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Unit 3 Plate Tectonics and Volcanoes

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Lithosphere includes the. crust and the rigid upper- most part of the mantle ... The crust is part of the lithosphere. Plate Tectonics is the movement of the plates. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Unit 3 Plate Tectonics and Volcanoes


1
Unit 3Plate Tectonics and Volcanoes
2
Hypothesis of Continental Drift
  • This idea preceded the theory of Plate Tectonics
  • Proposed by German scientist Alfred Wegener
  • All continents were at one time joined in one
    mega continent Pangea
  • Pangea then broke up and the pieces drifted apart

3
Wegeners evidence for Continental Drift
  • Fit of the continents

4
The shape of the continent we see is determined
by sea level, which changes over the
centuries.Continental Shelves are deeper and
wider than that shape. They are the true edge
of the continent.
5
Wegener found an excellent fit when he used the
continental shelves to match up the continents.
6
Wegeners evidence for Continental Drift
  • Fit of the continents
  • Fossils that match up

7
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8
Wegeners evidence for Continental Drift
  • Fit of the continents
  • Fossils that match up
  • Evidence of ancient glaciers match up
  • Evidence of tropical climates form a band across
    Pangea

9
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10
Wegeners evidence for Continental Drift
  • Fit of the continents
  • Fossils that match up
  • Evidence of ancient glaciers form a clump like an
    ice cap
  • Evidence of tropical climates form a band across
    Pangea
  • Rock types match up
  • Structures like faults match up

11
Wegeners theory was not accepted in his day (he
died in 1930).
  • What was missing A plausible mechanism for the
    continents to move.
  • He proposed that the continents drifted on top of
    the ocean crust.
  • This explanation was the best science could offer
    until we learned some critical information about
    the ocean floor.

12
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13
The Ocean Floor Revealed
  • In the 1960s scientists used sonar to map the
    irregular shape of the ocean floor
  • The images revealed prominent mid-ocean ridges
  • The mid-ocean ridge lines exactly follow the
    shape of the continental margins

14
Seafloor Spreading
  • The continents split apart and new ocean floor
    was formed in gap
  • As each new spreading event occurs, new lava
    forms at the mid-ocean ridge
  • The older ocean crust and the continents are
    pushed ever farther away from the spreading center

15
Plate Tectonics is born
  • Seafloor spreading provided the mechanism that
    Wegeners Continental Drift theory lacked.
  • The Supercontinent of Pangea and how it fits
    together are vindicated
  • We also learned important things about the deep
    Earth. The Earth was revealed to be covered with
    a crust that is broken into many plates
  • Dating has shown that Pangea began to break up
    235 million years ago

16
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17
Parts of the Earth
  • Outer crust, very thin
  • Lithosphere includes thecrust and the rigid
    upper-most part of the mantle
  • The tectonic plates aremade of lithosphere
  • Lithosphere floats on the mantle

18
Parts of the Earth
  • Mantle is a solid but it flows (like a
    marsh-mallow does) mantle has the consistency
    of asphalt
  • Outer core, liquid
  • Inner core, solid

19
The Crust
  • A single plate may have both continental crust
    and ocean crust on it
  • Ocean crust is thin and dense, made of basalt
    (lava rock)
  • Older ocean crust is denser than newer ocean
    crust because it cools and contracts as it ages
  • Continental Crust is thicker and less dense
  • The crust is part of the lithosphere

20
Plate Tectonics is the movement of the plates.
Plate tectonics is driven by mantle convection.
21
Convection
  • Recall that convection is the transfer of heat by
    the movement of currents

22
Mantle Convection
  • The mantle is heated by the outer core, making it
    less dense
  • The hotter mantle material rises up to the
    tectonic plates
  • When it gets to the top of the mantle it spreads
    out
  • This rising and spreading out of the mantle
    pushes the plates above it apart
  • The result is Seafloor Spreading

23
Mantle Convection
  • So close to the surface, the mantle cools and
    becomes less dense
  • The cooled part of the mantle becomes dense
    enough to sink
  • As the cooled mantle sinks, it drags down the
    plate that was on top of it
  • The result is subduction
  • Subduction is when a plate sinks back into the
    mantle

24
Seafloor spreading
  • The newest ocean crust is lighter and sits
    higher. The result is a Mid-ocean ridge.
  • As spreading continues, the rock that was at the
    ridgeline is moved away like on a conveyor belt.

25
Plate Boundaries
  • A plate boundary is the meeting place between the
    edges of two tectonic plates.

26
Three types of Plate Boundaries
  • Divergent
  • Convergent
  • Transform

27
Divergent Plate Boundaries
  • Divergent means separating
  • Two plates diverge, or move apart from each other

28
Divergent Plate BoundariesOcean-Ocean
  • This is known as seafloor spreading
  • The surface expression is a mid-ocean ridge
  • New ocean floor is created at these boundaries
  • The birthplace of oceans
  • Examples Mid-Atlantic Ridge and East Pacific Rise

29
Divergent Plate BoundariesThe earliest stage
Continental Rifting
  • When a single plate begins to break into two,
    this is called continental rifting.
  • Continent-continent divergent boundary

30
Stages of Continental Rifting
  • 1- The continental crust begins to pull apart
  • 2- The continental crust warps upward in the
    place where it is pulling apart and the mantle
    gets closer to the surface
  • 3- The crust thins in the rifting area, forming a
    rift valley
  • 4- Volcanoes rise up
  • 5- The plates succeed in separating

31
Stages of Continental Rifting
  • 6- As the two plates separate, a gap forms that
    is filled by magma (liquid rock from the mantle)
  • 7- Ocean crust (basalt lava rock) forms in the
    gap
  • 8- A skinny new strip of ocean floor develops

32
Stages of Continental Rifting
  • 10- As the spreading continues the ocean floor
    widens, separating the edge of continents from
    each other more and more
  • Eventually the seafloor spreading is significant
    enough that it is no longer considered
    continental rifting, just plain seafloor
    spreading

33
Continental Rifting
  • Example 1 North America has a failed rift
  • Long ago the continent of North America started
    to break apart, from the Great Lakes down to
    Kansas.
  • It got to the point that the crust was thinned
    where the plate was pulling apart.
  • Then it stopped.
  • The Great Lakes now fill the low spots created by
    the thinning of the crust at the failed rift.

