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Transcript
THE THEORY OF PLATE
TECTONICS
Did you know…

Most people know that Earth is moving around
the Sun and that it is constantly spinning.

But did YOU know that the continents and oceans
are moving across the surface of the planet?

Volcanoes and earthquakes as well as mountain
ranges and islands all are results of this movement.

Why is this?
Did you know…

Most of these changes in the earth’s surface takes
place so slowly that they are not immediately
noticeable to the human eye.

The idea that the earth’s landmasses have
broken apart, rejoined, and moved to other
parts of the globe forms part of the plate
tectonic theory.
Alfred Wegner
“Father of Continental drift”.
 In 1912 he theorized that 200 million years ago
ALL the continents were connected together as one
large landmass called Pangaea.

Wegener's theory had a problem!!!!
His theory did not include a mechanism that could
move the continental masses.
 Today evidence from geology supports the idea.

THEORY OF CONTINENTAL
DRIFT
Just a little Humor
So what are some of the
evidences
The Continental Puzzle
 Matching Fossils (plants and Animals)
 Rock Types and Structures
 Ancient Climates
 Paleomagnetism

Continents


Continents fit together
Especially if you consider the entire continental
plate
 EX:
Africa & South America
Puzzle Pieces
Evidence: Fossil Record


Some fossils are only found in certain places that
are across an ocean from each other.
EX: Mesosaurus - Found only in S.America and
Africa
How did they get there?
Rock Types

Some rock types and structures seem to end on one
continent and pick up on another
 Ex:
Appalachians stop at New Foundland & pick up in
British Isles.
Mountains Match Up!
Evidence: Glaciers


220-300 million years ago ice sheets covered S.
Hemisphere including Africa, S. America, Australia,
and India
Striations indicate that the ice sheet crossed the
equator several times!
Glaciers in AFRICA!!!
Paleomagnetism



When igneous rocks containing magnetic minerals
crystallize, the crystals align themselves with the
Earth's magnetic field.
The magnetic field of the rock then points toward
the magnetic pole that existed when the rock
formed.
If the rock is moved, its magnetic field will act as
a"fossil compass."
Paleomagnetism

Magnetized minerals can be used to determine the
latitude of their origin.
PLATE BOUNDARIES
The Seven Major Plates
*Memorize these!!!







The Pacific Plate
The Eurasian Plate
The North American Plate
The South American Plate
The African Plate
The Antarctic Plate
The Indo-Australian Plate
Plate Boundaries
Plate Boundaires

To determine the location of a plate boundary
scientists plot the worldwide distribution of
earthquakes. This activity is located at mid- ocean
ridges and subduction zones.

As mentioned earlier, tectonic plates are always
moving.
 pulling away from each other
 crashing head-on
 or sliding past each other.
Depending on which way these plates are moving will
decide what is happening on the earth you and I are
standing on.
Plate Tectonics
But this doesn’t actually tell me how the
mountains or volcanoes were formed or how
earthquakes happen, or does it?
Types of Plate Boundaries

Transform Fault- slide past each other

Divergent- pull apart

Convergent- collide
Divergent Plate Boundaries



New crust is made as
the plates pull away
from each other.
Also known as
Seafloor spreading
Site of many
earthquakes
Divergent Boundaries

Find a divergent boundary on your map.

Can you find the Mid-Atlantic Ridge?
They’re Pulling Apart!

When plates pull away from one
another they form a diverging
plate boundary, or spreading
zone.
Thingvellir, the spreading zone in Iceland between the North American (left
side) and Eurasian (right side) tectonic plates. January 2003.
Transform Fault

Crust is neither produced nor destroyed as the
plates slide horizontally past each other.
Transform Fault

Can you find a Transform Fault on your map?
San Andreas Fault
Now does it make sense why
there are so many
Earthquakes in California
Convergent Boundaries


Crust is destroyed as one plate dives under another.
Three types:
 Oceanic- Continental
 Oceanic-Oceanic
 Continental- Continental
Subduction Zones

Subduction – one oceanic plate subducts
(dives) beneath the other
Oceanic-Continental Collision



Oceanic lithosphere always subducts beneath
continental lithosphere due to differences in density.
Continental volcanic arc formed as the melting
continent provides magma for the volcano.
Example: Andes mountains
animation
Oceanic-Continental Collision
Oceanic-Continental Collision
Oceanic- Oceanic Collision




Two ocean slabs collide
One plate subducts and melts, the melted rock
becomes an island volcano.
This creates an Island Arc System forming volcanic
islands in the middle of the ocean.
Example: Japan
animation
Oceanic-Oceanic Collision
Continental-Continental Collision


Two continental plates collide
This creates a Continental Arc System.
They Crash!

When both are continental plates, the plates push
against each other, creating mountain ranges.
Continental-Continental Collision

So how did the Rocky Mountains form?
 Ancient
plates hitting one another or the result of
pressure on the North American Plate.

Can you think of any other Mountain Ranges that
may have formed this way. (Hint: Here in NC)
A contemporary example

The Indian Plate has been colliding
with the Eurasian Plate for the past
40 million years and has uplifted
and continues to uplift the Himalayas
and the Tibetan Plateau.
Why do tectonic plates move?
So what about Hawaii??


Geologists believe that a huge column of upwelling
lava, known as a “plume,” lies at a fixed position
under the Pacific Plate.
As the ocean floor moves over this “hot spot” at
about five inches a year, the upwelling lava creates
a steady succession of new volcanoes that migrate
along with the plate - a veritable conveyor belt of
volcanic islands.
Hot Spots
Other hot spots?

Yellowstone

Iceland
Our Future