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Dynamic Earth

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This map from 1858 shows that Africa and South America can be fit together very well. ... nice match if the continents are fit together ... Growth of Continents ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Dynamic Earth


1
Dynamic Earth
  • Class 10
  • 9 February 2006

2
VideoContinental Drift Legacy of Fire
3
Any Questions?
4
Homework, Chapter 3
  • What is the association between tectonic plate
    boundaries and volcanism? Can the eruptive style
    and the chemical composition of the volcanic
    deposits or the rock type be correlated with the
    type of plate boundaries (convergent versus
    divergent)?

More than 90 of the world's volcanic activity
occurs at plate boundaries, and the type of
activity can be related to the type of boundary.
Free-flowing basaltic lavas appear at divergent
boundaries andesitic and rhyolitic lavas
generally erupt violently at convergent
boundaries.
5
Homework, Chapter 3
  • What kinds of forces result in earthquake-producin
    g faults occur at the three types of plate
    boundaries?

Earthquakes that occur along mid-oceanic ridges
result from tension those along transform
boundaries are produced by shearing and those
along convergent boundaries are caused by
compression.
6
Homework, Chapter 3
  • At what depth do earthquakes form at the three
    types of plate boundaries?

Most major earthquakes occur along plate
boundaries. Shallow-focus earthquakes tend to
occur at divergent and transform boundaries.
Deep-focus earthquakes occur at convergent
boundaries. Several shallow-focus earthquakes
occur each year at locations that are not
associated with plate boundaries.
7
Homework, Chapter 3
  • At a place along a boundary fault between the
    Nazca Plate and the South American Plate, the
    relative plate motion is 8 cm/year. The last
    great earthquake, in 1880, showed a fault slip or
    displacement of 12 m. When should local
    residence begin to worry about another great
    earthquake?

With a relative motion of 80 mm per year, the
total motion will be about 8 m in 100 years (or
80 m in 1000 years). This is not that close to
the 12 m of slip that occurred in 1880 and more
than 100 years have passed since that time. They
might be more concerned in 2025 when the total
motion may be nearer 12 m.
8
Exam Review
  • First Exam Tuesday February 14th
  • Exam will be fill in the blank and short answer
    questions
  • Questions will come from Lectures (including
    videos), reading and homework

9
Uniformitarianism
The present is the key to the past James
Hutton
  • Geologic processes that we see in operation today
    have worked much the same way over geologic time
    however, rates and intensity of processes may
    have changed

10
Relative vs Absolute Age
  • Relative Rock A is older (or younger) than
    rock B
  • Absolute The exact age of a rock (in years)
  • Usually geologists first establish relative ages
    then try to get absolute age dates
  • Know the difference between absolute and relative
    age and be able to give an example

11
Radiometric Dating
  • Use of radioactive decay to determine the age of
    a rock
  • First proposed 1896-1902

12
Radiometric Dating
  • Key principle Half Life time required for 1/2
    of the nuclei in a sample to decay

13
Radioactivity and Absolute Time
Decay of parent atoms
Growth of daughter atoms
14
Radiometric Dating
  • Shows that the earth is much older than people
    had previously suspected
  • Earth formed about 4.6 billion years ago
  • But, oldest rocks on earth are only about 4
    billion years old

15
Relative vs Absolute Age
  • Usually geologists first establish relative ages
    then try to get absolute age dates
  • Determining relative age relies on a number of
    geologic principles that were developed during
    the 17th to early 19th centuries

16
Principle of Superposition
Sedimentary rocks are deposited in a layer-cake
fashion
Layer 4
Layer 3
Layer 2
Layer 1
Each layer is older than the one above and
younger than the one below
17
Principle of Original Horizontality
  • Layers of sediment are deposited in a nearly
    horizontal position

18
Principle of Cross-cutting Relationships
  • Something (such as a dike or fault) that cuts
    across a layer must be younger than the layer

19
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20
Magnetostratigraphy
  • An alternate method for absolute age dating that
    works well with volcanic rocks

21
Earths Magnetic Field
22
Magnetization of Magnetite
23
The Geologic time scale
  • Divisions in the worldwide stratigraphic column
    based on variations in preserved fossils
  • Built using a combination of stratigraphic
    relationships, cross-cutting relationships, and
    absolute (isotopic) ages

24
The Geologic Column and Time Scale
25
The first 4 billion years of Earths history was
nearly devoid of life this time is known as the
Precambrian. Age of Earth 4.6 by Age of oldest
rocks 4.0 by
26
After the Precambrian, life began to develop very
rapidly. The Paleozoic lasted for 300
my. Dinosaurs dominated the Mesozoic, which
lasted for almost 200 my. After the dinosaurs
died out, mammals began to dominate in the
Cenozoic. These are the main subdivisions that
you should know.
27
Plate Tectonics
  • Fundamental Concept and Unifying Theory in Earth
    Science
  • Idea is gt 100 yrs old
  • Acceptance only within the past 30 yrs

28
Plate Tectonics
  • How and why did it come about?
  • During the 1800s geologists recognized many
    strange things that seemed to imply that the
    continents had once been together.