34
Continental Rifting
  • Example 2 The East African Rift Valley
  • The continent of Africa is also ripping in two,
    creating a rift valley where the crust is
    thinning
  • In places magma is able to well up, creating
    volcanoes such as Mt. Kilimanjaro

35
Continental Rifting
  • Example 3 The Red Sea
  • The Red Sea is a skinny strip of brand new ocean
    floor being created where Saudi Arabia is pulling
    away from Africa

36
Divergent Plate BoundariesTwo plates separate
  • Continental Rifting, one plate breaking into two
  • Seafloor Spreading new ocean floor is created

37
Convergent Plate BoundariesTwo plates collide
  • The denser plate subducts
  • Put these in order from most dense to least
    dense continental crust old ocean crust new
    ocean crust

38
Convergent Plate BoundariesTwo plates collide
  • The denser plate subducts
  • In order from most dense to least dense old
    ocean crust (most dense) new ocean crust
    continental crust (most buoyant)

39
Convergent Plate BoundariesTwo plates collide
  • The denser plate subducts
  • Old ocean crust will subduct under new ocean
    crust
  • Ocean crust will subduct under continental
    crust

40
Convergent Plate Boundary1-Ocean-Ocean
  • Older ocean crust subducts under newer ocean
    crust
  • Along the edge is an ocean trench, a deep area
    where the subducting plate bows down

41
Convergent Plate Boundary1-Ocean-Ocean
  • The subducting plate melts
  • Magma rises up
  • Creates a chain of volcanoes on the overriding
    plate
  • The volcanoes are called Island Arcs

42
Convergent Plate Boundary1-Ocean-OceanExample
The Caribbean Islands
43
Convergent Plate Boundary2-Ocean-Continent
  • Ocean crust subducts under continental crust
  • Along the edge is an ocean trench, where the
    subducting plate bows down

44
Convergent Plate Boundary2-Ocean-Continent
  • The subducting plate melts
  • Magma rises up
  • Creates a chain of volcanoes on the overriding
    plate, along the edge of the continent
  • The volcanoes make a mountain chain

45
Convergent Plate Boundary2-Ocean-ContinentExamp
le 1 The Peruvian Trench and the Andes
Mountains, where the Nazca Plate (in the
Pacific Ocean) is subducting under the South
American Plate
46
Convergent Plate Boundary2-Ocean-ContinentExamp
le 2 The Marianas Trench near Japan is the
deepest part on the surface of the Earth.
47
Convergent Plate Boundary2-Ocean-ContinentExamp
le 3 The Cascade Range in the NW USA. Mount
St. Helens is one of the volcanoes in the
chain.
48
Convergent Plate Boundary3-Continent-Continent
  • Continental crust cannot subduct
  • No subduction or rising magma
  • Crust of Earth is squeezed together and pushed
    upwards

49
Convergent Plate Boundary3-Continent-Continent
Example The Indian sub-continent is pushing
into Eurasia. The result is the Tibetan
Plateau and the Himalayas Mt Everest
50
Convergent Plate Boundary3-Continent-Continent
Example The Indian sub-continent is pushing
into Eurasia. The result is the Tibetan
Plateau and the Himalayas Mt Everest
51
All three types of plate boundaries cause
earthquakes
  • Divergent
  • Convergent
  • Transform

52
Only two of the plate boundaries cause volcanoes
  • Divergent
  • Convergent

Transform boundaries do not cause volcanoes.
53
Transform Plate Boundaries
  • Two plates slide past each other
  • Transform plate boundaries create earthquakes and
    can deform the crust into small hills, but no
    volcanoes or big mountains.

54
Transform Plate Boundaries1-Ocean-Ocean
  • Major offset perpendicular to the Mid-Ocean Ridge
    axis
  • Examples Offset of East Pacific Rise in South
    Pacific Offset of Mid-Atlantic Ridge

55
Transform Plate Boundaries2-Ocean-Continentor
Continent-continent
  • Earthquakes

56
Transform Plate Boundaries2-Ocean-Continentor
Continent-continent
  • Example San Andreas Fault in California. The
    Pacific Plate is moving North, while the North
    American Plate is moving South

57
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60
Quiz Three kinds of Plate Boundaries
  • Transform
  • Divergent
  • Convergent
  • Seafloor is destroyed
  • Seafloor is created
  • Volcanic chain
  • Plates separating
  • Plates sliding past each other
  • Mid-ocean ridge
  • Plates colliding

61
Answers Three kinds of Plate Boundaries
  • Transform Plates sliding past each other
  • Convergent -Seafloor is destroyed -Plates
    colliding -Volcanic chain
  • Divergent -Seafloor is created-Plates
    separating-Mid-ocean ridge

62
Quiz Three kinds of Plate Boundaries
  • Transform
  • Convergent
  • Divergent
  • What are the map symbols?

63
Quiz
  • Which will be overridingold ocean crust or new
    ocean crust?
  • Which will subductcontinental crust or ocean
    crust?
  • What happens when continental crust collides with
    continental crust?

64
Answers
  • Young ocean crust will override old ocean crust
  • Ocean crust will subduct under continental crust
  • When continental crust collides with continental
    crust no subduction occurs the crust is squeezed
    together and pushed upwards
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