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Earth’s Internal Properties Continental Drift & Plate Tectonics Science 2201 Chapter 17
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Earth’s Internal Properties

Jan 04, 2016

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Earth’s Internal Properties. Continental Drift & Plate Tectonics Science 2201 Chapter 17. October 17, 1989. May 18, 1980. Earthquakes and volcanoes: evidence that our planet is not at rest. global distribution of earthquakes and volcanic centers…above crustal plate boundaries - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Earth’s Internal Properties

Earth’s Internal Properties

Continental Drift & Plate Tectonics

Science 2201

Chapter 17

Page 2: Earth’s Internal Properties

October 17, 1989

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May 18, 1980

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Earthquakes and volcanoes: evidence that our planet is not at rest.

• global distribution of earthquakes and volcanic centers…above crustal plate boundaries

• The surface of the earth is constantly changing and no feature on earth is permanent.

Page 5: Earth’s Internal Properties

Why is the Earth so restless?

• “Convection Conveyer-belt”

• The heat that drives the motion of the mantle comes from two sources:

---Radioactive decay of materials in the mantle

---Heat left over from the formation of the earth

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James Hutton 1726-1797

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• "catastrophism," earthly changes were sudden & caused by a series of catastrophes

• This belief prevailed until the 1700s

• "uniformitarianism • 1785 James Hutton• The present is the key

to the past

Page 8: Earth’s Internal Properties

Uniformitarian Principle

• the geologic forces and processes -- gradual as well as catastrophic -- acting on the Earth today are the same as those that have acted in the geologic past.

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Alfred Wegener 1880-1930

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Theory of Continental Drift

• (Wegener, 1915)

• continents plowed through crust of ocean basins, which would explain why the outlines of many coastlines(like South America and Africa) look like they fit together like a puzzle

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Continental Drift: a theory ahead of its time

• impossible for a large mass of solid rock to plow through the ocean floor without breaking up

• mid 20th Century, new evidence from ocean floor exploration rekindled interest in Wegener's theory, ultimately leading to theory of plate tectonics.

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Page 15: Earth’s Internal Properties

Plate Tectonics: A modern version of

Wegener’s old idea • the outer rigid lithosphere consists of about

20 rigid segments called plates

• Most plates contain both continental and oceanic crust—a major departure from the continental drift theory

• The word tectonics comes from the Greek root "to build."

Page 16: Earth’s Internal Properties

Folding and Faulting

• Compressive forces from moving plates can cause rock to bend & wrinkle into wavelike folds

• The crack or break in the rock is called a fault and the movement of the rock is “faulting”

Page 17: Earth’s Internal Properties

Earthquakes

• Great forces of stress occurs as plates of rock pushed in opposite directions

• sudden movement as the blocks slide and then come to rest in a new position that eases the pressure

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The entire San Andreas fault system is more than 800 miles long and extends to depths of at least 10miles within the Earth. In detail, the fault is a complex zone of crushed and broken rock from a few hundred feet to a mile wide.

Page 21: Earth’s Internal Properties

Seismograph

• Richter Scale based on the amount of seismographic movement

• An earthquake with a number of 2 is just strong enough to be felt, 5 can cause much damage, 7 or more is classified as a major earthquake

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Plate Boundaries

• 3 Main Types–Divergent

–Convergent

–Transform

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Divergent Plate Boundaries

• plates are being pulled apart

• sea floor spreading at Mid-Atlantic Ridge

• Eurasia and North America are separating at a rate of about 5 cm per year

• East African Rift Valley

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Convergent Plate Boundaries

• two plates are coming together

• 3 associated surface feature– deep ocean trench and chain of volcanic

islands – folded mountains – ocean plate subduction beneath continent

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Page 32: Earth’s Internal Properties

Transform Plate Boundaries

• one plate scrapes past the other

• San Andreas fault in California

• No mountain building or volcanism is associated with transform boundaries.

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Page 34: Earth’s Internal Properties

Mountains

• great masses of rock pushed high into the air by forces inside the earth

• may be folded, tilted, shaped into domes, or built up from volcanic material

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Forming Mountains

• Folded mountains are formed when layers of rock are pushed into a series of wavelike folds by tremendous sideward forces

• Appalachian Mountains & Rocky Mountains

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Forming Mountains

• Fault-block mountains formed when folded layers of rock crack, producing a fault

• Sierra Nevadas

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Forming Mountains

• Domed mountains formed when magma flows up between two layers of rock

• Black Hills of shown rising from the Great Plains of South Dakota

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Forming Mountains

• Volcanic mountains formed by the build up of lava and other materials thrown up when a volcano erupts

• Hawaiian Islands

Page 39: Earth’s Internal Properties

Volcanoes

• A mountain formed around a crack in the earth’s crust

• Cracks in crust allow magma to rise up

• Some erupt quietly, others violently

• Magma lava

• Obsidian

• Pumice

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3 main types of volcanoes

• Shield volcanoes link –Kilauea in Hawaii

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3 main types of volcanoes

• Cinder cone link—Paricutin in Mexico

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3 main types of volcanoes

• Composite or Stratovolcano link

– Ranier in U.S.

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Hot Springs

• Formed when underground water is heated by rock, and then flows to surface before cooling

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Geysers

• A hot spring that throws its water into the air from time to time

• Almost all geysers are on 3 places: Yellowstone National Park, Iceland, and New Zealand

• How geysers work: – (understanding boiling)