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Warm-up 1. Draw and label the layers of Earth. 2. Describe the core. 3. Pick one type of plate movement to describe. Use complete sentences any time you see “describe” or “explain” Topic 8: Plate Tectonics Evolution of the Earth How do we know anything about the Earth? • • • • • • Interior structure Volcanoes Earthquakes Tectonic plates Tectonic motion Reconstruction of the Earth’s history Interior Interior Plate Tectonics • Plate tectonics helps to explain – earthquakes – volcanic eruptions – formation of mountains – location of continents – location of ocean basins Tectonic interactions affect atmospheric and oceanic circulation and climate geographic distribution, evolution and extinction of organisms distribution and formation of resources Alfred Wegener and the Continental Drift Hypothesis • German meteorologist • Credited with hypothesis of continental drift1912 in a scientific presentation – published a book in 1915. Alfred Wegener and the Continental Drift Hypothesis • He proposed that all landmasses were originally united into a supercontinent he named Pangaea from the Greek meaning “all land” (pan = all; gaea = Earth) • He presented a series of maps showing the breakup of Pangaea • He amassed a tremendous amount of geologic, paleontologic, and climatologic evidence Wegener’s Evidence • Shorelines of continents fit together – matching marine, nonmarine, and glacial rock sequences from Pennsylvanian to Jurassic age for all five Gondwana continents including Antarctica • Mountain ranges and glacial deposits match up when continents are united into a single landmass Jigsaw-Puzzle Fit of Continents • Continental Fit Pangea The break up of Pangea Jigsaw-Puzzle Fit of Continents • Matching mountain ranges Matching glacial evidence Matching Fossils The Perceived Problem with Continental Drift • Most geologists did not accept the idea of moving continents – There was no suitable mechanism to explain how continents could move over Earth’s surface • Interest in continental drift only revived when new evidence from studies of Earth’s magnetic field and oceanographic research showed that the ocean basins were geologically young features Checkpoint 1. Give two sources of evidence for continental movement. 2. What was the name of the supercontinent? Fig. 3-4, p. 39 Further Evidence • Radiometric dating of sediments and rocks • Found the maximum age of the ocean floor and its sediments were less than 200 million years • Centers of continents are much older – Parts are more than 3.9 billion years old Seafloor Age Evidence is based on seafloor ages which get younger as we approach sea floor ridges So why is the oceanic crust so young? Seafloor Spreading • Professor Harry Hess (1960, Princeton) suggested that the new seafloor forms at the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and spreads outward from this line of origin. • As one boundary of a plate is being subducted and destroyed, the other boundary is having new material added to it - Plates move away! • Magma rises to the crustal surface and forms mid ocean ridges. • As the lava cools it forms new seafloor and features: rift valleys; seamounts; abyssal hills peaks) • As new material reaches the surface, the plates are pushed apart (volcanic What type of plate boundary (movement) do you think is responsible for seafloor spreading? Mid-ocean Ridges Plate Tectonics • Ideas of continental drift and seafloor spreading were integrated into the concept of plate tectonics – Tekton = builder • Earth’s outer layer consist of about a dozen plates floating on the asthenosphere (hot plastic layer of upper mantel) Based on Composition • Crust – solid, relatively low density silicate rock • Mantle – Semi fluid, denser, mafic (iron and magnesium bearing) rocks • Core – Liquid then solid iron and nickel with traces of heavier elements Composition vs. Motion We can look at the interior of the Earth based on the composition of the rocks or based on the movement Earth’s Moving Plates The oceanic crust shows signs of regular movement. This movement is associated with convection currents in the mantle. The rising up, spreading out and sinking of gasses, liquids or molten material create convection currents. Convection Currents • When heated from below, the fluid asthenosphere expands, becomes less dense, and rises. • It turns aside when it reaches the lithosphere (above asthenosphere), and drags the plates until it cools and turns under again to make a cycle Asthenosphere Cracks in the Earth’s Crust • The crust, when it is solid, acts as a heat insulator for the hot interior of the Earth. • The molten material, magma, below the crust builds up tremendous heat and pressure. • The magma creates convection currents and rises to the surface. • These currents can crack the crust! Cracks • The lava cools to form new rock for the crust. • There is a world wide system of “cracks” in the crust (both oceanic and continental). • These cracks separate the crust into plates (huge sections of the Earth that moves relative to each other). Tectonic Plates “Through the great expanse of geological time, this slow movement of the plates remakes the surface of the Earth, expands and splits continents, and forms and destroys ocean basins.” – Oceanography, pg. 63 Review • SONAR – Active – Passive • • • • SOFAR Sound Shadow Zone Speed of Sound and SOFAR Channel • Echolocation • Seafloor Spreading • Layers of Earth • Core • Mantel • Crust • Alfred Wegener • Continental Drift • Pangaea • Convection Currents • Subduction • Convergence • Divergence • Transform Boundary • Plates Plate Boundaries • Subduction – when one plate plunges beneath another • Continental Collision (Convergent) – plates move toward one another, shoved together • Sea Floor Spreading (Divergent) – plates move away from each other • Transform fault – plate moves sideways from each other, slide past each other Subduction • The downward movement of an