Title: Historical Geology
1http//www.geophysics.rice.edu/plateboundary/ Wh
ere are the Earths tectonic plates and their
boundaries? What happens at plate
boundaries? How do Earth scientists classify
plate boundaries?
2Part 1.
- Identify the patterns of your area of expertise
volcanology, seismology, geography, geochronology
- AT PLATE BOUNDARIES - Describe what you observe do not interpret what
you see, just describe the patterns - Use descriptive terms Wide or narrow, straight
or curved, symmetric or not symmetric, deep or
shallow, ridge or valley, active or inactive - Identify 3-5 boundary types color each on your
transparency define in words
3Part 2.
- Bring together areas of expertise volcanology,
seismology, geography, geochronology - Correlate your data sets what collective
patterns emerge? - Identify 3-5 boundary types color each on a
master transparency define in words
4Part 3.
- Describe the different types of boundaries
- What patterns were related in the different data
sets?
5- What skills did you use in undertaking this
activity? - Historical use
- How might you use it in your classroom?
- What might you modify?
6Plate BoundariesWhere Stuff Happens
7Plate Tectonics Theory
- The upper mechanical layer of Earth (lithosphere)
is divided into rigid plates that move away,
toward, and along each other - Most (!) geologic action occurs at plate
boundaries in DISTINCT patterns
8Compositional Crust - 2 Mantle Core
Physical / Mechanical Lithosphere Asthenosphere Me
sosphere
9Crust(Compositional)
- Two types of crust
- Continental
- 30 of crust
- Granites and Diorites - rich in silicates and
feldspars (lighter materials) - 40 Km thick
- Oldest is 3.8 billion years (90 solar system
age missing 700 m.y.) - 4.4 billion year old zircons in Western Australia
- Oceanic crust
- Basalt - Mg, Fe (heavier materials - relatively)
- 5-10 Km thick
- 200 Ma oldest 100 Ma average
- Ophiolites
10Lithosphere / Asthenosphere(Mechanical)
- Lithosphere
- PLATES in Plate Tectonics
- Upper 200 km
- Crust and upper mantle
- Rigid
- Asthenosphere
- 200 km to 700 Km
- Upper mantle
- Hi temperatures / high pressure little strength
ductile / plastic - NOT A LIQUID! - Plates moving on this
- Magma generation
- Mesosphere
- Also hot strong due to pressure
113 Basic Boundary Interactions 5 to 6 Basic
Boundary Types
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161. Divergent Boundaries
- Volcanic activity in fissures, some volcanos
- Shallow earthquakes, on plate boundary
- Young crust, symmetrical around boundary
- Ridge
- Rocks?
Mid- Atlantic Ridge
North American Plate
Eurasian Plate
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18Nazca Plate
South American Plate
Antarctic Plate
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20Andes Mountains
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222. Convergent Boundaries (a) Ocean-continent
convergence
- Volcanos tight, parallel boundary, landward
- Shallow to deep earthquakes
- Age varies on one side of the boundary not
symmetrical - Trench, mountain chain
- Rocks?
Andes Mountains
Peru-Chile Trench
South American Plate
Nazca Plate
23Foreshadowing Many on Earth Relatively small
but mighty
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282. Convergent Boundaries (b) Ocean-ocean
convergence
- Volcanos tightly spaced, parallel boundary, arc
- Shallow to deep earthquakes
- Age varies on one side of the boundary not
symmetrical - Trench, volcanic island chain
- Rocks?
Mariana Islands
Marianas Trench
Philippine Plate
Pacific Plate
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30Eurasian Plate
Indian Plate
31Himalaya Mountains
32Tibetan Plateau
Mt. Everest
Himalayan Mtns.
332. Convergent Boundaries (c) Continent-continent
convergence
- Volcanos rare, dispersed
- Shallow (to medium) dispersed earthquakes
- No age data
- High mountain chain
- Rocks?
Himalayan Mountains
Tibetan Plateau
Indian-Australian Plate
Eurasian Plate
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373. Transform-Fault Boundaries
- Volcanos dispersed, most on one side
- Earthquakes complex, shallow (to medium) on both
sides - Age data not symmetrical, one side of boundary
- Complex topography, wide mountains and basins
- Rocks?
Pacific Plate
North American Plate
38Plate Tectonics
- The upper mechanical layer of Earth (lithosphere)
is divided into rigid plates that move away,
toward, and along each other - Most (!) geologic action occurs at plate
boundaries in DISTINCT patterns
39Whats Driving Plate Tectonics on Earth?
40Mantle
- 85 volume of Earth
- Density - 3.3 - 5.5 g/cm3
- Probably material such as Peridotite (lots of
heavy olivine - Fe, Mg) - Solid high pressure ? slow, creeping, viscous
movement - convection - Samples from kimberlites, xenoliths in volcanic
eruptions, basalt composition lab experiments
41Core
- 15 of Earths volume / half of diameter of
Earth - Outer core
- Molten
- Density of pure iron or nickel/iron 2x density
of mantle - Convection Earths magnetic field
- Inner core
- Solid (very hot, but higher pressure than outer
core) - Density of nickel/iron (13 g/cm3)
- Conducts heat - cooling
- Size of Moon (70 of Moon)
42Earths Magnetic Field
- Magnetic dipole a bar magnet tilted 11 degrees
- Generated by eddies in the conductive liquid of
the outer core currents create magnetic fields - Changes over time north magnetic pole wanders,
north and south reverse - Rather important to life really important to
geology
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44Whats Driving Plate Tectonics on Earth?
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46How Did Earth (and other planets) Get Layers?