Download 8.4: Plates converge or scrape past each other

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

History of geology wikipedia , lookup

Geochemistry wikipedia , lookup

Geology wikipedia , lookup

Abyssal plain wikipedia , lookup

Oceanic trench wikipedia , lookup

Large igneous province wikipedia , lookup

Plate tectonics wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Chapter 8: Plate Tectonics
8.1: Earth has several layers
8.2: Continents change position over time
8.3: Plates move apart
8.4: Plates converge or scrape past each other
8.4 Plates converge or scrape past
each other
 Before, you learned:
 Plates move apart at divergent boundaries
 In the oceans, divergent boundaries mark where the sea floor
spreads apart
 On land, continents split apart at divergent boundaries
 Now, you will learn
 What happens when two continental plates converge
 What happens when an oceanic plate converges with another
plate
 What happens when one plate scrapes past another plate
Tectonic plates push together at
convergent boundaries
 Recall new crust forms at divergent
boundaries
 At convergent boundaries, plates
push together and crust is folded or
destroyed
 A plate with older, denser oceanic
crust will sink beneath another plate
 The crust melts in the athenosphere and
is destroyed
 Subduction: when one plate sinks beneath
another

Sub-, “under” and ducere, “to lead” = “led
under”
Continental-Continental
Collision
 Both crusts are the same density, so neither plate can
sink beneath the other
 The edges crumple and fold
 Push together two blocks of clay: one or both will buckle
 Folded crust may push up high enough to form a
mountain
 Ex: European Alps: where the African and European Plates
are colliding
 Ex: Himalaya: Indian Plate colliding with the European
 These mountains keep rising higher: plates are still moving
Oceanic-Oceanic
Subduction
 Occurs where an older plate with oceanic crust sinks
(subducts) under another with newer oceanic crust
 Older plate is colder and more dense than the younger
plate – subducts into the asthenosphere
Oceanic-Oceanic Subduction
 Deep-Ocean Trenches: like deep
canyons that form in the ocean floor a
a plate sinks
 Most are found in the Pacific Ocean
 Ex: Marina Trench: Pacific Plate
sinking under the Philippine Plate
 Deepest place in the world’s ocean:
11,000m (36,000ft) into the sea floor
Oceanic-Oceanic Subduction
 Island Arcs: chains of volcanic islands that form on the top
plate, parallel to a deep-ocean trench
 Ocean crust of the sinking plate melts and magma rises through
the top plate
 Overtime, flows can build up a series of islands
 Ex: Philippine Islands, Aleutian Islands (Alaska), islands of
Japan
Oceanic-Continental
Subductions
 Occurs when ocean crust sinks under continental
crust: ocean crust is colder and denser than
continental crust
 Deep-Ocean Trenches:
 In the Pacific Ocean, the Pacific Plate is sinking under the
North American Plate: can cause underwater earthquakes
Oceanic-Continental
Subductions
 Coastal Mountains: as oceanic crust sinks under a continent,
the continental crust buckles to form a range of mountains
 Similar to island arcs, parallel a deep-ocean trench
 Some of theses mountains are volcanoes (when melted oceanic
crust rises through the top plate)
 Ex: Cascade Mountains in Oregon and Wash.
 As the Juan de Fuca Plate began sinking under the North
American Plate
 Mount St. Helens: active volcanoes
Tectonic Plate Boundaries
 Divergent Boundaries: new crust formed
 Convergent Boundaries: crust
folds/destroyed
 Transform Boundaries…




Plates move past each other in opposite directions
Edges scrape and grind against each other
Occur mostly on the sea floor near mid-ocean
ridges
Can occur on land: San Andreas Fault


Runs from the Gulf of California to San
Francisco
Pacific Plate and North American Plate are
moving opposite directions…Los Angeles will
be a suburb of San Francisco in about 10
million years!!
The theory of plate tectonics helps
geologists today
 Changed scientists view of Earth: the lithosphere has been in
motion for millions of years…and can help predict what may
happen in the future
 Eastern U.S: the deformed and folded rocks in the Appalachian
Mountains are evidence of an ancient convergent boundary
 These rocks are the same as those in northwest Africa!
 Indicate these mountains formed when North America collided
with Africa and Eurasia as part of Pangaea
 As they pulled apart: formed rift valleys (U.S. east coast)
 Predictions:
 more earthquakes are likely where plates slide past each other
 volcanic activity where plates are sinking beneath other plates
 mountains will continue to rise where plates push together