Plate Tectonics
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Transcript Plate Tectonics
Plate Tectonics
BIG Idea:
Most geologic activity occurs
at the boundaries between
plates.
I. Drifting Continents
• MAIN IDEA: The shape and
geology of the continents
suggests that
they were
once joined
together.
Continental Drift
theory proposed by
Alfred Wegener
(VAY guh nur) in 1912
stated that the continents
were once a single landmass
the continents have moved...
-Pangaea (“all the earth”):
supercontinent; single landmass
-Panthalassa (“all seas”): huge ancient
ocean
A. Evidence of Continental Drift
1. Puzzle-Piece Fit
2. Rock Formations
Ages, types and layers of
coastal rocks of widely
separated regions matched…
Western Africa and
Eastern Brazil
Appalachians
(along eastern
U.S.) fit
Greenland and
Europe
3. Fossils
Mesosaurus: freshwater reptile
that lived 270 million years ago
• remains (fossils) found in South
America and Africa
• impossible for these reptiles to
have crossed the
Atlantic
4. Climate
(a) Glossopteris: fern
that grew in
temperate climates
places where fossils had been
found were once closer to the
Equator
rocks containing these fern fossils
had once been joined
(b) Coal Deposits:
Coal forms from ancient swamp
plants
Coal beds found in Antarctica
indicated that this frozen land
once had a tropical climate
Antarctica
must have
been closer
to the Equator
(c) Glacier Deposits:
found in Africa and South
America
climates are much warmer
there today
A Rejected Notion…
• Wegener’s Continental Drift
Hypothesis was never
accepted by the scientific
community
• He could not explain what
forces could cause such
massive movement
• Wegener died in 1930, on expedition
in Greenland, while collecting
evidence to further support his
theory
II. Seafloor Spreading
• MAIN IDEA: Oceanic crust forms at
ocean ridges and becomes part of the
seafloor.
1.Mid-Atlantic Ridge:
undersea mountain range
with a steep narrow valley
down the center
• the middle of the ocean
floor is very young
2. Renewal of the Ocean Floor:
seafloor spreading - floor moving
away from the center
Harry Hess and Robert Dietz
3. Paleomagnetism: as magma solidifies
the iron-rich minerals align with
magnetic north like a compass
reverse polarity: magnetic
orientation pointing south
III. Plate Boundaries
• MAIN IDEA: Volcanoes, mountains,
and deep-sea trenches form at the
boundaries between the plates
Theory of Plate Tectonics
• Plate Tectonics:
theory that the
lithosphere is made
of rigid plates that
‘float’ on the
asthenosphere
• Tectonics: the
study of the
formation of
Earth’s features
What are the inferred
properties of Earth’s
interior?
Zones of Earth
1. Crust: thin,
solid outermost
layer; surrounds
Earth like a shell
surrounds an
egg.
Two Types of Crust:
Continental Crust: makes up the
continents (land); thicker, less
dense; granitic rock
Oceanic Crust: under the oceans;
thinner, MORE dense; basaltic
rock
2. Moho: boundary between the
crust and mantle.
3. Mantle:
thickest layer
sits below the crust
makes up 2/3 of the Earth’s mass
•Lithosphere (‘rocky
sphere’): upper part of
mantle, cool and rigid
• Asthenosphere (‘weak
sphere’): lower (‘plastic’)
mantle; flows like hot tar
• Plasticity: the ability of a
solid to flow
4. Core: center of the Earth;
two parts:
• Inner Core: ball of hot,
solid metals (iron and
nickel)
Outer Core: only true liquid
zone
If we’ve never been there,
how have we learned about
the interior of Earth?
By studying seismic waves…
Seismic Wave:
vibration that
travels through
the Earth;
results from
earthquakes or
huge
explosions
Types of Plate Boundaries
1. Divergent Boundaries:
• two plates that are moving AWAY
from each other
• as plates move apart, the
asthenosphere flows up to fill the
empty space
What forms when plates
DIVERGE?
a. Mid-Ocean Ridges
Mid-Atlantic Ridge
b. Rift Valleys:
(1) narrow valleys in the
middle of ocean ridges
(2) where continents
separate
East African Rift Valley
2. Convergent Boundaries
• direct collision of one plate with
another
Three types of converging
boundaries:
• Types of Convergent
Boundaries
Oceanic vs. Continental
Subduction Zone: – oceanic crust
moves (dives) under continental
crust
forms an oceanic trench and
volcanic mountain range
oceanic crust is more dense than
continental, thus it dives down or
subducts
Andes Mountain Range
Mount Saint Helens - Cascade
Mountain Range
Oceanic vs. Oceanic
older, more dense oceanic crust
subducts
forms trenches and arcs of
volcanic islands
Aleutian Islands
Mariana Trench
Continental vs. Continental
no subduction
two continental plates collide
pushing up and creating folded
mountains
3. Transform Boundaries
• Plates slide horizontally past
each other
IV. Causes of Plate Motions
• MAIN IDEA: Convection
currents in the mantle
cause plate
motions.
cool material sinks as hot
material rises, due to
DENSITY DIFFERENCES.