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Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.

Jan 01, 2016

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Page 1: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.
Page 2: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.

Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis

Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist,developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915

Page 3: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.

Continental Drift

• Continents have drifted to present locations

• Continents once joined as “supercontinent” Pangaea

• Pangaea formed 250 mya

• 200 mya, tectonic forces began pulling Pangaea apart

Page 4: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.
Page 5: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.
Page 6: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.

Some of Wegener’s Evidence at the Time:

Page 7: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.

Evidence for continentaldrift

Page 8: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.

Rocks in Newfoudland are same age/type as Sweden, Norway, Scotland.

Page 9: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.
Page 10: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.

Problems with Continental Drift Hypothesis

• Continents drift -- but what about the ocean floor?

• What force could move continents?

• Studies of the ocean floor in the 2 decades following WWII led to the development of the plate tectonic theory

Page 11: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.

Mid-Atlantic Ridge

• Mountain range running N-S on floor of Atlantic Ocean

• Magnetic polarity of ocean floor “striped” with alternating N/S poles– This is called Magnetic striping

• How does this occur?• 1. New ocean forms when basaltic magma from

mantle rises and hardens at the ocean ridge. New magma coming up moves older rock away from ridge like conveyer belt.

Page 12: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.

• 2. Basalt, rich in iron, becomes magnetic

• 3. Minerals line up with magnetic north of earth

• 4. Earth’s magnetic field flips every 500,000 years

• New portions of the ridge will have reverse polarity

• Result = alternating bands of normal and reverse polarity in rock around ridge

Page 13: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.

• The Earth is constantly changing

• The Earth’s crust is divided into 8 large plates (and several small plates)

• Almost all major earthquake or volcano activity occurs along the plate boundaries

• Because each plate moves as a unit, the interiors of the plates are generally stable.

• Really not a theory due to overwhelming evidence!!!!

The Theory of Plate Tectonics

Page 14: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.
Page 15: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.
Page 16: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.

Lithosphere (crust + upper mantle) broken into lithospheric plates (tectonic plates)

Page 17: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.

How plates move - Convection Currents

Page 18: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.

Mantle convection• Convection in the mantle brings hot material upward in

some places. Elsewhere, cooler rock sinks.• Upwelling hot material can cause lithosphere to rift (split)

and plates drift apart (usually at oceanic ridges)

Page 19: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.

• The plates pushed apart contact another plate

• This often forms subduction zones– Denser plate (usually oceanic) forced underneath

less dense plate (continental)– A valley, called a trench, is formed

• Subducting plate pulls rest of plate = slab pull

Page 20: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.

TYPES OF PLATE BOUNDARIES

• Divergent boundaries -- plates move away from each other

• Convergent boundaries -- plates move toward each other

• Transform boundaries -- plates try to slide past each other

Page 21: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.

A

Divergent

B

Convergent

C

Transform

• plates are moving apart

• new crust is created

• magma is coming to the surface

• plates are coming together

• crust is returning to the mantle

• plates are slipping past each other

• crust is not created or destroyed

Types of plate Boundaries

Page 22: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.

A

Divergent

B

Convergent

C

Transform

• almost always found under the ocean

•Forms mid-ocean ridges

•Iceland is a rare example of one on land

• usually ocean plate colliding with land plate

• ocean plate goes under land plate

• pushes up mountains and forms deep ocean trenches (subduction zones)

• rare on the planet

• famous one is the San Andreas Fault in California

Page 23: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.
Page 24: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.

DIVERGENT BOUNDARIES

• Plates move apart along a system of fractures• As magma rises and cools, it pushes older rock away• Newer rock found closer to spreading oceanic ridge

and older rock farther away• Spreading on land = rift• Blocks of rock are down-dropped along fractures

(faults) - rift valleys• Seafloor spreading : mid-ocean ridges volcanic

activity produces new seafloor as plates drift apart• Examples: E. African Rift, mid-Atlantic ridge

Page 25: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.

Diverging Plates

Page 26: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.
Page 27: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.
Page 28: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.

Howocean basinsformed

Page 29: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.
Page 30: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.
Page 31: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.

CONVERGENT BOUNDARIES – Oceanic-Continental

• Oceanic plate (dense basalt) subducts under continental plate (less dense granite)

• Subducting plate pushed into mantle and melts…this forms cone volcanos

• Force also causes formation of mountains as continental crust crumples

• Causes smalllarge earthquakes• BC is over a subduction zone: oceanic Juan de

Fuca plate subducting under continental North American plate formed Coast Mountains

Page 32: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.

Converging Plates - Subduction

Page 33: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.

CONVERGENT BOUNDARIES – Oceanic-Oceanic

• Rock densities similar, so one plate forced under other

• Volcanoes produced– Form long chain of island = island arc

– Eg: Japan, Aleutian Islands

Page 34: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.
Page 35: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.
Page 36: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.

Earthquake focus increases in depthalong subducting plate

The further from the edge of plate, the deeper the earthquake

Page 37: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.
Page 38: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.

CONVERGENT BOUNDARIES – Continental-Continental

• Plates are same density– No subduction!

• Instead, we get mountain building• Plates crumple and fold as they collide• No volcanos formed• Do get earthquakes• Eg: Himilayas (Mt. Everest) formed by India

colliding with Eurasian plate

Page 39: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.

Converging Continental Plates

Page 40: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.
Page 41: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.
Page 42: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.

TRANSFORM BOUNDARIES• Plates slide past each other in opposite

directions• No volcanoes or mountains• Do get many large, shallow earthquakes• Examples: San Andreas fault zone, southern

CA; – oceanic Pacific Plate sliding past North

American plate• Also found at divergent plate boundaries

Page 43: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.

Transform Boundaries

Page 44: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.

Streams offset by San Andreas Fault

Page 45: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.
Page 46: Alfred Wegner - Continental Drift Hypothesis Alfred Wegener, a German climatologist, developed the Continental Drift hypothesis in 1915.

GATHERING EVIDENCE

• Field work - geologists sampling rocks, drilling, mapping formations

• Remote Sensing - observing from a distance (satellite photos, sonar mapping of ocean floors)

• Seismology - study of earthquakes and seismic waves

• Volcanology - study of volcanoes