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Earth ~200 million years ago The Continental Drift Hypothesis • Proposed by Alfred Wegener in 1915. • Supercontinent Pangaea started to break up about 230 million years ago • Continents "drifted" to their present positions • Continents "plowed" through the ocean crust. Continental Drift • This idea was not widely excepted until the 1960’s. It was at this time that different kinds of data indicated that the continents have moved. • Continental drift turns out to be just one aspect of the broader theory known as plate tectonics • Tectonics is the study of large scale movement and deformation of the Earth’s outer layers Continental Drift: Evidence • Geographic fit of South America and Africa • Fossils match across oceans • Rock types and structures match across oceans • Ancient glacial features Continental Drift: Evidence Tight fit of the continents, especially using continental shelves. Fossil Evidence • Leaves of a fossil plant Glossopteris were found in southern Africa, Australia, South America, India, and even Antarctica. • Certain dinosaur and other vertebrate fossils were found only over limited areas of several different continents. • The question was asked: how did a given life form develop, identically and simultaneously, on different continents now widely distributed around the globe. Continental Drift: Fossil Evidence Climatic Evidence • Many factors determine a region’s climate, but a dominant one is latitude. • In general equatorial regions tend to be the warmest, polar regions tend to be the coldest, with more moderate temperatures in between. • Sedimentary rocks formed at Earth’s surface, often preserve evidence of the climate conditions under which they were formed. • Fossil remains of plants known to thrive in moist heat imply a tropical climate, and some sandstones indicate desert conditions Question: Did the climate change of did the continent move, or both Continental Drift: Evidence Correlation of mountains with nearly identical rocks and structures Continental Drift: Evidence Glacial features of the same age restore to a tight polar distribution. The Rise of Plate Tectonics • U.S. Navy mapped seafloor with echo sounding (sonar) to find and hide submarines. Generalized maps showed: • oceanic ridges—submerged mountain ranges • fracture zones—cracks perpendicular to ridges • trenches—narrow, deep gashes • abyssal plains—vast flat areas • seamounts—drowned undersea islands Evidence for Plate Tectonics In the 1960’s scientists started to map seafloor magnetism. The research showed that has a striped pattern completely unlike Mason on & Raff, patterns land. 1961 Black: normal polarity White: reversed polarity Evidence for Plate Tectonics When reviewing the data the scientists noted that the patterns are SYMMETRICAL across oceanic ridges. The dates show the youngest rocks at the ridge (red color). Meanwhile back on the military front • U.S. military developed new, advanced seismometers to monitor Soviet nuclear tests. • By the late 1950s, seismometers were recording 24 hrs/day, 365 days/year • All of this recording led to a detailed idea of what the ocean floor really looked like Bands of seismicity—chiefly at trenches and oceanic ridges What did the data and research show? • After years of data collecting and analysis it was determined that the surface of the Earth is broken into 7 major plates. • 1. Indian-Australian • 2. Pacific • 3.North American • 4.South American • 5.Antarctic • 6.African • 7.Eurasian The seven major plates in Earth’s crust The Theory of Plate Tectonics • Earth’s outer shell is broken into thin, curved plates that move laterally atop a weaker underlying layer • Most earthquakes and volcanic eruptions happen at plate boundaries. • Three types of relative motions between plates: • Divergent, Convergent, and Transform Divergent Convergent Transform Important to remember and understand • The Earth is not completely solid from the surface to the center of the core • There is a “plastic”, locally partly molten zone that lies relatively close to the surface, where a thin, solid, rigid shell of rocks floats on a weaker, semisolid layer below The lithosphere • This is the Earth’s outermost solid layer • The name reflects the rigid quality of the lithosphere. • It varies in thickness from place to place but the thinnest is under the oceans where it extends to a depth of about 50 kilometers (30 miles). • It is thicker under the continents where it can be as thick as 100 kilometers (60 miles) The asthenosphere • This layer has “plastic” quality to it, which allows it to flow slowly as contrasted with the more rigid lithosphere. • This layer lies within the upper mantle and extends to an average depth of 500 kilometers (300 miles). • This zone is actually not all molten, only a small part is magma, but with the immense pressure the rocks behave like fluid but remain solid Locating Plate Boundaries • Locating the boundaries consists of two main ways: • Earthquakes • Volcanic eruptions Polar Wandering • It is the migration over the surface of the Earth of the magnetic poles of the Earth through geological time. It was long recognized that the directions of magnetization of many rocks do not correspond to the present direction of the geomagnetic field at their sites • On the time scale of polar wandering, polarity reversals of the geomagnetic field are relatively frequent • What this shows is the directions continents have drifted How fast are they moving? • By looking at Hawaii and the its previous path and looking at the amount of time it took to cover that distance we can get a speed. • 2,700 kilometers • 25 million years • = • 11 centimeters per year • **However looking at many determinations from all over the world, movement has been determined at 2 to 3 centimeters per year Why do the plates move? Slab pull: Denser, colder plate sinks at subduction zone, pulls rest of plate behind it. Ridge push: At spreading ridges, the plates push material ahead of the spreading Mantle convection: Hotter mantle material rises beneath divergent boundaries, cooler material sinks at subduction zones. Convection cells Evidence for • From seismic and other geophysical evidence and laboratory experiments, scientists agree with the theory that the plate-driving force is the slow movement of hot, softened mantle that lies below the rigid plates • Below the lithospheric plates, at some depth the mantle is partially molten and can flow, albeit slowly, in response to steady forces applied for long millions of years. Mechanics of • The mobile rock beneath the rigid plates is believed to be moving in a circular manner somewhat like a pot of thick soup when heated to boiling. • The heated soup rises to the surface, spreads and begins to cool, and then sinks back to the bottom of the pot where it is reheated and rises again. • This cycle is repeated over and over to generate what scientists call a convection cell or convective flow. How does convection work? No one knows— but they aren’t afraid to propose models! Whole-mantle convection Two mantle convection cells Complex convection Divergent boundaries also can rip apart (“rift”) continents All of these oceans were caused by rifting of the Earth’s crust • The Atlantic Ocean • Red Sea • East Africa Rift It is presumed that Pangea was ripped apart by the same process This is how the Rocky Mountains and the Himalayas were formed Hotspots, such as the one under Hawaii, have validated plate tectonic theory.