oceanic plate (more dense) into the mantle • As the crust enters the mantle, pressure breaks the crustal rock. • Heat from friction melts it. • It forms a pool of magma. • This magma is called andesite lava, which is a mixture of basalt from the oceanic crust and granite from the continental crust. • Might reemerge through a volcano Results of Subduction • Places where subduction occurs are also sites of deep earthquakes caused by rocks slipping over other rocks deep in the mantle. Results of Subduction Cont... • The lava will travel along channels in the crust, causing great explosive eruptions and form composite volcanoes – steep sided, cone shaped mountains with alternating layers of lava and rock fragments • Ocean trenches form at the regions where one plate moves downward beneath another. These trenches are deep, narrow and long. Continental Collision Occurs if 2 plates carrying continents collide and the subduction is interrupted. • Because the continental crust is made of low density material, it does not sink. • The crust moves upward, folds and buckles and breaks. • Mountain ranges were formed by continental collision. Convergent Plates Divergence and Seafloor Spreading • Two plates are moving apart • Magma rises to the crustal surface and forms mid ocean ridges. • As the lava cools it forms new seafloor and features: rift valleys; seamounts; abyssal hills (volcanic peaks) • As new material reaches the surface, the plates are pushed apart Divergent Plates Ring of Fire • Plates are diverging and oceanic plates are moving under the continental plates (subduction) Transform Fault • Perpendicular breaks or fractive zones occur when sections of plates slip pass one another • This causes shallow earth quakes Transform Plates Transform Plates San Andreas Fault Why do the Plates Move? • No single idea explains everything but we can identify several forces that contribute to the movement of the plates. – Slab pull • The sinking of the cooled dense oceanic plates pulls on the rest of the plate – Ridge rises • The material deposited on the top of the ridge slides downs from the rise pushing on the plate – Convection • Movement within the mantle could be part of the driving force behind the motion of the plates. Review 1. Name and describe the feature of the ocean floor shown at A. 2. Describe the process shown occurring at B, and explain what results from this Review 3. What process is shown occurring at C, and why does it occur? 4. The process by which the ocean floor sinks into the mantle is called? Plate Boundaries The Big Picture Tectonic Plates Today plate boundaries are determined by examining the location of volcanoes and earthquakes. Volcanoes result from the friction (heat) of the plates’ motion. Earthquakes occur where plates rub against one another. Tectonic Plates Volcanoes Volcanoes • Volcanoes are the result of hot spots within the crust or mantle of the earth. • The hot, liquid rock will break through weak spots in the surface and form volcanoes or flood basalts. • Many volcanoes do not release lava, instead they spit ash and small bits of lava called lapilli. • Some eruptions are quiet with very fluid (low viscosity) lava flows while others are explosive Volcanoes Quiet lava flows Volcanoes Mt. St. Helen before the explosive eruption Volcanoes Time lapse of the eruption Volcanoes Mt. St. Helen after the eruption Volcanoes Volcano Locations Underwater Volcanoes • Some are active and blast steam and rock-debris high above the surface of the sea. • Many others lie at such great depths that the tremendous weight of the water above them results in high, confining pressure and prevents the formation and explosive release of steam and gases. FROM: www.geog.ucsb.edu Hot Spots and Mantle Plumes • Hot spots are locations where stationary columns of magma originating deep within the mantle, called mantle plumes slowly rise to the surface • Mantle plumes remain stationary although some evidence suggests they may move • When plates move over them, hot spots leave trails of extinct, progressively older volcanoes Hot Spots and Mantle Plumes Example: Emperor Seamount-Hawaiian Island chain Age increases with plate movement Warm-up 1. List the 3 types of plate boundaries and briefly describe how they move. 2. Who are Alfred Wegener and Harry Hess? 3. Describe the process of seafloor spreading (think about the computer activity you completed) Earthquakes • Earthquakes are a result of motion within the earth. • Caused by shifting masses of rock miles below the surface • This only occurs where the earth is solid and therefore can only occur within about 100 miles of the surface • Earthquakes provide the best evidence regarding the interior structure of the Earth. Tectonic Plates P-Waves and S-Waves P-waves • Compression Waves • Move through solids, liquids, and gases • Move quickest through denser material S-waves • Travel through solids only • Speed and direction change as density changes Surface Waves • Result when P- and S-waves reach the surface and travel outward along the surface from an earthquake’s epicenter (where the earthquake starts). – These cause damage to buildings, etc. Earthquakes Earthquakes Shadow Zone • Seismic waves change speed and direction as they travel through materials of different density. •When P-waves enter the boundary between the mantle and core, the difference in densities causes them to bend sharply. •When S-waves reach the boundary between the mantle and the core, they bounce back because they cannot travel through the dense fluid in the outer core. •The result is a shadow zone. Tectonic Plates Earthquakes Location of worldwide earthquakes Earthquakes Tidal waves or Tsunamis result when a large section of the sea floor suddenly moves and therefore displaces a massive amount of water. Where are we going? We appear to be headed for another super continent as North America, South America, Asia and Australia converge in the ever shrinking Pacific Ocean Pangaea Pangea