Download Theory of Plate Tectonics: Mechanism 1

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Transcript
Theory of Plate Tectonics:
• Combined Seafloor Spreading and Subduction
– Lithosphere created at spreading ridges and consumed at
subduction zones
– Continents along for the ride
• Mechanisms?
Mechanism 1: Slab Sinking
• Subducting slab pulls lithosphere along
• Problems:
– Translate stress across slab
– No Atlantic subduction (next slide)
1
Problem: no Atlantic Subduction
Except for
small
Scotia and
Puerto
Rico Arcs
Plate Tectonic Mechanism 2:
• Ridge Push: Sloped density contrast (Lith vs. Asth) is unstable
– Horizontal force works to flatten this slope to stable configuration
• Problem: Earthquakes are tensional (pulling) not compressional
(pushing).
2
Plate Tectonics mechanism 3:
• Asthenosphere convection:
– Regional flow of asthenosphere shears plate
– Forces plate along
Plate boundaries are defined by locations of Earthquakes.
3
Plate Boundaries
• ~15 plates
• Only 3 types of boundaries
• Divergent, convergent, transform
Divergent Boundaries:
• Plates spread apart
• Mantle rises, melts
and forms new
lithosphere
• OCEANS are
formed
• Continents rift.
4
Continental Rifting:
animation
Cont. rifting culminates in mature ocean basins
5
Transform Boundaries: plates slide past each other
• Very common in ocean b/c they link ridge segments
– They also link trenches to ridges, trenches to trenches, etc.
• Required because
– spreading ridges are linear & Earth is spherical, and
– Spreading rates vary along ridges
San Andreas:
Show animation
6
3rd Type - Convergent Margins
• Where plates collide - continents
eventually grow
• Two types:
– collision zones (e.g. Himalaya) and
– Subduction zones (e.g. Japan, Andes,
Aleutians)
Subduction Zones:
Animation
• Build island arcs (e.g. Japan, Aleutians) and
continental arcs (e.g. Andes)
• Consume lithosphere
• Grow continents by addition of island arcs.
7
Collision Zones:
• Evolve from
subduction zones
• Build large
mountains
• ‘stuff-up’ subduction
with continental
mass
Plate Motions
How can we understand plate motions: their velocities
and paths over time?
8
Spreading Rate = Velocity (distance/time) of plate divergence
• Calculate velocity from
– age of crust
– Distance from axis
• Recall paleomagnetic
time scale?
– Brunhes-Matuyama 0.7
ma
– Matuyama-Gauss 2.4
ma
• Notice that Spreading rate
is RELATIVE to the axis!
If axis is moving…
• Spreading rate is
averaged over time
2.4 Ma
0.7 Ma
Hot-spots and rates of plates:
Absolute Velocities
9
What is a hot-spot (or plume)?
• Anomalously hot mantle (from coremantle boundary)
• Rises Buoyantly (plume)
• Melts on assent (adiabatic decompressive)
• Feeds volcanoes on Lithosphere
Create hot-spot track
See the hot-spot tracks? Samoa, Hawaii-Emperor,
Ninety-East Ridge, Tristan/Walvus Ridge, etc.
(they are ‘everywhere’!)
10
How to make a hot-spot track
• Plume ‘burns’ through
lithosphere
• Plate motion continues
• New volcanoes form
• Example: Candle
burning a piece of
paper.
Animation - good more cartoons!
What info do hot-spot tracks provide?
• Assuming fixed HotSpots:
– Direction of plate
motion (absolute)
– Absolute Velocity
• Do they agree with
spreading rates?
11
Absolute vs. Relative plate vectors
Do they always agree? Blue vs. red vectors
Not always, spreading rate is plate motion relative to divergent boundary. Hotspot track/absolute velocity is velocity of plate relative to fixed reference
Plate Tectonics & Wilson Cycle
• ~15 plates interact
at margins
• Created at MOR
and consumed at
SZ
• Wilson Cycle…
12
Wilson Cycle:
• Ocean basins open & close over geologic time
• Continents grow by
– Accumulation of sediment in intercontinental basins
– Accumulation of island arcs as SZ collide with continents
Wilson cycle: watch oceans
13
Pangaea! Panthalassic & Tethys
Open Tethys rift Pangaea, open Atlantic, Pacific:
14
Close Tethys, open Atlantic, begin closing Pacific:
Today:
15