Tectonic Plate Theory PowerPoint Study Guide
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Transcript Tectonic Plate Theory PowerPoint Study Guide
Tectonic Plate Theory
Understanding Basic Principles of
Earth Science Related to Geology
Earth’s Crust
Earth’s crust is the outermost layer.
The rigid crust “floats” on the molten part of
the mantle called the asthenosphere.
Pangea
Pangea was the supercontinent from which all
continents have split.
In 1915 Wegener proposed Earth’s continents looked
this way about 225 million years ago.
The theory of continental drift was used to explain the
current positions of the continents.
Wegener could not come up with a mechanism for
continental drift.
Evidence that Pangea
Existed
Fit of the continents
Fossil similarities
Rock similarities
Mountain chains
*Paleoclimatic evidence
*Paleomagnetism
Theory of Plate Tectonics
Fit of the Continents
North and South America match almost
perfectly with Africa and Europe
Fossil Similarities
*Mesosaurus, a reptile similar to an alligator
once lived in the shallow waters of both
South America and Africa.
Rock Similarities
Rocks of same age are found in locations of
South America and Africa that were once
joined in Pangea.
Termination of Mountain
Chains
The map shows location of Pangean
mountain chains (dark blue) that correspond
with current mountain chains.
Paleoclimatic Evidence
Glacial deposits at the equator
Coral reefs in Antarctica
Therefore the landmasses must have
been in different locations in the past.
Magnetism
Earth is a bar magnet
Magnetic north and south poles
These are not the same location
as the geographic north and south
poles
Exact location varies year-to-year
Paleomagnetism
This is magnetism
“frozen” in the rock at
the time it was
formed.
Geologists can
determine pole
reversals by studying
rock all over the
globe.
Sea Floor Spreading
Surveys of the ocean basins showed a
system of ridges and trenches.
This led geologists to come up with the
idea of Sea Floor Spreading.
Symmetrical magnetic “stripes” were
discovered on either side of the Atlantic
Mid-ocean ridge.
Sea Floor Spreading
Magnetic Reversals along
a Mid-Ocean Ridge
(“stripes”)
Youngest,
newest rock
is along the
ridge.
Oldest
rock is
farthest
from
ridge.
Theory of Plate Tectonics
A rigid piece of lithosphere (outer
crust) is floating on a partially
plastic (molten, soft)
asthenosphere
Seven Major Plates
3 types of Plate Boundaries
Plate Boundaries
*Divergent-Spreading CenterOcean ridges and seafloor
spreading (Atlantic Ocean)
*Convergent-Creates trenches and
island arcs (Pacific Ocean)
*Transform-Plates move past one
another (San Andreas Fault in
California)
Divergent Boundaries
Magma from deep within Earth forces
its way between two plates, pushing
them apart.
The magma cools and forms new
seafloor.
More magma emerges and pushes
apart the cooled rock.
Seafloor Spreading/mid-oceanic
ridges
Rift Valley
A rift valley forms when a
continent is slowing splitting
apart along a divergent boundary.
The African Rift Valley is an
example.
Locations of Seafloor
Spreading
Convergent
Plates move together
Oceanic crust slides under
continental crust.
Subducting crust slides under.
Andes Mountains Chain in South
America is an example.
Mountains formed from volcanoes
along the convergent boundary.
Convergent Boundaries
The Pacific Ocean by several
continental plates.
The ocean basin is sliding under the
continental plates along the plate
boundaries.
As a result, the Pacific Ocean is
growing smaller.
Why the Pacific is Shrinking
and the Atlantic is Growing
Hawaiian Islands are an
island arc.
More Examples of
Convergent Boundaries
Japanese Islands (Pacific Ocean)
Cascade Mountains (Northwestern
U.S.A.)
Himalaya Mountains (Nepal-Asia)
Transform Plate Boundary
Plates move past one another along
strike-slip faults
What Drives the Tectonic
Plates??
Convection Cells
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