29
Early geologists sawsimilarities between the
coasts of Africa and South America.
30
This map from 1858 shows that Africa and South
America can be fit together very well.
31
If the northern continents are fit together, rock
units match very well.
32
Again, a nice match if the continents are fit
together
33

Why was Continental Drift not accepted?
  • Because it was difficult to under-stand how
    continents could move.
  • What did we learn to make us more willing to
    accept the idea that the continents have moved?

34
Mid-ocean Ridges
35
Drilling into the seafloor provided more evidence
supporting sea-floor spreading
  • Micropaleontology of sediments
  • Dating of the underlying lavas

Drilling ship Glomar Challenger
36
Age of Seafloor Crust
37
Formation of Magnetic Anomalies
38
Convection
Water boiling in a pan on your stove is an
example of convection
39
Convection within the Earth
Transports or drives plate motion Ridge push and
slab pull Gravity pushes plates away from
uplifted MOR and pulls the plates down into
Earths interior at subduction zones
40
Mosaic of Earths Plates
41
Rates of plate motion
  • Mostly obtained from magnetic anomalies on
    seafloor
  • Fast spreading 10 cm/year
  • Slow spreading 3 cm/year

42
What do we find right at the spreading axis?
Black smokerHydrogen sulfide
Giant tube worms and clams live onthe Black
smokers
43
How does it work?
  • Crabs live on dead worms, bacterial mats, and
    snow
  • A complete complex food chain is established

44
Were submarine hot springs the origin of life on
Earth?
Maybe?
45
Seismology
  • Study of the propagation of mechanical energy
    released by earthquakes.
  • When energy is released in this fashion, waves of
    motion (like the effect of a pebble tossed into a
    pond) are set up in the Earth.

46
Earthquakes
  • earthquake movement of rock bodies past other
  • fault locus of the earthquake movement
  • faults come at all scales, mm to separation of
    lithospheric plates (e.g., San Andreas).

47
Earthquake terms
  • focus site of initial rupture
  • epicenter point on surface above the focus

48
Seismic Waves Radiate from the Focus of an
Earthquake
Know what is needed to locate an epicenter
49
Elastic Rebound Theory
50
Elastic Rebound Theory
51
Elastic Rebound Theory
52
Elastic Rebound Theory
53
What Causes Earthquakes?
  • Sudden release of energy accumulated in deformed
    rocks
  • At shallow depths, rocks are brittle and deform
    elastically
  • When subjected to sufficient stress, they
    fracture forming a fault
  • When the fault is locked, stress builds
  • When the friction along the two sides of a fault
    is overcome, stress is released and an earthquake
    results

54
Distribution of earthquakes
  • Not random
  • Focused in linear zones

55

Most earthquakes occur at plate boundaries
56
Plates
  • Rigid Lithosphere with definite boundaries
  • Can have both oceanic and continental crust or
    just one kind.

57
Note that crust under continentsis thicker (45
km)than under oceans (8 km).
58
Types of plate boundaries
  • Divergent mid-ocean ridges
  • Convergent collision zones
    volcanic arcs
  • Strike-slip San Andreas Fault
    (California) Anatolian Fault
    (Turkey)

59
Divergent (Spreading)
Convergent (Subduction Zone)
Transform
Three Types of Plate Boundaries
60
Earthquakes Associated with Divergent and
Transform Margins
61
Earth-quakes in subduction zones
Benioff- Wadati Zone
62
Convection within the Earth
Lithosphere is created at spreading centers and
destroyed at Trenches (Subduction Zones) Know
mechanisms of plate transport
63
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64
Subduction zones
Ocean-continent convergence
Ocean-ocean convergence
Continent-continent collision
65
Growth of Continents
  • Addition of volcanic arc material to continent
    (e.g. Andes, as on the video).
  • Collisions Continents
  • Collisions Exotic terranes

66
Elastic Rebound Theory
Works for 1964 Alaska and 2004 Sumatra earthquakes
67
Tsunami
Series of very long-wavelength waves on the
ocean tidal wave Has nothing to do with tides
/
68
Generation of a Tsunami
69
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70
Tsunami waves
  • Very small out in the open ocean
  • Amplitude of only 1 meter
  • Very long wavelengths (up to 100 km)
  • Travel very fast (as much as 500 mph)

71
Tsunami waves
  • When waves reach shallow water, they "feel" the
    shallow bottom, just like ordinary waves, and
    they slow down (to 20-30 mph)
  • Because of the massive energy, this slowdown
    causes them to build up very high (up to 50-100
    m)

72
Runup
  • Maximum height above sea level reached by a
    tsunami when it reaches shore

73
Inundation
  • Horizontal distance from the normal water's edge
    reached by a tsunami

74
Big Island Field Trip
  • Need deposit of 50 on or before February 17th
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