* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Forces in Earth’s Crust
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Forces in Earth’s Crust Chapter 5 Section 1 But First, a Bit of Review on Continental Drift! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wW2 3Z94yf24&list=PLVortxm_jTVgeSqPtPmh3o OeQj8dcPcqu Key Terms Stress Tension Compression Shearing Normal Fault Hanging Wall Footwall Reverse Fault Strike-Slip Fault Plateau Types of Stress Stress: a force that acts on an area of rock to change its shape or volume 3 kinds of stress: tension, compression, and shearing Tension, compression, and shearing work over millions of years to change the shape and volume of rock. Tension: 2 plates move apart, pull on the rock, and stretch the rock out Compression: pushes rock together to squeeze it until it folds or breaks Shearing: pushes a mass of rock in 2 different directions, which breaks the rock or changes its shape. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ib2Ox9U_nMQ Kinds of Faults A fault is a break in the rock of the crust where rock surfaces slip past each other. Most faults occur along plate boundaries, what the forces of plate motion push or pull the crust so much that the crust breaks. There are three main types of faults: normal faults, reverse faults, and strike-slip faults. Normal Faults Normal faults: occur where tension in the crust pulls rock apart The fault is at an angle, so one block of rick lies above the other block of rock. Hanging wall: the rock that lies above and slips downward Footwall: the rock that lies below http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pjefNn9jQ5c Reverse Faults Reverse fault: rock of the crust is being pushed together by compression Looks just like a normal fault, but the blocks move in the opposite direction. The hanging wall moves upward rather than downward. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xy0f_rubZJI Strike-Slip Faults Strike-slip fault: the rocks on either side of the fault slip past each other sideways The plates move past each other along a sliding boundary. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4idd OA95xp4 Changing Earth’s Surface Over millions of years, the forces of plate movement can change a flat plain into landforms produced by folding, stretching, and uplifting the earth’s crust. These landforms include anticlines and synclines, folded mountains, fault-block mountains, and plateaus. Folding Earth’s Crust Sometimes plate movement causes the crust to fold. Folds are bends in rock that form when compression shortens and thickens part of the earth’s crust. A fold in rock that bends upward into an arch is called an anticline. A fold that bends downward into a valley is called a syncline Stretching Earth’s Crust When 2 normal faults cut through a block of rock, a fault-block mountain forms. 2 normal faults form next to each other with rock in between them. As the hanging walls on each normal fault move downward, the rock in between moves upward to form the fault-block mountain. Uplifting Earth’s Crust Plateaus: a large area of flat land elevate high above sea level Some plateaus form when forces in the earth’s crust push up a large, flat block of rock. Plateaus consist of many different layers of rock, and is wider than it is tall.