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Transcript
Ch.4
Notes
Plate Tectonics
Continental Drift
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400 years ago
Magellan and Columbus mapping info
Similar shoreline
1912 Alfred Wegener hypothesized
Pangaea – 1 land mass
Panthalassa – all seas
World Map
Evidence of Continental Drift
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Coastlines
Fossils
Mesosaurus – lived 270 million years ago
They cannot swim well
Age and type of rocks Brazil = Africa
Mountain ranges
Coal deposits
Continents joined over South Pole
No force making this happen?
Still not accepted 1930’s
Continental Drift
Sea floor spreading
• 1947
• Out of a ridge in the ocean floor magma
flows creating new crust.
• Pushing old crust outward.
• Harry Hess – Princeton, MidAtlantic Ridge
• Arthur Holmes hypothesis in 1930 to put
Wegener hypothesis back on map
Sea floor spreading
Sea Floor Spreading
Mid-Ocean Ridges
• Go around the earth
• 80,000 km long
• Undersea mountain range with a valley in
the middle.
Mid Atlantic Ridge
Iceland
Earth layers
layers
Paleomagnetism of the ocean floor
• Magma has iron in it.
• Iron aligns with the poles like a magnet
• Reverse polarity in layers 1965
Paleomagnetism of the ocean floor
1960
• Hypothesis of continental drift and seafloor
spreading turned into a theory.
The theory of Plate Tectonics
• Explanation of how and why the continents
broke apart.
• Construction = tectonics
• Crust
• 1. oceanic crust
• 2 continental crust
• Lithosphere – upper mantle
• Asthenosphere – solid rock that is under
pressure
• 30 different plates
Microplate Terranes
Lithospheric Plate Boundaries
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Boundaries can be anywhere
Divergent – moving away
Convergent – moving toward
Transform Boundaries – moving across
Divergent – moving away
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Plates moving away from each other
Asthenosphere flows upward to fill in
Mid-ocean ridge
Rift valley – center of plate boundary
Red sea is one
Sea floor spreading
Convergent – moving toward
• Opposite side of divergent
• 1. Oceanic crust vs continental crust oceanic is
denser so subduction – goes under, continental
crust goes up
• Forms deep ocean trenches
• Often forms volcanoes on land
• 2. If continental crust plates are even both
crumple and go up (Himalayas)
• 3. oceanic and oceanic crusts one is subducted
• Deep trench and island arc of volcanoes
Crust layers
Transform Boundaries – moving
across
• 2 plates grinding past each other
• Not smooth so many spurts
• San Andreas Fault in California
Causes of Plate Motion
• Movement of lithospheric plates by
convection (transfer of heat)
• Convectional current – boiling rice
• Ex. Lake turning over
• Arthur Holmes
• Radioactivity
• thermalconvection
Plate Tectonics
Microplate Terranes
• Theory of plate tectonics refines continental drift theory
• Theory of microplate terranes
• Scraping of ocean floor materials to land crust
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Separate from other plates (neighbors)
1. Contains rock and fossils unique
2. major faults are the boundaries
3. magnetic properties differ
• Palo Alto – fossils of coral reef
• Ocean floor sediments in California mountains
• Petosky stones
• FORMATION
Silicification of Paleozoic Era corals such as the
Devonian age (416 to 359 million years ago) “Petosky
Stone” of the Lake Michigan region (FIGURE 3) or on
Prince of Wales Island, Alaska, are attributed to the large
amount of siliceous sponges which flourished in the
ancient warmer shallow waters. The sponges represent
a likely source of mobile silica in the sedimentary pile. As
the sponges decomposed, the silica was freed to replace
the carbonate rich coral skeletons. Specimens are
dominantly gray colored and exhibit a hexagonal pattern
typical of primitive coral species
Assignment
• Pg. 71 4.1 Questions 1-4
• Page 77
• Sec. 4.2 Questions 1-5
• Page 78-79
• Question 1-14
• Testbank
• Crossword puzzle
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Assigned
Due
Explain how Sea Floor spreading occurs.
You must include:
- rift valley
- magma
- asthenosphere
iron
magnetism
north and south poles
use a diagram to help explain
where the old rock and new rock is located
why is this important to Alfred Wegeners idea of continental drift
It should take at least 2 paragraphs to explain it in detail.