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Transcript
Pangea and Continental
Drift
Mr. White
6th Grade Earth Science
Alfred Wegener
Born: Germany, 1880
PhD: Astronomy
Profession: Meteorologist and Greenland Explorer
Died: 1930
Became the “father of continental drift” by
amassing considerable supporting evidence that
the continents moved over time
In 1915 Wegener published his work in The Origin
of the Continents and Oceans.
Continental Drift
Wegener was the first to advance the idea of
mobile continents in 1912
He identified several lines of evidence to
support the idea that the continents had
drifted
What was the evidence and where did it come
from?
1- Continental shape
2- Fossil remains
3- Sea Floor Depth (Global Bathymetry- SONAR)
4- Magnetic Stripes –A geomagnetic reversal is a change in the Earth's
magnetic field such that the positions of magnetic north and magnetic south are interchanged.
The Earth's field has alternated between periods of normal polarity, in which the direction of the field
was the same as the present direction, and reverse polarity, in which the field was in the opposite
direction.
5- Paleoclimatology
6 - Mountain Soil Comparison
Evidence for continental drift
Matching coastlines on different continents
Evidence for continental drift
Distribution of fossils such as Mesosaurus
Figure 2-6
Early Case for Continental Drift
• Puzzle-piece fit of coastlines of Africa
and South America has long been known
• In early 1900s, Alfred Wegener noted
South America, Africa, India, Antarctica,
and Australia have almost identical late
Paleozoic rocks and fossils
– Glossopteris (plant), Lystrosaurus and
Cynognathus (animals) fossils found
on all five continents
– Mesosaurus (reptile) fossils found in
Brazil and South Africa only
Early Case for Continental Drift
• Wegener reassembled continents into the
supercontinent Pangaea
• Pangea initially separated into Laurasia
and Gondwanaland
– Laurasia - northern supercontinent containing
North America and Asia (excluding India)
– Gondwanaland - southern supercontinent
containing South America, Africa, India,
Antarctica, and Australia
• Late Paleozoic glaciation patterns on
southern continents best explained by their
reconstruction into Gondwanaland
• Coal beds of North America and Europe
support reconstruction into Laurasia
The presence of fossils only over small areas of now separate
continents (how did they get from continent to continent?).
Evidence for continental drift
Matching mountain ranges across oceans
Today
300 million years ago
Ancient “cratons” within continents match up when they are
brought together like a jigsaw puzzle.
Mountain formations were once connected
Evidence for continental drift
Glacial ages and climate evidence
Objections to the continental
drift model
Wegener envisioned continents plowing through
ocean basins
Wegener did not provide a plausible mechanism to
explain how the continents could have drifted
apart
Most Earth scientists rejected continental drift
because it was
Too far-fetched
Contrary to the laws of physics
The theory of plate tectonics
Continental drift was reexamined in the
1960s when new information became
available
Sea floor features became better known
A technique was developed that enabled
scientists to determine the original positions of
rocks on Earth (paleomagnetism)
Evidence for plate tectonics
Earth’s magnetic field affects all magnetic
objects on Earth
Figure 2-7
Evidence for plate tectonics
When rocks
cool at Earth’s
surface, they
record Earth’s
magnetic field
(normal or
reversed
polarity)
Figure 2-9
Evidence for plate tectonics
Paleomagnetic studies
indicate alternating
stripes of normal and
reverse polarity at the
mid-ocean ridge
Pattern was created by
sea floor spreading
Figure 2-11
Evidence for plate tectonics
Harry Hess
envisioned
new sea floor
being created
at the midocean ridge
and destroyed
in deep ocean
trenches
Figure 2-10
Evidence for plate tectonics
Age of the sea floor
matches pattern
predicted by sea
floor spreading
Youngest sea floor
is at mid-ocean ridge
Sea floor is older
with increasing
distance from midocean ridge
Figure 2-12
Evidence for plate tectonics
Pattern of worldwide earthquakes (left)
matches plate boundaries (right)
Figure 2-13
Earth structure
Chemical composition
Crust
Mantle
Core
Physical properties
Lithosphere
Asthenosphere
Mesosphere
Outer core
Inner core
Figure 2-14
Principles of plate tectonics
The outermost portion of Earth is composed of a
mosaic of thin rigid plates (pieces of lithosphere)
that move horizontally with respect to one another
Plates interact with each other along their edges
(called plate boundaries)
Plate boundaries have a high degree of tectonic
activity (mountain building, earthquakes, active
volcanoes)
The 3 types of plate boundaries
1. Divergent
Figure 2-17
2. Convergent
3. Transform
Divergent plate boundaries
The MidAtlantic Ridge
is a divergent
plate boundary
where sea
floor
spreading
occurs
Figure 2-18
Divergent plate boundaries
Iceland sits atop
a divergent
plate boundary
where
continental
rifting occurs
Figure 2-19
Divergent plate boundaries
Formation
of an ocean
basin by
rifting and
sea floor
spreading
Figure 2-20
Convergent plate boundaries
a. Ocean-continent
Figure 2-23
Convergent
plate
boundaries
vary
depending
on the type
of crust
c. Continent-continent
b. Ocean-ocean
Convergent plate boundaries
An oceancontinent
convergent plate
boundary
produces the
Cascadia
subduction zone
and Cascade
Mountains
Figure 2-24
Convergent plate boundaries
A continentcontinent
convergent
plate boundary
produces the
Himalaya
Mountains
Figure 2-25
Transform plate boundaries
Transform plate
boundaries
occur between
segments of the
mid-ocean ridge
Can also occur
on land (ex: San
Andreas Fault)
Figure 2-26
Hotspots and plate tectonics
Hotspots are stationary
and have abundant
volcanic activity
The lithospheric plate
moves over the hotspot
Creates a row of
volcanoes progressively
older toward one end
(called a nematath)
Figure 2-28
Stages of coral reef development
If in tropical
shallow water,
coral reefs can
form on the tops
of volcanoes
Fringing reef
Barrier reef
Atoll
Figure 2-30
Atoll and barrier reefs in the
Society Islands
Figure 2-32
Satellite positioning of locations
on Earth
Shows
good
agreement
with
predicted
plate
motion
Figure 2-33
Paleogeography: A look at the
past
The positions of
continents and
oceans have
changed in the past
Internet site
showing more
detailed maps
Figure 2-34
The world as it may look 50
million years in the future
Figure 2-35
End of Chapter 2
Essentials of Oceanography
7th Edition