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Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens
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Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens. Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans Continental.

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Page 1: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.

Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens

Page 2: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.

Alfred Wegener • First proposed hypothesis, 1915 • Published The Origin of Continents and

Oceans Continental drift hypothesis

• Supercontinent called Pangaea began breaking apart about 200 million years ago

• Continents "drifted" to present positions • Continents "broke" through the ocean crust

Page 3: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.
Page 4: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.

Wegener's continental drift hypothesis• Evidence used by Wegener

Fit of South America and Africa Fossils match across the seas Rock types and structures match Ancient climates

• Main objection to Wegener's proposal was its inability to provide a mechanism

Page 5: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.
Page 6: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.
Page 7: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.

More encompassing than continental drift

Associated with Earth's rigid outer shell • Called the lithosphere • Consists of several plates

Plates are moving slowly Largest plate is the Pacific plate Plates are mostly beneath the ocean

Page 8: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.

Asthenosphere • Exists beneath the lithosphere • Hotter and weaker than lithosphere• Allows for motion of lithosphere

Plate boundaries • All major interactions among plates occur

along their boundaries

Page 9: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.

Plate boundaries • Types of plate boundaries

Divergent plate boundaries (constructive margins) •Two plates move apart•Mantle material upwells to create new seafloor

•Ocean ridges and seafloor spreading •Oceanic ridges develop along well-developed boundaries

•Along ridges, seafloor spreading creates new seafloor

Page 10: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.
Page 11: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.

Plate boundaries • Types of plate boundaries

Divergent plate boundaries (constructive margins)

•Continental rifts form at spreading centers within a continent

Page 12: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.
Page 13: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.

Plate boundaries • Types of plate boundaries

Convergent plate boundaries (destructive margins)

•Plates collide, an ocean trench forms and lithosphere is subducted into the mantle

Convergent plate boundaries (destructive margins)

•Oceanic-continental convergence •Denser oceanic slab sinks into the asthenosphere

•Pockets of magma develop and rise •Continental volcanic arcs form•Examples include the Andes, Cascades, and the Sierra Nevadan system

Page 14: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.
Page 15: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.

Plate boundaries • Types of plate boundaries

Convergent plate boundaries (destructive margins)•Oceanic-oceanic convergence

•Two oceanic slabs converge and one descends beneath the other

•Often forms volcanoes on the ocean floor

•Volcanic island arcs forms as volcanoes emerge from the sea

•Examples include the Aleutian, Mariana, and Tonga islands

Page 16: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.
Page 17: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.

Plate boundaries • Types of plate boundaries

Convergent plate boundaries (destructive margins)

•Continental-continental convergence •When subducting plates contain continental material, two continents collide

•Can produce new mountain ranges such as the Himalayas

Page 18: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.
Page 19: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.
Page 20: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.
Page 21: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.

Plate boundaries • Types of plate boundaries

Transform fault boundaries •Plates slide past one another •No new crust is created •No crust is destroyed

•Transform faults •Most join two segments of a mid-ocean ridge

•At the time of formation, they roughly parallel the direction of plate movement

•Aid the movement of oceanic crustal material

Page 22: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.

Evidence for the plate tectonics model • Paleomagnetism

Probably the most persuasive evidence Ancient magnetism preserved in rocks Paleomagnetic records show

•Polar wandering (evidence that continents moved)

•Earth's magnetic field reversals •Recorded in rocks as they form at oceanic ridges

Page 23: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.
Page 24: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.
Page 25: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.

Evidence for the plate tectonics model • Earthquake patterns

Associated with plate boundaries Deep-focus earthquakes along trenches

provide a method for tracking the plate's descent

• Ocean drilling Deep Sea Drilling Project (ship: Glomar

Challenger)

Page 26: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.
Page 27: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.
Page 28: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.

Evidence for the plate tectonics model • Ocean drilling

Age of deepest sediments

•Youngest are near the ridges •Older are at a distance from the ridge

Ocean basins are geologically young

Page 29: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.

Evidence for the plate tectonics model • Hot spots

Rising plumes of mantle material Volcanoes can form over them

•e.g., Hawaiian Island chain•Chains of volcanoes mark plate movement

Page 30: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.
Page 31: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.

Measuring plate motion• By using hot spot “tracks” like those of the

Hawaiian Island - Emperor Seamount chain• Using space-age technology to directly

measure the relative motion of plates Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) Global Positioning System (GPS)

Page 32: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.
Page 33: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.

Driving mechanism of plate tectonics • No one model explains all facets of plate

tectonics • Earth's heat is the driving force• Several models have been proposed

Slab-pull and slab-push model

•Descending oceanic crust pulls the plate •Elevated ridge system pushes the plate

Page 34: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.

Driving mechanism of plate tectonics• Several models have been proposed

Plate-mantle convection

•Mantle plumes extend from mantle-core boundary and cause convection within the mantle

•Models •Layering at 660 kilometers •Whole-mantle convection •Deep-layer model

Page 35: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.
Page 36: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.
Page 37: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.
Page 38: Edward J. Tarbuck & Frederick K. Lutgens.  Alfred Wegener First proposed hypothesis, 1915 Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans  Continental.