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Title: Chapter 2 Quiz


1
  • Chapter 2 Quiz
  • 1. During the formation of Earth, the
    differentiation (separation) of material based on
    mass/unit volume is called
  • a. Convection b. Rotation c. Density
    stratification d. Accretion
  • 2. There is evidence that water on the surface of
    Earth existed _____ bya.
  • a. 5.1 b. 1.4 c. 6.2 d. 3.9
  • 3. What are the two known sources of ocean water?
    Mantle outgassing, meteorites
  • 4. The formation of the universe (Big Bang)
    occurred _____ bya.
  • a. 2 b. 14 c. 4.6 d. 3.9
  • 5. Oxygen (O2) was present in the early
    atmosphere approximately 4.6 bya. T/F

2
Chapter 3 Earth Structure
  • Geologic Structure of Earth - The interior of
  • the Earth is layered.
  • Concentric layers crust, mantle, liquid outer
    core and solid inner core.
  • Evidence (indirect) for this structure comes from
    studies of Earths dimensions, density, rotation,
    gravity, magnetic field, behavior of seismic
    waves and meteorites.

3
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Density is a key concept for understanding the
structure of Earth differences in density lead
to stratification (layers). Density measures
the mass per unit volume of a substance. Densit
y _Mass_ Volume Density is
expressed as grams per cubic centimeter. Water
has a density of 1 g/cm3 Granite Rock is about
2.7 times more dense
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Evidence that supports the idea that Earth has
layers comes from the way seismic waves behave as
they encounter different material inside Earth
and as the material is either liquid or solid
8
  • Earths layers chemical composition and
    physical properties
  • Core 3500 km thick, average density 13 g/cm3,
    30 of
  • Earths mass and 16 of its volume
  • Inner core radius of 1200 km, primarily Fe
    Ni
  • _at_Temp of 4000-5500C, solid, av. den. 16 g/cm3
  • Outer core 2260 km thick, Temp of 3200C,
  • liquid (partially melted), viscous, less dense
  • Mantle 70 Earths mass 80 of its volume,
    2866 km
  • thick, _at_ Temp of 100-3200C, Mg-Fe silicates,
    solid but
  • can flow, average density 4.5 g/cm3
  • Note inner core may be rotating faster than
    mantle can be hotter than the Suns surface
    (more than 6, 500 deg C!!)
  • Earths outer layer is the Crust cool, rigid,
    thin surface
  • layer rocks on crust side are chemically
    different than
  • rocks on mantle side separation is called
    Mohorovicic
  • discontinuity

9
Earths Crust cold, brittle
  • thin layer, 0.4 of Earths mass and 1 of its
    volume
  • Continental Crust
  • Primarily granitic type rock (Na, K, Al, SiO2)
  • 40 km thick on average
  • Relatively light, 2.7 g/cm3
  • Oceanic Crust
  • Primarily basaltic (Fe, Mg, Ca, low SiO2)
  • 7 km thick
  • Relatively dense, 2.9 g/cm3
  • cool, solid crust and upper (rigid) mantle
    float
  • and move over hotter, deformable lower mantle

10
Lithosphere Asthenosphere More detailed
description of Earths layered structure
according to mechanical behavior of rocks, which
ranges from very rigid to deformable
1. lithosphere rigid surface shell that includes
upper mantle and crust (here is where plate
tectonics work), cool layer 2. asthenosphere
layer below lithosphere, part of the mantle, weak
and deformable (ductile, deforms as plates move),
partial melting of material happens here, hotter
layer
(100 200 km)
(200 400 km)
11
Summary Table 1 Physical Properties
12
Summary Table 2 Composition
13
Isostasy A term used to refer to the state of
gravitational equilibrium between the lithosphere
and the asthenosphere, which makes the plates
(seem like) float at an elevation that depends
on their thickness and density areas of Earths
crust get to this equilibrium after rising and
subsiding until their masses are in balance.
Less dense continental blocks float on the
denser mantle
14
Buoyancy a 10 kg object can float if it lands on
a liquid (water) body large enough that the
object can displace a volume of liquid that
weighs 10 kg and there is still more liquid left
displaced water
Buoyancy depends on the mass and density of the
object and of the liquid in which object
floats Icebergs 10 of volume above water, 90
of volume below surface
15
Isostatic equilibrium continental mountains
float high above sea level because the
lithosphere sinks slowly into the deformable
asthenosphere until it has displaced a volume of
asthenosphere equal to the mass of the mountains
mass. Very slow process if it goes too fast for
some reason then the rock will crack (fracture)
and a fault occurs, and cause earthquakes
16
Chapter 3 on to Plate Tectonics
  • Movement of the Continents Continental Drift
  • Continents had once been together advanced by
  • Alfred Wegener during the 1920s
  • Ultimately rejected Until new technology
  • provided evidence to support his ideas.
  • Seismographs revealed a pattern of volcanoes and
  • earthquakes.
  • Radiometric dating of rocks revealed a
    surprisingly young
  • oceanic crust.
  • Echo sounders revealed the shape of the
    Mid-Atlantic
  • Ridge

