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Plate Tectonics and Geology Genesis of Earth Earth is 4.6 billion years old. Same age as all other planets and the sun. Earth formation. Nebular hypothesis. Diffuse cloud of matter rotating in space, formed a disk shaped body, which later formed into sun and planets. Planets are cooled and condensed gases that surrounded the sun. Core Development Earth was a homogeneous planet immediately after formation But then, a profound reorganization as Earth initially heated up due to collision with other rocky bodies heat of compression Radioactive decay of elements Earth heated up such that much of the interior melted causing dense elements like iron and nickel to sink to the core lighter elements like silicon and aluminum float to the crust Resulted in a stratified Earth - core, mantle, crust Distribution of Elements More than 100 elements in entire Earth, but 99% of Earth's mass is made up of only 8 elements Whole Earth: Fe>O>Si>Mg>Ni>S>Ca>Al (others constitute < 1%) Earth's crust O>Si>Al>Fe>Mg>Ca>K>Na (other constitute <1%) Composition of Earth’s Crust Earth’s Crust Oxygen 46.6% All others 1.5% Magnesium 2.1% Silicon 27.7% Potassium 2.6% Sodium 2.8% Calcium 3.6% Iron 5.0% Fig. 10.4, p. 213 Aluminum 8.1% Layers of the Earth crust Crust The surface of the Earth is a very thin layer made of rocks, minerals and clay We live on the crust of the earth Layers of the Earth crust mantle Mantle- Upper and Lower The mantle is the biggest part of the earth; the magma is rich in iron and magnesium Convection occurs here and is thought to drive plate tectonics Layers of the Earth crust mantle Outer core •Outer Core •The outer core consists of molten iron and magma •The outer core rotates giving the Earth a magnetic field Layers of the Earth crust Inner Core mantle Outer core Inner Core The inner core is made of solid iron The closest model of the inner core we have is an iron nickel meteorite The inner core is under extreme pressure How do we know about the layers of the Earth? To date, humans have never drilled through the crust of the Earth. Scientists study where waves from earthquakes end up around the globe. The waves move differently through different densities of material. GEOLOGIC PROCESSES Spreading center Collision between two continents Subduction zone Continental crust Ocean trench Oceanic crust Oceanic crust Continental crust Material cools Cold dense as it reaches material falls the outer back through mantle mantle Mantle convection cell Two plates move towards each other. One is subducted back into the mantle on a falling convection current. Hot material rising through the mantle Mantle Hot outer core Inner core The Earth’s Major Tectonic Plates JUAN DE FUCA PLATE EURASIAN PLATE NORTH AMERICAN PLATE ANATOLIAN PLATE CARIBBEAN PLATE ARABIAN AFRICAN PLATE PLATE PACIFIC PLATE SOUTH AMERICAN NAZCA PLATE PLATE SOMALIAN SUBPLATE CHINA SUBPLATE PHILIPPINE PLATE INDIAAUSTRALIAN PLATE ANTARCTIC PLATE Divergent plate boundaries Convergent plate boundaries Transform faults The Earth’s Major Tectonic Plates Hawaiian Island Hot Spot How the hotspot works History of Continental Drift Hypothesis 1596 Abraham Ortelius: fit of South American & African coasts 1620 Francis Bacon: noted same fit 1782 Benjamin Franklin: suggested that crust of Earth "floated" on fluid interior (crust broken and disordered by movement of fluids) 1885 Edward Suess Similarities between Late Paleozoic plant fossils of Africa, India, South America, Australia & Antarctica Carboniferous glaciers on Africa, S. America, Australia, Inda Southern supercontinent of Gondwana Gondwana named after province in India where there was glacial and plant evidence (Glosopteris flora) Landbridges, which sank beneath the sea, connected present continent Continental movement not a new idea Wegener developed hypothesis of "continental drift”. Proposed "continental drift" - published "Origin of Continents and Oceans" in 1915 Pangaea ("all land") existed about 200 Ma Showed breakup in series of maps Few supporters - mostly European and African geologists Ridiculed by American geologists Can't "sail" continents through oceans (granitic continents too weak to move through stronger basaltic crust No mechanism to explain movement (Wegener's tidal forces => too weak) Land bridges the answer to explain fossils