Chapter 9 Plate Tectonics
Download
Report
Transcript Chapter 9 Plate Tectonics
Chapter 9
Plate Tectonics
Continental Drift
More than 300 years ago, mapmakers produced world maps that
accurately showed the shapes of the continents.
Once people had these accurate maps, they began to notice that
some continents fit together like pieces of a puzzle
In 1915, Alfred Wegener proposed the hypothesis of continental
drift
Continental Drift all the continents had at one time been joined
together to form a single super continent
Pangaea name given to the super continent; means “all land”
Evidence for Continental Drift
Evidence for Wegener’s hypothesis includes:
Similar fossils
Similar types of rock
Traces of glaciation
These were found on coastlines of widely separated
continents like South America and Africa
Matching Fossil
Fossil Evidence several similar fossil organisms are found
on different landmasses
These animals could not have crossed the vast ocean to move
to another continent
Ex: Mesosaurus
Found only in southern South America and southern Africa
Rock Types
Rock Evidence matching types of rock in several mountain
belts that today are separated by oceans
Ex:
The Appalachian mountain belt on the East coast of North America
today ends in Newfoundland (Canada)
However, there is evidence of the same rock types in a mountain
range in the British Isles and Scandinavia (Sweden/Finland)
Ancient Climates
Climatological Evidence various glacial deposits have been
found to show that large ice sheets covered areas of the
Southern Hemisphere that today have tropical climates.
There is no way these ice sheets could have existed unless the
continents were in different locations in the distant past
Rejection of Wegener’s Hypothesis
The main objection to Wegener’s hypothesis was that he
could not describe a mechanism capable of moving the
continents
Luckily, some geologists continued to work on his hypothesis
As technology got better, out ability to study the Earth also
got better
This allowed for the theory of Plate Tectonics
Exploring the Ocean Floor
As scientists began to study the idea of continental drift more
and more, their search led them to the ocean floor
Where they expected the ocean to be very deep, they found
mountain ranges
This helped to fuel the need to map the entire ocean floor
Sonar (SOund NAvigation and Ranging) a system that uses
sounds waves to calculate the distance to an object
Deep Ocean Trenches
As scientists mapped the ocean floor, they found long,
curved alleys along the edges of some ocean basins
Trenches form the deepest parts of Earth’s oceans
Ex:
The Marianas Trench in the Pacific Ocean is over 11 km deep
(about 6.8 miles)
Mid-Ocean Ridges
By the late 1950’s, scientists had constructed a more
complete map of Earth’s ocean floor
This map showed that the mountain range found in the
Atlantic Ocean was not an isolated feature
Mid-Ocean Ridge a long chain of mountains extending the
length of the ocean
Rift Valley a deep, central valley that runs down the center
of a ridge; usually resembles a long canyon
Process of Sea-Floor Spreading
In the process of sea-floor spreading, new ocean floor forms
along Earth’s mid-ocean ridges, slowly moves outward across
ocean basins, and finally sinks back into the mantle beneath
deep-ocean trenches.
Sea-floor spreading new oceanic lithosphere is formed and
the ocean floor gets wider
Subduction at Deep-Ocean Trenches
Although new ocean floor is constantly being added at the
mid-ocean ridges, our planet is not growing larger
This means the old ocean floor has to be going somewhere
Subduction ocean floor returns to the mantle as it sinks
beneath a deep ocean trench
Evidence for Sea-Floor Spreading
Evidence for this theory includes:
Magnetic stripes in ocean-floor rock
Earthquake patterns
Measurements of the ages of ocean floor rocks
Magnetic Strips
Geophysicists learned that Earth’s magnetic field occasionally
reverses polarity
The north magnetic pole becomes the south magnetic pole
and vice versa
Scientists graphed these reversals going back millions of years
Paleomagnetism as certain rocks form, they acquire the
polarity that Earth’s magnetic field has at the time
Earth’s Moving Plates
During the 1960’s, scientists realized that sea-floor spreading
explained part of Wegener’s idea of continental drift
Canadian geologist J. Tuzo Wilson combined this evidence
together to develop a new theory of tectonic plates
Plates several huge pieces of Earth’s lithosphere that are
separated by deep faults
Theory of Plate Tectonics Earth’s lithospheric plates move
slowly relative to each other, driven by convection currents in
the mantle
Causes and Effects of Plate Motion
Causes
Convection currents within Earth drive plate motion
Hot material deep in the mantle moves upward by convection
At the same time, cooler, denser slabs of oceanic lithosphere
sink into the mantle
Effects
Plate motion averages about 5cm per year
About as fast as your fingernails grow
Earthquakes, volcanoes, and mountain building
Types of Plate Boundaries
Divergent Boundaries found where two of Earth’s plates
move apart
Most divergent boundaries are spreading centers located
along the crests of mid-ocean ridges
Some spreading centers, however, occur on the continents
Types of Plate Boundaries
Convergent Boundaries form where two plates move
together
At convergent boundaries, plates collide and interact,
producing features including trenches, volcanoes, and
mountain ranges
Continental Volcanic Arc a range of volcanic mountains
produced in part by the subduction of oceanic lithosphere
Volcanic Island Arc newly formed land consisting of an arcshaped chain of small volcanic islands
Types of Plate Boundaries
Transform Fault Boundaries occur where two plates grind
past each other
At a transform fault boundary, plates grind past each other
without destroying the lithosphere
What Causes Plate Motions?
Convection Current the continuous flow that occurs in a
fluid because of differences in density
Warm material is less dense so it rises
Cooler material is denser so it sinks
Convection currents in the mantle provide the basic driving
forces for plate motions
Plate Motion Mechanisms
The sinking of cold ocean lithosphere directly drives the
motions of mantle convection through slab-pull and ridgepush.
Some scientists think mantle plumes are involved in the
upward flow of rock in the mantle
Slab-pull the force of gravity pulls old ocean lithosphere,
which is relatively cold and dense, down into the deep mantle
Plate Motion Mechanisms
Ridge-push the stiff ocean lithosphere slides down the
asthenosphere that is elevated near mid-ocean ridges
Plate Motion Mechanisms
Mantle Plume a rising column of hot, solid mantle rock