17
Evidence for Seafloor Spreading
  • Earthquake epicenters
  • Heat flow
  • Ocean Sediments
  • Radiometric dating of rocks of ocean and
    continental crust
  • Magnetism

18

Age of Earth was not easily determined, nor
accepted as that old!
The Fit between the Edges of Continents Suggested
That They Might Have Drifted The fit (first
noticed by Leonardo da Vinci) of all the
continents around the Atlantic at a water depth
of about 137 meters (450 feet), as calculated in
the 1960s. This well-known graphic was a very
effective kick-off to the tectonic revolution.
19
  • Synthesis of Continental Drift and Seafloor
    Spreading --gt Theory of Plate Tectonics
  • Main points of theory (Wilson, 1965)
  • Earths outer layer is divided into lithospheric
    plate
  • Earths plates float on the asthenosphere
  • Plate movement is powered by convection currents
    in the
  • asthenosphere seafloor spreading, and the
    downward
  • pull of a descending plates leading edge.
  • Hess and Dietz in 1960 proposed a model to
    explain features of ocean floor and of
    continental motion powered by heat ? mantle
    convection

20

heat transfer conduction (contact)
convection (motion of an agent,
currents)
tectonic plate is the cool surface, the result of
a convection current rising from the (hot) upper
mantle (spreading center) as it cools it
becomes denser so gravity pulls it down
(subduction zone)
heated water rises, cools at the surface and
falls around the containers edge
21
Model of Mantle Convection
22

Divergent plate boundary marked by mid-ocean
ridge (spreading center)
Convergent plate boundary marked by trench
Transform fault
Oceanic lithosphere
Subduction fueling volcanoes
Asthenosphere
Asia
Africa
Descending plate pulled down by gravity
Mantle upwelling
Superplume
Philippine Trench
Outer core
Mariana Trench
Mantle
Mid-Atlantic Ridge
Inner core
Rapid convection at hot spots
Hot
Cold
Possible convection cells
South America
PeruChile Trench
Hawaii
East Pacific Rise
23
Figure 2.13
Age of sea floor vs. distance from ridge crest
24
Age and thickness of sea floor sediment
25
Chapter 3 Plate Tectonics
  • Plate Tectonics a unified model with ideas from
    continental drift and sea floor spreading
  • Lithosphere broken into plates
  • Plates move
  • Boundaries between plates are sites of geologic
    activity

26
Earthquake Epicenters
Shallow epicenters crustal movement (less than
100 km)
Mid-deep epicenters subduction (greater than 100
km)
27
Plates ? Rigid Slabs of Rock
Seven major plates Pacific, African, Eurasian,
North American, Antarctic, South American,
Australian Minor plates Nazca, Indian,
Arabian, Philippine, Caribbean, Cocos, Scotia,
Juan de Fuca
28
Plate boundaries in action (1) plates move
apart, (2) plates move toward each other, (3)
plates move past each other
29
  • As plates float on the deformable
    aesthenosphere, they interact among each other.
    The result of these interactions is the existence
    of 3 types of boundaries
  • Divergent plates move away from each other,
    examples
  • Divergent oceanic crust
  • the Mid-Atlantic
    Ridge
  • Divergent continental crust
  • the Rift Valley of East Africa
  • (b) Convergent plates move toward each other.
  • Three possible combinations continent-ocean,
    ocean-ocean, continent-continent
  • (c) Transform
  • neither (a) nor (b), plates slide
  • past one another transform faults.
  • Example San Andreas fault

30
Fracture Zones-Transform faults
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Oceans are created along divergent boundaries
  • Recall that seafloor spreading was an idea
    proposed in 1960 to explain the features of the
    ocean floor. It explained the development of the
    seafloor at the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. Convection
    currents in the mantle were proposed as the force
    that caused the ocean to grow and the continents
    to move.
  • The breakdown of Pangea showing spreading centers
    and mid-ocean ridges

2 kinds of plate divergences
33
Mid Atlantic Ridge South Indian Ridge
34
Modern divergenceEast African Rift System
35
East African Rift System
36
Island Arcs Form, Continents Collide, and Crust
Recycles at Convergent Plate Boundaries
  • Convergent Plate Boundaries - Regions where
    plates are pushing together can be further
    classified as
  • Oceanic crust toward continental crust - the west
    coast of South America.
  • Oceanic crust toward oceanic crust - occurring in
    the northern Pacific.
  • Continental crust toward continental crust one
    example is the Himalayas.

