Transcript early earth
Energy
Drives earthquakes
and volcanic
eruptions
Concentrated at
certain tectonic
settings
Associated with the
Earth’s formation
Driving Forces on and within
the Earth?
Driving Forces within the Earth
Heat formation:
– Impact of asteroids and comets in Earth’s
early history
– Decay of radioactive elements
– Gravitational contraction
– Differentiation into layers
Artist Impression, NASA
Driving Forces on and within the
Earth?
Earth’s internal heat
– Flows within the mantle (largest volume of
Earth)
– Release in terms of volcanic activity and
earthquakes
– Long-term: continents, oceans and
atmosphere
– Movement of tectonic plates
Greg Houseman,
University of Leeds
Driving Forces on the Earth
Gravity: the attraction between bodies
– Segregating elements within the Earth
– Movement along the Earth’s surface
landslides
– Movement within the Earth
Subducting oceanic slab moving into the mantle
Landslide,
China
Driving Forces on the Earth
The Sun
– ¼ of the Sun’s energy reaches the Earth
– Evaporation
– Warming of atmosphere and hydrosphere
– Weather: movement of air from warm to
cooler areas
Formation of Solar System
What happened in the past and how is
this currently reflected?
– Gravitional force
– Variations of temperatures
– Rotation
– Composition of material
– Different states of matter
The Nebular Hypothesis
The solar system formation
A nebula is formed from
a collection of gases
(98%) and dust (2%)
The mass rotates and is
held together by gravity.
Where do we see this in our
sky?
Third star down on
Orion’s belt
Star nursery
100 light years
across (1 light year
equals 6 trillion
miles)
Reflection of dust
and hydrogen
Orion Constellation
Winter sky
constellation
Hunter in Greek
mythology
New stars in several
hundred million years
Nebula: Step I
Nebula exists and
through time:
– Contracts causing the
nebula to increase
temperature in center
and increase speed of
rotation
The Nebula
collapses: step 2
The collapsed mass
forms a proto-sun
and disc-shape
rotating mass of gas
and dust.
The Orion nebula
contains about 153
visible protoplanetary
disks
2-17 times larger than
our solar system
Rotation increases
Temperature increases: 1,800,000 degrees
Fahrenheit
Fusion begins
Protosun
Fusion
What does “to fuse” mean?
Remember, what is the composition of the
nebula?
Look on the periodic table
What is the relation or difference between
Hydrogen and Helium?
Can you predict what fuses?
Fusion
Hydrogen (1 proton) fuses with another
Hydrogen (1 proton) = Helium (2
protons)
E
= mc2
E = energy
m= mass (very small)
c squared =speed of light
(186,000 miles/second)
Step 3: Sun Forms
The disk is “cleared
out” due to the
immense amount of
energy released.
Dust and gases cool,
condense and
accrete forming
planetesimals.
Defined orbits
around the sun
Earth’s internal heat from
formation
Our Sun
Collapsed disk not shown
Sun is about 5 billion years
old
5 billion years until a red giant
is formed
Step 4: Material Cools and
Condenses; planet formation
Temperature
differences with
respect from the sun
Terrestrial planets
(closer)
Jovian or gaseous
planets (farther
away)
Solar System
The first four planets are terrestrial (iron
and silicate)
The last planets are composed of gases
Moon’s Formation
5:20
A large size planet ,
thought to be the
size of Mars, collided
with Earth- 4.4 billion
years ago
The debris formed
the moon
The impact, set the
Earth on its axis
23 degrees
The Earth tilted
on its axis in
response to the
collision
The Early Earth
Hot
Homogenous
Crust as we know it,
not developed
4.6 billion years ago
Melted again due to
the collision of the
Mars size planet
Transitional Earth
Segregation of
elements by density
Iron moves to the
center
Gravitational pull and
rotation
Chemically distinct layers
Crust: oxygen and
silicon (70%)
Mantle: iron,
magnesium, lower %
Si, O
Core: iron and nickel
Physically Distinct Layers
Inner core: solid
Outer core: liquid
Mantle: capable of
flow
Asthenosphere: acts
like a hot plastic
Lithosphere: rigid
Lithosphere
Rigid layer that lies between the surface
and 60-100 miles
“Floats” on the asthenosphere
The tectonic plates are composed of
lithosphere
Lithosphere
Contains crust and upper mantle
Continental Crust
Less dense
Higher % of silicon
and oxygen
Lower % of iron and
magnesium
Thicker (15-25 miles)
30 % of Earth’s
surface
Oceanic Crust
More dense
Higher % of iron and
magnesium
Lower % of silicon and
oxygen
Thinner (5-7 miles)
70 % of Earth’s
surface
Asthenosphere
Relatively soft layer capable of flow that
lies below a depth of 60-100 miles (upper
mantle)
Dr. Railsback, University
of Georgia
The Mantle
Largest portion of the Earth
Very rich in iron and magnesium
Very poor in silicon and oxygen
The mantle is solid but because of high
temperatures and pressures, it is soft
enough to flow
The asthenosphere is part of the upper
mantle
The Core
Outer core-liquid which can flow and
generates the Earth’s magnetic field
Inner core- solid and rotates faster than
the Earth
Mostly iron, some nickel
Complex fields in the core
contribute to the dipole field
at the surface (UC Berkeley)
The magnetic field protects the
Earth from solar radiation
External Source of Earth’s Water
The collision of
comets with the
Earth’s surface
As the ice hits the
warm Earth, the ice
melts to water
Gravity holds the
water to the surface
Haley’s comet contains ices
and dust. The tail is created
by ice to sublimate to
steam.
Internal Source of Earth’s Water
Water vapor is
released during
volcanism
Cooling of the hot
Earth involved intense
volcanism
Water condenses
Formation of Atmosphere
Gas is expelled from
magma during
volcanic eruptions
Nitrogen, carbon
dioxide, hydrogen,
sulfur dioxide and
water
Early Earth’s
atmosphere did not
contain which gas?
Why?
History of the Earth
4.6 billion years old
Early Earth
4.4 bya, formation of moon
3.9 bya, oldest rock (sedimentary rock)
– sedimentary rocks are made-up of
fragments of preexisting rocks
– Sediments are carried and deposited by
water and wind
– implies the existence of weather and water
4.1 bya, age of particles within the
sedimentary rock
History of the
Earth
Fossil
Worm,
Cambrian
Sponge
3.5 bya, first bacteria
3.2 bya, algae (product?)
plants
– photosynthesis, by-product is oxygen
worms and jelly fish
Trilobite
500 million years ago, Cambrian (life)
explosion: marine fauna; modern phyla:
sponges, mollusks (clams and snails),
echinoderms (sea urchins and stars),
anthropoda -trilobites(crabs, lobsters)
Earth as an
evolving system
Creation and early Earth
Earth’s chemically and physically
distinct layers
Atmosphere (air)
Hydrosphere (water)
Biosphere (plants and animals)
Summary
The Nebular Hypothesis
Earth’s heat sources
– Radioactive decay
Think Quest
– Initial heat produced by collision of other
objects
Moon, water and gas formation
Earth’s layers, differences and locations
Importance of gravitational pull