fe, Mg, Ca, low SiO2) 7km thick Relatively dense Layered Structure of Earth (Physical Properties) Tectonic or Lithospheric Plates Lithosphere: 100km thick Rigid slab (plate) Asthenosphere 350km thick Partially melted (P,T,H2O) Mesosphere Extends to mantle-core boundary Pressure=compact mineralogy, mechanically strong 2 Direction of Plate Movement Divergent Types of Plate Boundaries Convergent Rates: average 5cm/year Mid-Atlantic Ridge = 2.5 – 3.0 cm/yr East-Pacific Rise = 8.0 – 13.0 cm/yr Modern divergence East African Rift System Mid Atlantic Ridge Transform East African Rift System Mid Atlantic Ridge South Indian Ridge 3 Convergent Plate Boundaries • Continent – Ocean Convergent Plate Boundaries Ocean-Ocean Aleutian Islands, Alaska • Ocean – Ocean • Continent – Continent Ocean – Ocean Caribbean Islands Continent – Ocean West Coast of South America • Continent – Ocean Fracture Zones-Transform faults • Mount St. Helens 4 Model of Mantle Convection (Hess, 1960’s) Improved Mapping, WWII radioactive decay, magma coming from the mantle or core-mantle boundary, gravitational sliding, slab pull Continental Margins Continental Shelves: broad shallow extension of the continents (~75km wide) Regions of deposition (rivers, glaciers, scrapped marine deposits, calcium carbonate) Large bedform features, reworked by tides, storms, waves Continental Slopes: Continental Rise: continental crust thins into oceanic crust Fan like deposit where the continental slope intersects the abyssal plains steep (~20km, 1-25 degrees), 5deg Pacific, 3deg Atlantic extend to depths between 1500-4000 m Formed by turbidity currents 5 Tectonic Evolution of Continental Margins Tectonic Coastline Classification (Inman & Nordstrom) Tectonic Setting (Pacific-vs-Atlantic type margin) Tectonic Setting of opposite side of the continent Geologic Age of the coast Exposure to open ocean conditions 1. Collision Coasts Continental collision coasts Island arc collision coasts Atlantic Margin: passive margin, edge of the continent is in the middle of a lithospheric plate, little seismic activity, no volcanism Pacific Margin: active margin, edge of the continent coincides with a plate boundary, rim of the Pacific Ocean, ring of fire, seismic activity and volcanism Continental collision coasts 2. Trailing Edge Coasts Neo-trailing edge coasts Afro-trailing edge coasts Amero-trailing edgo coasts 3. Marginal Sea Coasts Island Arc collision coasts continental – oceanic plate boundary oceanic – oceanic plate boundary narrow margin, deep trench narrow margin, deep trench seismic activity, coast backed by high mountains Neo-Trailing Edge Coasts Atlantic type margins geologically young Ex Red Sea, Gulf of Aden, Gulf of California moderate mountain ranges Ex Japan, Philippines, Aleutian Islands Afro-Trailing Edge Coasts both sides of the continent are passive margins lack organized drainage pattern Ex Africa, Greenland 6 Amero-Trailing Edge Coasts opposite side of the continent is an active margin organized drainage pattern Ex Atlantic coast of N&S America and Europe, India Marginal Sea Coasts direct exposure to the ocean is reduced due to island arc system Ex Gulf of Mexico, Bearing Sea, Sea of Japan, East and South China Seas Classification Based on Tidal Range Classification Based on Wave Energy correlation of morphology based on energy regime Hs2T2 Microtidal: <2m Mesotidal: 2–4m Macrotidal: >2m Hs = significant wave height T = significant wave period Hs2T2 0 – 30 = mildly exposed coast Hs2T2 30 – 300 = moderately exposed coast Hs2T2 > 300 = highly exposed coast Walton and Adams, 1978 Long Island Classification Hydrodynamic Coastline Classification Amero-Trailing Edge Coast South Shore Significant Wave Conditions: H ~= 1.5 m, T = 8 sec Tide Dominated Micro-Tidal Environments Tide Dominated Wave Dominated Shinnecock Inlet Tide Dominated & Cliff or Bluff Coast Gravel, sand Riverine Mixed Energy Gravel 2m Wave Dominated Sand Barrier Island Mixed Energy (Hayes, 1975) 7