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• Some questions we will answer today: – How is the earth always changing? – What forces inside the earth create and change landforms on the surface? – What is the theory of plate tectonics and how does it work? – What two theories help make up the theory of plate tectonics? – What is continental drift and sea floor spreading? – What happens when the plates crash together, pull apart, and slide against each other? Different theories about phenomena on earth’s surface • Most of them contradict each other • Not reliable • Eg. – – – – Roman Church Copernicus Aristotle Galileo Bases of studies of every discipline Physics Chemistry Biology Gravity Atom Cell Earth Science Plate tectonic The Plate Tectonic Theory • One single theory • explains almost all phenomena prevalent in the lithosphere – – – – – – volcanism, mid-oceanic ridges, deep sea trenches, earthquakes, mineralization, mountain-building and many more. • “Paradigm Shift” Yet tip of the iceberg To really understand how the earth became to look as it does today, and the theory of plate tectonics, you also need to become familiar with two other ideas: Continental Drift and Seafloor Spreading. The idea of ‘moving’ continents Continental Drift Theory • In the early 1900s a German explorer and scientist proposed the continental drift theory. He proposed that there was once a single “supercontinent” called Pangaea. Continental drift: An idea before its time • Alfred Wegener • Proposed hypothesis in 1915 • Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans • Continental drift hypothesis • Supercontinent Pangaea began breaking apart about 200 million years ago CONTINENTAL DRIFT THEORY • Alfred Wagener- 1912, revised in 1924. • He was a meteorologist studying global climatic changes in the geologic past. • ‘jigsaw fit’ of continents – Brazil- Gulf of Guinea – North American coastline- Scandinavian coastline – Ethiopia- Western India and Pakistan – Australia- Bay of Bengal THE THEORY • • • • • Super continent- Pangaea Covered by huge water body- Panthalassa Pangaea- Laurasia & Gondwanaland Seperated by a narrow sea- Tethys Sea 250-300 mya, both started coming closer, Indian peninsula started drifting north-eastwards, Tethys Sea became smaller • Himalayas and Alps were formed • 180 mya, Americas started drifting westwards, forming Rockies and Andes Evidence used in support of continental drift hypothesis •Fit of the continents •Fossil evidence •Matching rock type and mountain belts •Paleoclimatic evidence Evidence for Continental Drift • Jigsaw Puzzle fit of continents Alfred Wegener during Greenland expedition Glacial Deposits More evidence • Matching geologic structures including: – Mountain chains – Ore deposits – Same rocks of same age The Evidence for Continental Drift • Fossil Evidence – – – – Glossopteris Cynognathus Mesosaurus Lystrosaurus Wegener not believed • Why? – What could possibly force the continents to move across the ocean floor in this way. They would be crushed. – He was a meteorologist, not a geologist Sea-Floor Spreading • Sea-floor spreading: The process by which molten material adds new oceanic crust to the ocean floor Seafloor Spreading • Emerged from the study of the ocean floor. • Series of mountains that extend around the world, stretching more than 64 thousand kilometers (40 thousand miles). Developments 50s and 60s • World war 2 submarines found mountains under the oceans – the mid-ocean ridges • Theory of seafloor spreading suggested by Princeton professor Dr. Harry Hess Seafloor spreading First look at the earth’s layers as shown here. Evidence for Sea-Floor Spreading Trend of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge • Similar to the coastlines of adjacent continents • Europe and Africa to the east • North and South America to the west Oceanic Crust is thin • Both sides of the ridge, oceanic crust is hardly 4 to 5 km thick • Rest all oceans –between 10 to 20 km Volcanoes • Continuous chain of volcanoes all along the mid-Atlantic ridge • What would be the effect of this at the ridge? Age of rocks • Youngest near the ridge • As we move away from the ridge, rocks are older in age • No rock in the Atlantic ocean is more than 200 million years old ( The crust is not more than 200 million years old) How are these matching stripes evidence of sea-floor spreading? • The pattern of stripes is the same on both sides of the ridge, indicating that the sea floor has spread from the mid-ocean ridge What happens to the rock along the ridge when new molten material erupts? • The spreading molten material pushes the older rock to both sides of the ridge Where is the oldest part of the ocean floor? • The oldest part of the ocean floor is farthest from the mid-ocean ridge Pangaea revisited • By piecing together this information, we can see how the continents have moved over the past 200 million years, due to seafloor spreading If new crust develops from midoceanic ridges………. • Where does the old crust go? • Why the amount of lava coming out and forming crust does not reduce? Look at the observations made by • Hugo Benioff & Vine and MathewsAmerican GEOLOGISTS • They observed certain phenomena in the eastern coast of Eurasia Deep sea coast • The sea near the east coast of China was very deep. • Yellow Sea • South China Sea • East China Sea Ring of Fire • Chain of volcanic islands running parallel to the east coast of Eurasia – Aleutian – Japan – Phillipines Volcanic activity • Intense • Explosive. • Lava different than that of the Mid-Atlantic ridge Frequent earthquakes • Japan gets at least 2 earthquakes every day Conclusion • As Eurasia is pushed from Mid-Atlantic Ridge, – It pressed against and subsided under the