3 kinds of plate convergences
37
Convergent Plate Boundaries
  • Continent Ocean
  • Ocean Ocean
  • Continent Continent

38
Continent Ocean West Coast of South America
39
  • Continent Ocean
  • Mount St. Helens

40
Island Arcs Form, Continents Collide, and Crust
Recycles at Convergent Plate Boundaries
The formation of an island arc along a trench as
two oceanic plates converge. The volcanic islands
form as masses of magma reach the seafloor. The
Japanese islands were formed in this way.
41
Convergent Plate Boundaries Ocean-Ocean Aleutian
Islands, Alaska
42
Ocean Ocean Caribbean Islands
43
Many discoveries contribute to the theory of
plate tectonics but the most compelling evidence
comes from The Earths Magnetic Field
  • Rocks record the direction of magnetic field
    (Magnetite)
  • Magnetic field direction changes through geologic
    time polar reversals recorded in rocks
  • 560 C rock solidifies (Curie Point)
  • Captures magnetic signature
  • Particles of Magnetite align with the direction
    of Earths magnetic field at the time of rock
    formation

44
Magnetites occur naturally in basaltic magma and
act as compass needles
45
The patterns of paleomagnetism support plate
tectonic theory. The molten rocks at the
spreading center take on the polarity of the
planet while they are cooling. When Earths
polarity reverses, the polarity of newly formed
rock changes. (a) When scientists conducted a
magnetic survey of a spreading center, the
Mid-Atlantic Ridge, they found bands of weaker
and stronger magnetic fields frozen in the rocks.
(b) The molten rocks forming at the spreading
center take on the polarity of the planet when
they are cooling and then move slowly in both
directions from the center. When Earths magnetic
field reverses, the polarity of new-formed rocks
changes, creating symmetrical bands of opposite
polarity
46
Plate Movement above Mantle Plumes and Hot Spots
Provides Evidence of Plate Tectonics
(See also Figure 3.33 on page 89 of textbook)
Formation of a volcanic island chain as an
oceanic plate moves over a stationary mantle
plume and hot spot. In this example, showing the
formation of the Hawaiian Islands, Loihi is such
a newly forming island.
47
  • Chapter 3 Summary
  • Keep in mind that the important points in this
    chapter are
  • Internal Layers inner core, outer core, mantle,
    crust (continental and oceanic).
  • P and S waves used to study Earths layered
    structure
  • Lithosphere and Asthenosphere defined according
    to mechanical behavior of rocks
  • Isostasy pressure balance between overlying
    crust and astheosphere deformation
  • Continental drift plates/continents moving
    about surface deduced from definitive evidence
    ridges, rise, trench system, sea-floor spreading,
    spreading centers, subduction zones
  • Evidence of crustal motion earthquakes
    epicenter, heat flow, radiometric dating,
    magnetism
  • Plate Tectonics 7-8 major plates, 3 types of
    plate boundaries
  • Convergent Plate Boundaries ocean-continent,
    ocean-ocean, continent-continent

48
Chapter 3 Key Concepts Some seismic
wavesenergy associated with earthquakescan pass
through Earth. Analysis of how these waves are
changed, and the time required for their passage,
has told researchers much about conditions inside
Earth. Earth is composed of concentric spherical
layers, with the least dense layer on the outside
and the most dense as the core. The lithosphere,
the outermost solid shell that includes the
crust, floats on the hot, deformable
asthenosphere. The mantle is the largest of the
layers. Large regions of Earths continents are
held above sea level by isostatic equilibrium, a
process analogous to a ship floating in
water. Plate motion is driven by slow convection
(heat-generated) currents flowing in the mantle.
Most of the heat that drives the plates is
generated by the decay of radioactive elements
within Earth.
49
Chapter 3 Key Concepts Plate tectonics theory
suggests that Earths surface is not a static
arrangement of continents and ocean, but a
dynamic mosaic of jostling segments called
lithospheric plates. The plates have collided,
moved apart, and slipped past one another since
Earths crust first solidified. The confirmation
of plate tectonics rests on diverse scientific
studies from many disciplines. Among the most
convincing is the study of paleomagnetism, the
orientation of Earths magnetic field frozen into
rock as it solidifies. Most of the
large-scale features seen at Earths surface may
be explained by the interactions of plate
tectonics. Plate tectonics also explains why our
ancient planet has surprisingly young seafloors,
the oldest of which is only as old as the
dinosaurs that is, about 1/23 of the age of
Earth.
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