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Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –

Jan 02, 2016

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Page 1: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –

Our Amazing Planet

Page 2: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –

Planet Earth

• Earth’s Layers

Page 3: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –

Crust

• Earth’s thin outermost layer.

–Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite).–Oceanic Crust (sea floor)- thin dense rock (basalt)

Page 4: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –

Lithosphere

• Earth’s outermost layer• Includes the crust and solid upper

part of the mantle.• Divided into huge pieces called

“Tectonic Plates”.• “Floats” on top of the

asthenosphere - very hot, soft layer of the mantle.

Page 5: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –

Asthenosphere- Upper Mantle

• Earth’s thickest layer made of dense iron-rich super heated soft rock.

-semisolid layer

• *Layer where convection currents occur.

Page 6: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –

Convection Currents in the Asthenospere

• Causes Sea Floor Spreading – The main cause of

plate tectonics

• Convection Currents– Hot magma rises

and cooler magma sinks in the Earth’s upper Mantle

Page 7: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –
Page 8: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –

Core

• Earth’s innermost layer made of hot, dense iron and nickel.

–Outer core - Liquid–Inner core - Solid

Page 9: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –

Earth’s Tectonic Plates

Page 10: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –

Continental Drift

–Theory that the Earth’s continents move over time–Proposed by Alfred Wegener in the

early 1900’s–Evidence of Continental Drift:• Continents fit together (South America and Africa)• Similar fossils found on different continents• Similar rocks and minerals• Similar climatic conditions

Page 11: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –

Continents Fit Together

Page 12: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –

Eastern coast of South America and western coast of Africa

Page 13: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –

Found Fossils!

Page 14: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –

Sea Floor Spreading(divergent boundary)

• Occurs where tectonic plates spread apart at Mid Ocean Ridges

• Magma rises from upper mantle creating new crust (sea floor) .

• New “younger” sea floor pushes the existing “older” sea floor out (laterally) explaining why continents move.–Evidence that supports the theory of Continental Drift.

Page 15: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –

Sea Floor SpreadingNew crust is formed at mid-ocean

ridges spreading the sea floor

Page 16: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –

Mid-Atlantic Ridge

Page 17: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –

Mid-Atlantic Ridge

Page 18: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –

Rift Valley (divergent boundary)

There are only two rift valleys on Earth within continental crust.-the Baikal Rift Valley and the East African Rift.

- Tectonic activity splits continental crust much in the same way it does along mid-ocean ridges. As the sides of a rift valley move farther apart, the floor sinks lower.

Page 19: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –
Page 20: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –

Tectonic Plate Boundaries

Page 21: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –

Convergent Boundaries

• Tectonic plates that collide or come together

• A) When two plates of equal density collide they squish together to form folded non volcanic mountains.

Page 22: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –

Convergent Boundaries Subduction Zones (a process)

B) Difference in density between oceanic and continental crust creates trenches in the ocean and volcanoes

on land

Page 23: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –

Divergent Boundaries

• Tectonic plates move apart or separate

• Forms Mid Ocean Ridges in oceans and Rift Valleys on land

• East African Rift

• Mid-Atlantic Ridge

Page 24: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –

Mid-Ocean Ridges

• Chain of volcanoes at the middle of the ocean floor.

• Causes Sea Floor Spreading• Magma comes up from inside the

Earth, cools and hardens and creates new sea floor.

• The rock at the mid-ocean ridge is the youngest and gets older as it moves farther away from the ridges.

Page 25: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –

Mid-Atlantic Ridge

Page 26: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –

Evidence of Pangaea

Page 27: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –

Transform Boundaries

• Tectonic plates slide past each

• Forms Fault lines

• San Andreas Fault in California

• Why not in Texas?

Page 28: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –
Page 29: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –

Volcanoes and EarthquakesMost Occur at Tectonic Plate

Boundaries

Page 30: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –

Ring Of Fire

Page 31: Our Amazing Planet. Planet Earth Earth’s Layers Crust Earth’s thin outermost layer. – Continental Crust (land) - thick low density rock (granite). –

Ring of Fire

• Volcanoes around the Pacific Ocean caused by tectonic plates colliding into each other creating subduction zones at CONVERGENT boundaries.