Chapter 17 - Auburn City Schools
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Transcript Chapter 17 - Auburn City Schools
Coach Williams
Room 310B
Plate Tectonics
Objectives
Describe one piece of early evidence that led
people to suggest the Earth’s continents my
have once been joined.
Discuss evidence of continental drift
Explain why continental drift was not
accepted when it was first proposed.
Fit of continents across Atlantic Ocean
Gondwanaland: southern continents
Theory that Earth’s continents were once
joined.
Continents had slowly drifted apart
Pangaea: “all the Earth”
Rocks: similar rocks
Fossils: animal/plant remains
Ancient Climate: coal in Antarctica
2 Reasons the theory was rejected
◦ 1) What forces could cause them to move?
◦ 2) How could continents move and not shatter?
Objectives
◦ Summarize the evidence that led to the discovery of
seafloor spreading.
◦ Explain the significance of magnetic patterns on the
seafloor.
◦ Explain the process of seafloor spreading.
Sonar- sound waves to determine depth
Magnetometer- detects changes in magnetic
fields
Map the ocean floor
Mountain ranges (ridges), trenches
Earthquakes & volcanoes
Varying ages of rocks: pattern
◦ Younger rocks near ridges
◦ Older rocks farther away
Sediments
◦ Thinner than continental crust
◦ Thickness increased farther away from ridge
Paleomagnetism: study of magnetic record
◦ Basalt(Iron) = compass needle
Magnetic reversal: change in Earth’s magnetic
field
Magnetic symmetry: matching strips on each
side of ridge
New crust created at ridges
Crust is destroyed at trenches
Magma comes out of ridges
New rock pushes crust outward
Provided evidence for continental drift
Objectives:
Explain the theory of plate tectonics
Compare/contrast the three types of plate
boundaries and the features associated with
each.
Earth’s crust: large slabs called plates
Major and smaller plates
Plate boundaries: where plates meet
◦ Divergent
◦ Convergent
◦ Transform
Plates moving apart
Most on ocean ridges
Rift valley: narrow valley along divergent
boundary
Plates moving together
◦ Oceanic crust – oceanic crust: volcanoes
◦ Oceanic crust – continental crust: volcanoes
◦ Continental crust – continental crust: mountains
Subduction- one plate goes below the other
Plates slide horizontally
Objectives:
Explain the process of convection
Summarize how convection in the mantle is
related to the movements of tectonic plates
Compare/contrast the processes of ridge
push and slab pull
Convection: movement due to temperature
differences
Mantle has convection currents
Currents move plates
Ridge push- weight of ridge pushes plate
down
Slab pull- weight of plate pulls plate down