Top Banner
Title: Chapter 17 Plate Tectonics; 17.1 Drifting Continents Page: 85 Date: 3/11/2013
21

Title: Chapter 17 Plate Tectonics; 17.1 Drifting Continents Page: 85 Date: 3/11/2013.

Dec 25, 2015

Download

Documents

Lindsay Wilkins
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Title: Chapter 17 Plate Tectonics; 17.1 Drifting Continents Page: 85 Date: 3/11/2013.

Title: Chapter 17 Plate Tectonics; 17.1 Drifting Continents

Page: 85Date: 3/11/2013

Page 2: Title: Chapter 17 Plate Tectonics; 17.1 Drifting Continents Page: 85 Date: 3/11/2013.

Students will be able to identify lines of evidence that led Wegener to suggest that Earth’s continents have moved.

Students will be able to discuss evidence of ancient climates supported by continental drift.

Students will be able to explain why continental drift was not accepted when it was first proposed.

Page 3: Title: Chapter 17 Plate Tectonics; 17.1 Drifting Continents Page: 85 Date: 3/11/2013.

Hypothesis: A testable explanation of a situation.

Page 4: Title: Chapter 17 Plate Tectonics; 17.1 Drifting Continents Page: 85 Date: 3/11/2013.

Main Idea: The shape and geology of the continents suggests that they were once joined together.

Page 5: Title: Chapter 17 Plate Tectonics; 17.1 Drifting Continents Page: 85 Date: 3/11/2013.

Early Observations:

First evidence from cartographers (map makers.)

Noticed continents fit together like puzzle pieces.

1500s Abraham Ortelius (Dutch) proposed that North and South America had been separated from Europe and Africa by earth quakes and floods.

Page 6: Title: Chapter 17 Plate Tectonics; 17.1 Drifting Continents Page: 85 Date: 3/11/2013.

Abraham Ortelius 1858 Continental Puzzle Map

Page 7: Title: Chapter 17 Plate Tectonics; 17.1 Drifting Continents Page: 85 Date: 3/11/2013.

Early Observations:

1912 Alfred Wegener (German) made 1st scientific proposal.

Page 8: Title: Chapter 17 Plate Tectonics; 17.1 Drifting Continents Page: 85 Date: 3/11/2013.

Alfred Wegener(Looks like Mr. Martino)

Page 9: Title: Chapter 17 Plate Tectonics; 17.1 Drifting Continents Page: 85 Date: 3/11/2013.

Continental Drift

Wegener’s theory: Continents were once

joined as a single land mass called Pangaea “All Earth.”

Pangaea broke up 200 million years ago.

Continents have been moving ever since.

Page 10: Title: Chapter 17 Plate Tectonics; 17.1 Drifting Continents Page: 85 Date: 3/11/2013.

Pangaea

Page 11: Title: Chapter 17 Plate Tectonics; 17.1 Drifting Continents Page: 85 Date: 3/11/2013.

Evidence (3 Pieces)

1. Evidence from Rock Formations: • Wegener found identical

rock layers in Appalachian Mountains, Greenland and Europe - all older than 200 million years.

Page 12: Title: Chapter 17 Plate Tectonics; 17.1 Drifting Continents Page: 85 Date: 3/11/2013.

Rock Layer Evidence of Continental Drift

Page 13: Title: Chapter 17 Plate Tectonics; 17.1 Drifting Continents Page: 85 Date: 3/11/2013.

Evidence (3 Pieces)

2. Evidence from Fossils: • Wegener found fossils of

similar land animals and plants on different continents.

• No way land animals could have swam across oceans.

Page 14: Title: Chapter 17 Plate Tectonics; 17.1 Drifting Continents Page: 85 Date: 3/11/2013.

Fossil Evidence of Continental Drift

Page 15: Title: Chapter 17 Plate Tectonics; 17.1 Drifting Continents Page: 85 Date: 3/11/2013.

Fossil Evidence of Continental DriftMesosaurus (An aquatic reptile that Wegener believed wasNot able to swim across an entire ocean.)

Page 16: Title: Chapter 17 Plate Tectonics; 17.1 Drifting Continents Page: 85 Date: 3/11/2013.

Evidence (3 Pieces)

3. Climatic Evidence: • Fossil of plant Glassopteris

found in South America, Antarctica and India.

• Plant only grows in warm climates.

• Climates on these continents must have been different - warmer.

Page 17: Title: Chapter 17 Plate Tectonics; 17.1 Drifting Continents Page: 85 Date: 3/11/2013.

Evidence (3 Pieces)

3. Climatic Evidence: Coal Deposits: Coal forms from the

compaction and decomposition of accumulations of ancient tropical swamp plants.

Coal deposits found in Antarctica.

Antarctica must have had a tropical climate - must have been closer to the equator.

Page 18: Title: Chapter 17 Plate Tectonics; 17.1 Drifting Continents Page: 85 Date: 3/11/2013.

Pangaea Coal Deposits

Page 19: Title: Chapter 17 Plate Tectonics; 17.1 Drifting Continents Page: 85 Date: 3/11/2013.

Evidence (3 Pieces)

3. Climatic Evidence: Glacial Deposits: Found 290 million year old

glacial deposits in Africa, India, South America and Australia.

Current locations of these continents are too warm for glaciers.

Continents must have once been closer to South Pole.

Page 20: Title: Chapter 17 Plate Tectonics; 17.1 Drifting Continents Page: 85 Date: 3/11/2013.

Evidence from Glacial Deposits

Page 21: Title: Chapter 17 Plate Tectonics; 17.1 Drifting Continents Page: 85 Date: 3/11/2013.

A Rejected Notion

• 1900s Scientists thought continents had been carved out by erosion and rejected Wegener’s theory of Continental Drift.

• 2 Questions Wegener could not explain:

1. What forces caused continents to move?

2. How could continents move through solids?

• Not until WWII when technology was developed that Wegener’s hypothesis was taken seriously.