Title: similarity between late paleozoic plant fossils of indian,
1How the Earth Works
2Early Observations
- Fit of the continents ? 1596, Abraham Ortelius,
Thesaurus Geographicus - similarities between fossils found on widely
separated continents ? Antonio Snider -
Pelligrini, 1858 - Similarity between late Paleozoic plant fossils
of Indian, Australia, South Africa, Antarctica ?
Edward Suess, 1885
3- Evidence of glaciation preserved in rocks of
India, Africa - Distribution of earthquakes and volcanoes
4 Antonio Snider-Pellegrini, 1858
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6Explaining the Observations
- Land bridges
- Break-up of early large polar continents by
gigantic tidal forces, - Atlantic mid-ocean ridge marks the spot
- Frank Taylor, 1910
7Theory of Continental Drift
- Alfred Wegener
- The Origin of Continents and Oceans, 1915
- break-up of original supercontinent, Pangaea
- theory based on wide range of geological ,
paleontological, and climatological evidence
8- Mountain ranges and glacial deposits match -up
when continents are placed together - Shorelines of continents fit together
- Rock record indicates that global climate belts
were not always parallel to equator? - How to explain observations?
- Wegener ? move continents
- Mechanism?
9- Principal proponent Alexander duToit, Our
Wandering Continents, 1937 - proposes that Pangaea initially rifts apart into
2 parts - Laurasia
- Gondwanaland
- later into smaller continents
- Some support in Europe,
- Little support in North America
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11Further Observations
- Paleomagnetic evidence 1920 ?
- when magma cools iron-bearing minerals align
themselves with the Earths magnetic field - records both intensity and direction
- polar wandering?
12Magnetic reversals 1950s ?
- normal north and south magnetic poles located
approximately at the north and south geographic
poles - at times has completely reversed
- discovered on the continents, later verified in
ocean basalts
13 Vine-Matthews Hypothesis, 1963
14Theory of sea-floor spreading
- Harry Hess, 1962
- Proposes sea-floor spreading to account for
movement of continents - continents do not move across oceanic crust
- continents and oceanic crust moving together
- Robert Dietz - adds asthenosphere
15Heezen and Tharp
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17- sea-floor separates at oceanic ridges where new
oceanic crust is being formed by upwelling magma - as magma cools, newly-formed oceanic crust moves
laterally away from ridge - Mechanism? Remember Wegener!
18- Thermal convection cells in mantle
- Hot mantle rises (more buoyant) from the mantle
- Intrudes along rift zone fractures defining
oceanic ridges - Cold crust subducted back into the mantle at
deep-sea trenches - Reheated and recycled ? completing a thermal
convection cell
19 Imagery courtesy of Stacey Tighe, University of
Rhode Island
20Confirmation
- How could Hesss theory be confirmed?
- Magnetic surveys of the ocean floor revealed that
the magnetic reversals preserved in the oceanic
crust were both parallel to and symmetrical with
oceanic ridges - drilling indicated ocean basins are geologically
young features - oldest oceanic crust, 165,000,000 years old
21- Oldest continental crust, 3.96 billion years
old - Rocks on the ocean floor youngest near mid-ocean
ridge, older as we move away
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23How the Earth Works
- The Composition of the Earth
24(Adapted from, Beatty, 1990.)
25 W.J. Kious and R.I. Tilling, This Dynamic Earth
The Story of Plate Tectonics, U.S. Geological
Survey, 1996.
26- Consider the composition of the Earth in terms
of - chemical makeup
- primary elements
- physical properties
27Chemical Composition
28Core
- Central zone of the Earth
- Begins at a depth of 2,900 km
- Composed of Fe-alloys
- outer core
- liquid (balance of P and T)
- Fe, Ni, S
- inner core
- solid (due to tremendous pressure)
- Fe
29- Core-mantle boundary (CMB) defined by the
Gutenberg discontinuity - Important thermal boundary above the core-mantle
boundary (CMB) defined by extreme variation in
the movement of seismic waves - Zone of 200 - 300 km, designated D11
30Mantle
- Zone surrounding the core
- 83 of the Earths volume
- lt dense than the core
- entire mantle is composed of two silicates of Fe
and Mg - Olivine (Mg, Fe)2SiO4
- Pyroxene (Mg, Fe)SiO3
31- These minerals change their forms at different
pressures. - As a result there are boundaries in the mantle
which represent changes in the phases, or atomic
packing, of these minerals. - The two most important phase changes take place
at depths of 410-km, and 660-km.
32- In the upper mantle (above 660-km) olivine and
pyroxene are found as peridotite - In the lower mantle (below 660-km) olivine and
pyroxene form perovskites and a much smaller
amount of an oxide, magnesiowüstite
33- The 660-km boundary is important for several
reasons - represents the deepest earthquakes
- the phase change of the minerals at this depth
can be duplicated in the laboratory, temperature
at that depth must be 1700C
34Crust
- Mantle - Crust boundary established by the
Mohorovicic discontinuity - Ranges in thickness from 10 - 70 km
- 2 varieties
- 1. oceanic
- 2. continental
35Oceanic crust
- thin crust under the ocean
- basaltic
- average thickness of about 8 km
- 2-km pillow basalt
- 6-km gabbro
- density of 3.2 g/cm3
- composition rich in Ca, Mg, Fe
- lt 50 SiO2
36Continental
- From 30 - 70 km thick
- thinnest where continents are being pulled apart
- thickest under mountains
- average density 2.7 g/cm3
- granitic
- composition rich in Si, Al, Na, K
- gt 50 SiO2
37Physical Properties
38lithosphere
- rigid outer shell of the Earth
- composed of
- upper mantle
- oceanic crust
- continental crust
- 70 - 125 km thick
39asthenosphere
- Region of the Earths outer shell that lies just
below lithosphere - Extends to a depth of 220-km
- behaves plastically
40Theory of Plate Tectonics
41The modern synthesis
- The Earths surface is broken into about a dozen
major plates - Plates move about horizontally with respect to
one another - Plates float or slide on a highly viscous
layer -- the asthenosphere
42- Plates are made up of both continental and
oceanic crust, with the continents riding
passively on the spreading seafloor - Main action in plate tectonics occurs at the
edges of the plates
43- in a human time scale these boundaries are marked
by the presence of volcanoes and the occurrence
of earthquakes - over the course of geologic time these boundaries
are the site of the splitting, shifting and
crumpling of the continents
44Volcanoes of the World (Smithsonian Institution
Global Volcanism Program)
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46Types of Plate Motion
47Divergent Plates
- Spreading boundary
- zone of healed cracks or fissures
- examples
- Rift Valley of eastern Africa
- Mid-Atlantic ridge
- volcanoes, earthquakes
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50Heezen and Tharp
51Convergent Plates
- At convergent plate boundaries the response to
plate collision will vary with the type of crust
involved - There are three possible combinations
52Oceanic crust converging with oceanic crust
- subduction of one plate
- formation of an island arc
- volcanoes
- earthquakes
- example ? Japanese Islands
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54Oceanic crust converging with continental crust
- Formation of mountain ranges
- volcanoes
- earthquakes
- example ? Andes Mountains
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56Continental crust converging with continental
crust
- Overriding of one plate
- formation of mountain ranges
- earthquakes
- example ? Himalayas
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58Transform Boundaries
- side-slip boundary
- create fault zones
- earthquakes
- example ? San Andreas
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60Cross section by José F. Vigil from This Dynamic
Planet
6150 million years
62150 million years
63250 million years