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Download nonsequitur - Earth and Atmospheric Sciences
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nonsequitur Science searches for the true by tying to eliminate the untrue. “It is a process of separating the demonstrably false from the probably true.” [Lynton Caldwell] Authentic science operates on the assumption that a concept can be shown to be false. Falsification occurs when a concept either is shown to be logically inconsistent or is demonstrated to run counter to direct observations. TJs & Internal Plate Deformation • (1) Plate Tectonics basic simplifying assumption that plates are perfectly rigid. However real plates do sometimes have internal plate deformation (e.g. Juan de Fuca) • (2) Triple Junctions (TJs) are places where 3 plates meet. Their kinematic and geometric evolution can be predicted from plate tectonics principles as long as the 3 plates maintain constant velocities. Juan de Fuca & TJs Mantle Plumes & Hotspots • Intraplate volcanism on oceanic plates often forms a pattern of linear chains of islands/seamounts • The conventional picture for the formation of these changes is that they reflect the melting of mantle that is locally upwelling beneath the focus of volcanism in a mantle plume • This hypothesis offers, in particular, a simple explanation for why the chains on different plates can all be viewed as being created by plates that move over multiple nearly stationary mantle plumes – upwelling plumes that are nearly stationary with respect to each other…. forming a ‘hotspot’ reference frame with respect to which absolute plate motions are inferred Seamoount Trails Hotspot Tracks Conceptual model for hotspot volcanism On Pressure • Pressure is a force/area [a stress] • Pressure is a tensor. (the force depends on the direction of the surface. However the magnitude of the force is independent of direction. Force Normal vector P (tensor) Pressure, Isostasy, and Horizontal Forces • Each column isostatic equilibrium has the same weight of overburden at its base (equal pressure) • If the mean densities and heights of each column are different, there will be a net horizontal force on the material (isostasy only reflects a vertical force balance) 2h Isostasy (same overburden at base) leads to net horizontal force Ph /2 Flhs = Ph P h Frhs = Ph/2 P How big? • Continental crust is ~40km thick • Continental shelves and their adjacent oceanic abyssal plains differ in elevation by ~5-6km (say 5000m for this estimate) • Mean density of continental crust is 2800 kg/m3 (2.8Mg/m3) • Pressure at base of continents (compensation depth) is 2800 kg/m3 x 10 m/s2 x 40,000m = 1.1GPa (1.1GN/m2) • Net horizontal force F ~1.1GPa x 5000m (height difference) = 5.5TN • Net horizontal stress associated with isostasy = F/40000m = 0.14GPa i.e. = ~5,000/40,000 (1/8) of the pressure at the depth of compensation • Implication: Lithosphere can elastically support stresses at least of order 0.14GPa (atmospheric pressure = 0.1 MPa, 1400 times less). In other words, crustal rocks do not typically creep under differential stresses of order 1400 atmospheres Review for Prelim 1 • Prelim will be roughly 2/3 non-quantitative questions and 1/3 quantitative ones • Questions can cover all material to date— but there will be no mathematical derivations (e.g. ‘show this math expression to be true’) • Will be closed book exam, but you will be given a sheet with all formulas that you would need to use — and many more useless ones so you will need to recognize what expression is used for what • Study suggestions: – Review notes & problem sets (quantitative problems will be based on notes & problems) – Review handouts: e.g. Einstein handout on origin of meanders – Review the ‘review questions’ at the end of each chapter in the Marshak assigned reading (some non-quantitative questions will be taken from these questions) Review for Prelim 2 – Material Covered • What is a mineral? What are diagnostic differences between igneous, sedimentary, & metamorphic rocks, and how are they formed? • What is origin of global atmosphere & ocean circulation patterns? El Nino? Monsoon seasons? What is global distribution of water? What is the meaning of residence time? • Darcy’s Law — what is it? What do various terms in this relation mean? Groundwater flow & relation to water table, Aquifers, Artesian Basins & basin-scale groundwater flow… There will be a quantitative question or two on some aspect of Darcy’s Law & groundwater flow Review for Prelim 3 – Material Covered • What is the origin of stream meanders? — read the little handout on Einstein’s explanation for the formation of stream meanders • Seafloor spreading, origin of seafloor magnetic anomalies, Wilson cycle • Plate tectonics, Transform fault, fracture zones, ridges, trenches, subduction zones, relative and absolute plate motions • Mid-ocean ridge volcanism, arc volcanism, hotspot volcanism • Seafloor depth vs. age, thermal model of plate cooling with seafloor age, volume & density changes associated with cooling… (quantitative) • Isostasy, implications for depth vs. age, difference between ocean & continent heights… (quantitative) Stress - Generalization of Force to a Volume • Normal stress (force/area perpendicular to a surface -- like pressure) • Shear stress (force/area parallel to a surface) xz or xz xx z x Direction of normal vector to surface Direction of force Earth’s Rheology: Visco-elastic • Rock becomes viscous at depth (below lithosphere) • Rock is elastic/brittle when cold (lithosphere) F/A u D Analogy to rock deformation: Bragg’s bubble model ~1011 Pa (100GPa) ~1021 Pa-s (1ZPa-s) Elastic ue F z A ue = elastic displacement = uv Viscous u&v F t z A DF 1 A uv DF 1 rate of viscous disp lacement = t A Earth’s Rheology: Visco-elastic F/A u D Analogy to rock deformation: Bragg’s bubble model Elastic Viscous u&v F t ue F z A z DF 1 ue = elastic displacement = A u DF 1 uv v rate of viscous disp lacement = t A A u = ue +uv u DF 1 t , A Why we know Earth can be viscous (postglacial rebound) Main mechanisms for creep: Movement of imperfections in crystal lattice (dislocations & vacancies)