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GEO/OC103 Exploring the Deep Lecture 4: The Structure of the EARTH The Edge of the Sea • "Now I hear the sea sounds about me; • the night high tide is rising, swirling with a confused rush of waters against the rocks below …. • Once this rocky coast beneath me was a plain of sand; • then the sea rose and found a new shore line. • And again in some shadowy future the surf will have ground these rocks to sand and will have returned the coast to its earlier state. • And so in my mind's eye these coastal forms merge and blend in a shifting, kaleidoscopic pattern in which there is no finality, no ultimate and fixed reality - Earth becoming fluid as the sea itself." • Rachel Carson, The Edge of the Sea, 1955 Atmosphere Hydrosphere Atmosphere Hydrosphere Atmosphere Cryosphere Biosphere Hydrosphere Atmosphere Cryosphere Lithosphere Biosphere Hydrosphere Atmosphere Cryosphere Our Dynamic Earth • Earth is incredibly dynamic • How do we know it’s dynamic?? • Earthquakes • Volcanic eruptions • Surface Features: – Mountain Ranges; Mid-Ocean Ridges; Deep-Sea Trenches Topography of the Ocean Floor Topography of the Ocean Floor Topography of the Ocean Floor Topography of the Ocean Floor Elevated Continents Elevated Continents Depressed Ocean Basins How Big is the Earth? • Circumference 40,000 km (25,000 miles) • Radius 6,300 km (4,000 miles) • (1 meter = 1/10,000,000 distance from equator to pole) Questions: How are the ocean basins formed? How permanent are these features? What is the age of the ocean floor? Why are the ocean basins deep and the continents high? The Surface of the Earth 2 levels: – elevated continents – depressed ocean basins What causes these surface features We must know what goes on inside the Earth Interior of the Earth? • Jules Verne “Journey to the Center of the Earth” • Entered in Iceland • Exited in Italy Edgar Rice Burroughs • “Tarzan” • “John Carter of Mars” Information about the Earth’s Interior comes from: • Meteorites • Volcanoes • Seismic Waves Meteor Crater (Arizona) Willamette Meteorite • Found 1902, in West Linn • Largest in the U.S.A. • Sold and now resides at the AMNH Volcanoes • E.g., Hawaiian “hotspot” • Windows into the Earth • Samples 200km down Seismic Waves Sound energy from earthquakes and large explosions DEPTHS • Top of Mantle – 10 to 70 km (5 to 30 miles) • Top of Core – 2,900 km (2000 miles) • Center of Earth – 6,300 km (4,000 miles) • Mt. Everest 9 km high. • Mariana Trench 11 km deep. How do we know what’s inside the Earth? How do we know what’s inside the Earth? Direct Observations: • Exposures on Surface • Up from 50 km (30 miles) depth • Drilling • To 15 km (10 miles) • Volcanic Material • Up from 200 km (120 miles) depth How do we know what’s inside the Earth? How do we know what’s inside the Earth? Indirect Observations: • Magnetic Field • Iron core. • Gravity Field • Densities: – Crust: 2 - 3 gm/cm3 – Mantle: 3.3 - 5.8 gm/cm3 – Core: 10.8 gm/cm3 • Earthquake Seismic Waves • Physical state of crust, mantle, core. Interior of Earth by STRENGTH • LITHOSPHERE – – – – rigid outer shell crust and upper mantle (~ 50 to 200 km thick) somewhat brittle, breakable cold (like butter out of fridge) • ASTHENOSPHERE – – – – warmer, plastic layer under lithosphere mantle from ~ 150 to 700 km squishy, plastic warm (like softened butter) • LOWER MANTLE – Solid, but can flow over time! – ~700 to 2900 km • OUTER CORE – liquid • INNER CORE – solid Elevated Continents Depressed Ocean Basins Swimming Pool Earth’s Mantle Continental Crust Earth’s Mantle Types of Crust • Continental Crust Types of Crust • Continental Crust – 20 to 70 km (10 to 30 miles) thick. Continental Crust Earth’s Mantle Oceanic Crust Types of Crust • Continental Crust – 20 to 70 km (10 to 30 miles) thick. • Oceanic Crust Types of Crust • Continental Crust – 20 to 70 km (10 to 30 miles) thick. • Oceanic Crust – 7 km (4 miles) thick. Elevated Continents Depressed Ocean Basins Thick, Buoyant Continental Crust Thin, Less-Buoyant Oceanic Crust Thick Continental Crust Floats Higher Thick Continental Crust Floats Higher Thin Oceanic Crust Floats Lower Thick Continental Crust Floats Higher Thin Oceanic Crust Floats Lower Water Fills in the Low Areas And Hides Features on the Ocean Floor! Water Fills in the Low Areas PLATE BOUNDARIES PLATE TECTONICS • Tectonics: • From the Greek “tecton” • builder • “architect” • The study of large features on Earth’s surface and the processes that formed them. PLATE TECTONICS: • Large features: – continents, mountain ranges – ocean basins • and processes: – earthquakes – volcanic eruptions • due to movement of plates of Earth’s outer shell. All resulting from mantle convection Cracked Egg Shell!