crust which make up the floor of the Pacific Ocean – Constant rubbing of both the plates melts some rocks, magma forms and erupts out forming the islands. Process known as?????????????????????????? Subduction • Subduction: The process by which oceanic crust sinks through a deepocean trench and back into the mantle; a convergent plate boundary Subduction at Deep-Ocean Trenches Deep-Ocean Trenches • Deep-Ocean Trenches: A deep valley along the ocean floor through which oceanic crust slowly sinks towards the mantle What happens to the ocean floor at deep ocean trenches? • At deep-ocean trenches, subduction allows part of the ocean floor to sink back into the mantle, over tens of millions of years Plate Tectonics • • • • • • Unifying concept Sea floor spreading Continental Drift Earthquakes Volcanoes Mountains Sea islands According to the theory of plate tectonics, the earth’s outer shell is not one solid piece of rock. Instead the earth’s crust is broken into a number of moving plates. The plates vary in size and thickness. They keep moving in different directions 2 Types of Plates • Ocean plates - plates below the oceans • Continental plates - plates below the continents What is the Asthenoshere? • The plastic layer below the lithosphere = asthenosphere • The plates of the lithosphere float on the asthenosphere Drifting of continents • When the tectonic plates under the continents and oceans move, they carry the continents and oceans with them. Sea-Floor Spreading • • • • • Mid oceanic ridges Magma comes out Forms new crust Pushes existing crust on both sides Drifting continents Subduction • Heavier plate subsides under lighter plate. • Magma erupts over the thinner plate • Sometimes magma may pile over on the ocean to form islands Plate Tectonic Theory • Plates of rigid lithosphere (oceanic and continental) move from the energy of heat transfer below • Their interactions define divergent, convergent, and transform boundaries and control many surface processes Plate tectonics • Sea floor spreading provides the driving mechanism for movement • However, it is not the continents that are moving, but the “plates” of lithosphere “floating” in effect on the asthenosphere • The lithosphere is made up of about 20 plates which move relative to each other in several ways • Let’s look at a generalized sketch The Plates Types of Plate Margins • Plate boundaries • Interactions among individual plates occur along their boundaries • Types of plate boundaries – Divergent plate boundaries – Convergent plate boundaries – Transform fault boundaries DIVERGENT PLATE BOUNDARY • At a divergent plate boundary lithospheric plates move away from each other. • The mid-Atlantic Ridge, a topographically high area near the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, is an example of a divergent plate boundary. • New crustal material Features of Divergent Boundaries • Mid-ocean ridges • rift valleys • fissure volcanoes They’re Pulling Apart! • When plates pull away from one another they form a diverging plate boundary, or spreading zone. Thingvellir, the spreading zone in Iceland between the North American (left side) and Eurasian (right side) tectonic plates. January 2003. Divergent: Atlantic Ridge LAVA FOUNTAINS KRAFLA VOLCANO ICELAND Divergent boundaries in Continents • Continental rifts • Splits landmasses into two or more smaller segments The East African Rift CONVERGENT PLATE BOUNDARY • At a convergent plate boundary, lithospheric plates move toward each other. • The west margin of the South American continent, where the oceanic Nazca Plate is pushed toward and beneath the continental portion of the South American Plate, is an example of a convergent plate boundary Convergent plate boundaries • Types of convergent boundaries • Oceanic-oceanic convergence – When two oceanic slabs converge, one descends beneath the other – Often forms volcanoes on the ocean floor – If the volcanoes emerge as islands, a volcanic island arc is formed (Japan, Aleutian islands, Tonga islands) – Subducting plate bends downward forming an oceanic trench ure 12.16 Oceanic-oceanic Collision Oceanic-Continental Collision ANDES • The Andes Mountain Range spans the entire length of South America, along the western coast. During this subduction some Nazca crust is scraped off along base of the Andes, adding height to the entire range. RING OF FIRE OCEANIC-CONTINENTAL COLLISONS SUSTAIN MOST VOLCANIC ACTIVITY AROUND THE PACIFIC OCEAN Convergent plate boundaries • Types of convergent boundaries • Continental-continental convergence – Continued subduction brings continents together – Less dense, buoyant continental lithosphere does not subduct – Result is a collision between two continental blocks – Process produces mountains (Himalayas, Alps, Appalachians) The collision of India and Asia produced the Himalayas Transform fault boundaries • Third type of plate boundary • Plates slide past one another and no new lithosphere is created or destroyed Transform Boundaries • Transform faults mark fractures in the crust where plates slide laterally past each other • The San Andreas fault separates the Pacific plate from the North American plate • These areas are likely to have a rift valley, earthquake, and volcanic action. San Andreas Fault, CA Hot spots • Caused by rising plumes of mantle material • Volcanoes form over them (Hawaiian Island chain) • Mantle plumes are long-lived structures and originate at great depth, perhaps at core-mantle boundary The Hawaiian Islands form over stationary hot spot OTHER HOTSPOTS Plate motions also can be looked at into the future, and we can have a stab at what the geography of the planet will be like. Perhaps in 250 million years time there will be a new supercontinent.