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The Theory of Plate Tectonics Chapter 1, Section 5
14

The Theory of Plate Tectonics Chapter 1, Section 5.

Dec 24, 2015

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Page 1: The Theory of Plate Tectonics Chapter 1, Section 5.

The Theory of Plate Tectonics Chapter 1, Section 5

Page 2: The Theory of Plate Tectonics Chapter 1, Section 5.

What is J. Tuzo Wilson responsible for doing?

He proposed that the lithosphere is broken into separate sections called plates.

The plates fit closely together along cracks in the lithosphere

He combined sea-floor spreading, the plates and the ideas behind continental drift to create the theory of Plate Tectonics.

Page 3: The Theory of Plate Tectonics Chapter 1, Section 5.

How is Plate Tectonics DIFFERENT from Continental Drift?Plates vs Continents movingAbility to explain the movement

(convection currents in the mantle)

Page 4: The Theory of Plate Tectonics Chapter 1, Section 5.

How is Plate Tectonics SIMILAR from Continental Drift?

Explained that the continents moved (All of the continental drift information)

Page 5: The Theory of Plate Tectonics Chapter 1, Section 5.

What do most geologists believe causes the plates to move?

Convection currents in the mantle (friction of the molten material plus the force of gravity)

Page 6: The Theory of Plate Tectonics Chapter 1, Section 5.

Continental & Oceanic Oceanic

North American Pacific

South American Nazca

Eurasian Caribbean

African Philippines (purple)

Antarctic Scotia (blue)

Indo-Australian Cocoas (pink)

Arabian (purple) Juan de Fuca (yellow)

Page 7: The Theory of Plate Tectonics Chapter 1, Section 5.

Transform Boundaries Plates slide past each other in opposite

directions North American Plate and the Pacific Plate

(where California is being ripped in two parts)

Page 8: The Theory of Plate Tectonics Chapter 1, Section 5.

Divergent Boundaries The plates slide away from each other in

opposite directions Two Oceanic Plates Diverge…

N. American & Eurasian; S. American & African; etc.

Landforms…. Mid-ocean ridge and the rift valley Two Continental Diverge…

N. American & Eurasian (Iceland); Africa (Great Rift Valley)

Landforms… rift valley

Page 9: The Theory of Plate Tectonics Chapter 1, Section 5.

Convergent Boundaries The plates push towards each other Two Oceanic Plates Converge…

Pacific & Philippines (Marinas); Pacific & N. American (Aleutian)

Landforms…. Trench, a line of volcanic islands (mountians on the ocean floor)

Page 10: The Theory of Plate Tectonics Chapter 1, Section 5.

Convergent Boundaries (continued) Two Continental Converge…

Eurasian & Indo-Australian (Himalayas)

Landforms… mountains

Page 11: The Theory of Plate Tectonics Chapter 1, Section 5.

What do you need to know to predict where the continents will be in 50 million years?

The types of boundaries on each side of the plate.

Which direction the plate is moving. The speed the plate is moving.

Page 12: The Theory of Plate Tectonics Chapter 1, Section 5.

What is a rift valley? How are rift valleys formed?

The steep sided valley found where two plates diverge.

This can be found where continental plates are ripping apart (Africa’s Great Rift Valley and in Iceland)

It can also be found in the middle of the Mid-Ocean Ridge.

As the plates diverge, molten material rises and create new land. This creates the valley floor.

Page 13: The Theory of Plate Tectonics Chapter 1, Section 5.

What types of plate movement occur at plate boundaries?

Transform Slide past each other in opposite directions

Convergent Push towards each other

Divergent Pull away from each other

Page 14: The Theory of Plate Tectonics Chapter 1, Section 5.

Section Review1. What is the theory of plate tectonics?

The theory of plate tectonic explains the formation, movement and subduction of Earth’s plates.2. What are the different types of boundaries?

Transform, divergent and convergent3. What major event in Earth’s history began about 225 million years ago?

The supercontinent Pangaea began to break apart.4. Find the divergent boundary the runs through

Africa. What can eventually happen along this boundary?

If the rift valley continues to grow, it could someday split the eastern part of Africa away from the rest of the continent eventually forming a new ocean.