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Deformation of the Earth’s Crust Mr. Silva
18
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Page 1: 3.1 deformation of the earths crust

Deformation of the Earth’s Crust

Mr. Silva

Page 2: 3.1 deformation of the earths crust

Objective

• Students will be able to describe isostatic adjustment by using an analogy of comparing cargo ships to mountain ranges.

• Students will be able to identify three stresses acting on the Earth’s crust and correlate at which boundary each stress occurs.

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What do you think of when you hear…the Himalayans, the Rockies, the Andes, the Sierra Nevada?

These imposing landforms are visible reminders that the shape of the earth’s surface is always changing.

Page 4: 3.1 deformation of the earths crust

How the Crust is Deformed

• Deformation of the crust is the bending, tilting, and braking of the earth’s crust.

• Plate tectonics is the movement of the earth crust, but it’s not the only force that shapes the earth’s crust

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Isostatic Adjustment

• Isostatic adjustment occurs in the earth’s crust because of the change in the weight in some parts of the crust.

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Isostatic Adjustment

• When crusts are thicker and heavier they move deeper into the mantle.

SINKSSINKS

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Isostatic Adjustment

• When crusts are thinner and lighter, it will rise higher on of the mantle.

RISESRISES

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Isostatic Adjustment

• Take a second and think of a CARGO SHIP.

Page 9: 3.1 deformation of the earths crust

Isostatic Adjustment

• This up-and-down movement in the crust occurs because of two opposing forces

• The crust is always trying to reach a balance.

• That balance is known as isostatic!

ISOSTATIC = BALANCEISOSTATIC = BALANCE

Page 10: 3.1 deformation of the earths crust

Isostatic Adjustment

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Common Locations

• Isostatic adjustments are constantly occurring near:

–Mountain ranges –Active volcanoes–Around glacier formations

Page 12: 3.1 deformation of the earths crust

Stress on the Crust

• Plate movement causes STRESS on the earth’s surface, or outermost crust.

• What is STRESS?

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Stress on the Crust

• The crust becomes stressed when plates collide, separate or rub up on each other.

CollideSeparateSeparateRub

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14

Quick Review

• At what plate boundary do plates collide?

• At what plate boundary to plates separate?

• At what plate boundary to plates rub?

14

Convergent Plate Boundaries

Divergent Plate Boundaries

Transform Faults

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3 Types of Stresses

• Compression: occurs when crustal rocks are squeezed together.

–Often times reduces volume of rock

–Will push rock higher up or deeper down into the crust

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3 Types of Stresses

• Tension: is the force that pulls the rocks apart.

–Tend to become thinner.

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3 Types of Stresses

• Shearing: pushes rocks in the opposite horizontal direction.

–Rocks can bend, twist, or break apart as they slide past each other.

Page 18: 3.1 deformation of the earths crust

Quick Review

• Divergent Boundary–Tension

• Rocks pull apart

• Convergent Boundary–Compression

• Rocks crash into each other

• Transform Fault–Shear stress

• Rock slide past each other