Title: Plate Tectonics
1Chapter 9
2Earths Interior Structure
3- Continental Drift hypothesis
- Alfred Wegener
- Supercontinent Pangaea began to break apart 200
million years ago - Continents drifted to where they are today
4Breakup of Pangaea
5"Pangea Ultima" is hypothesized to form 250
million years in the Future
6Continental Drift
7Evidence of Continental Drift
- Continental Puzzle
- Fossil
- Geological
- Climate
8Continental Puzzle
Figure 1 A Curious Fit This map shows the best
fit of South America and Africa at a depth of
about 900 meters. The areas where continents
overlap appear in brown. Inferring Why are there
areas of overlap?
9Fossil
10Identical fossil remains of Mesosaurus, a small,
extinct land reptile that lived 270 million years
ago, has been found in both eastern South America
and western Africa. These reptiles could not
have swum across the Atlantic Ocean.
11Geological
Matching Mountain Ranges
12Geological
13Climate
Ancient Glaciers grooves (shown by arrows) in
present day structures)
14Gondwana Reconstruction of Southern hemisphere
super continent. Notice how ring of glaciers
match the patterns of a polar ice
15Glacier Evidence
16- Theory of Plate Tectonics
- Earths crust consists of a number of rigid, but
moving pieces called plates - -plates are not defined by continental boundaries
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18Lithosphere
- The outer shell of the Earth
- Made of crust and upper mantle
- Rigid but broken into plates that move with
respect to one another
19Types of Earths Crust
- Oceanic Crust
- Made up of material on the ocean floor
- Continental Crust
- Made up of continental landmasses
20Asthenosphere
- Layer within mantle that lithospheric plates rest
on - Molten
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22- Convection Currents
- movement of heat through the asthenosphere
- -causes plates to move
23Where convection currents are rising
- New material moves to Earths surface
- Pushes older material aside
- Lithospheric plates move apart
24Where cooler, denser currents are sinking
- Lithospheric plates are pulled together!
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26Plate Boundaries
- Place where one plate is moving relative to
another plate
27Kinds of Plate Boundaries
28Divergent boundaries
- lithospheric plates are moving apart
- Form mid-ocean ridges which have deep valleys
along entire length called rift valleys - Seafloor spreading As plates move apart, molten
rock rises and fills space between plates cools
and hardens as new ocean floor
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31 continental rift when a divergent boundary
occurs in a continental landmass creates rift
valley
Continental rift near Krafla, Iceland
32East African Rift Valley
33Transform Fault Boundaries
- Lithospheric plates are sliding past one another
- Transform fault break or crack in the Earths
crust along which movements have occurred
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35Example San Andreas Fault
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37Convergent Boundaries
- Lithospheric plates come together
- There are 3 types.
38Oceanic-Continental Convergence
- oceanic plate and continental plate collide
SUBDUCTION! - Ocean plate slides under continental plate
WHY!?! - Forms deep-ocean trenches and continental
volcanic arcs
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41Continental - Continental Convergence
- Two continental plates collide
- Become crumpled and uplifted
- Form mountain ranges
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45Collision of India and Asia
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47OCEANIC-OCEANIC Convergence
- One plate is subducted, forms trench
- Subducted plate melts
- Molten rock rises to surface along trench
- Forms island chain called an ISLAND ARC
(VOLCANOES)
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49Evidence of Plate Tectonics
- Paleomagnetism
- Seafloor Spreading
- Earthquake Patterns
- Ocean Drilling
- Hot Spots
50? Paleomagnetism rocks formed millions of years
ago show the location of the magnetic poles at
the time of their formation.
- Normal polaritywhen rocks show the same
magnetism as the present magnetism field
- Reverse polaritywhen rocks show the opposite
magnetism as the present magnetism field
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52Paleomagnetism Preserved in Lava Flows
53Polarity of the Ocean Crust
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56Ocean Drilling
- Confirm seafloor spreading
- Compare age of sediment to distance from
mid-ocean ridge
57Hot Spots
- Rising plume of mantle pushed towards surface
- Melts and creates a volcanic area
- NOT along plate boundary
- Ex. Hawaiian Islands
58Lets go to this website and review!
CLICK HEREgtgtgt
http//www.pbs.org/wgbh/aso/tryit/tectonics/
Click on Plate Tectonics Activity (with a yellow
arrow) when you get there!
59Here it is all in one big picture
Can you pick out the types of Plate Boundaries?
60Were you right?