Title: The tectonic system
1The tectonic system
- Internal structure of Earth
- Plates and plate boundaries
- Evidence for movement of continents
- The Earths magnetism
- Earthquakes and the Earths interior
- Direct measurement of plate motion
2A. Internal structure of the Earth
- By physical properties
- By chemical composition
3Divisions of the Earth by physical properties
- Atmosphere
- Hydrosphere
- Lithosphere
- Asthenosphere
- Mesosphere
- Outer core
- Inner core
100 km
250 km
2900 km
- Outer core - liquid, metallic
5200 km
- Inner core - solid, metallic
6370 km
4Divisions of the Earth by chemical composition
- Atmosphere
- Hydrosphere
- Crust
- Mantle
- Core
5-70 km
- Mantle (oxygen, silicon, magnesium, iron)
2900 km
6370 km
5Divisions of the Earth by chemical composition
- Continental crust less dense rock with more
silicon, aluminum - Oceanic crust more dense rock with more iron,
magnesium
6B. Plates and plate boundaries
- Lithosphere is divided into plates.
- Plates are in relative motion at speeds of a few
cm per year - There are 3 types of plate boundary
- Spreading centres
- Subduction zones
- Transform faults
7Plates and plate boundaries
81. Spreading centres
91. Spreading centres
- Pillow lavas from the ocean floor
101. Spreading centres
111. Spreading centres
- Cross-section of a spreading centre
121. Spreading centres summary
- Occur beneath the oceans
- Marked by a mid-ocean ridge several thousand km
wide, rising 2 or 3 km above surrounding ocean
floor - Site of submarine volcanoes and earthquake
activity - New lithosphere formed by ocean-floor spreading
- Plates move apart (a few centimetres per year)
132. Subduction zones
- Deep trenches around the Pacific Ocean
PS 1.12
142. Subduction zones
- Subduction zone volcanoes (Mount St. Helens -
before)
152. Subduction zones
- Subduction zone volcanoes (Mount St. Helens
after)
162. Subduction zones
- Where subduction occurs close to a continental
margin, there is often a mountain belt (orogen) - Rocks within orogen are crumpled (deformed)
172. Subduction zones summary
- Subduction zone or convergent plate boundary
- Deep ocean trench (up to 11 km deep)
- Benioff zone of deep earthquakes
- Melting in mantle produces magma
- Volcanic arc
- One plate moves under another (a few centimetres
per year) - Orogens (mountain belts) form where subduction
zones affect continental crust
183. Transform faults
- Transform faults (transcurrent plate boundaries)
193. Transform faults
203. Transform faults
- Dextral or right-lateral transform fault
PS 1.17
213. Transform faults
- Right-lateral transform fault
Asthenosphere
223. Transform faults
- Left-lateral transform fault
Asthenosphere
233. Transform faults
- Many small transform faults occur along the
mid-ocean ridges - Larger transform faults cut continental crust
- Many shallow earthquakes
24C. Evidence for moving continents
- Common sense tells us the Earth is solid
- Until 1960 most scientists also believed
continents remained fixed - Lines of evidence supporting moving plates
- Match of geologic structures
- Fossils
- Glaciation and climate
- Paleomagnetism
- Match of continent outlines
- Seismicity
- Direct measurement of plate movement by GPS
251. Match of continent outlines
Some continents show 'jig-saw' fit
262. Match of rock units between continents
Very similar rock units are now separated by
oceans
273. Fossil evidence
Fossils of very similar land animals and plants
are now separated by oceans
284. Glaciation and climate
- Locations of ice sheets at 350-300 Ma - no sense
on modern map - Can be explained if "Gondwanaland" is reassembled
29D. Paleomagnetism
- Before 60's most geophysicists claimed that Earth
was too rigid to allow continental drift. - But first measurements of movement came
geophysics studies of Earth's magnetism.
- The Earth's magnetic field
- Remanent magnetization
- Magnetic reversals and anomalies on the ocean
floor
301. Earth's magnetic field
- Earth behaves approximately as if there is a bar
magnet in the core
311. Earth's magnetic field
- Field at any place has an inclination (steepness)
and a declination (direction) - Inclination indicates distance from pole
- Declination indicates direction to pole
Inclination angle
322. Remanent magnetism
- Some ancient rocks were (weakly) magnetized when
formed - "Remanent magnetism" - "Fossil compass needles"
- If age of rocks is known, remanent magnetism
indicates the ancient location of the pole
Ma in the diagrams signifies Million years
before present
500 Ma
332. Remanent magnetism
- Some ancient rocks were (weakly) magnetized when
formed - "Remanent magnetism" - "Fossil compass needles"
- If age of rocks is known, remanent magnetism
indicates the ancient location of the pole - Pole appears to have wandered through time
Ma in the diagrams signifies Million years
before present
342. Remanent magnetism
- Some ancient rocks were (weakly) magnetized when
formed - "Remanent magnetism" - "Fossil compass needles"
- If age of rocks is known, remanent magnetism
indicates the ancient location of the pole - Pole appears to have wandered through time
- Apparent polar wander path (APWP)
- Hence either the pole moved or the continent moved
Ma in the diagrams signifies Million years
before present
352. Remanent magnetism
Ma in the diagrams signifies Million years
before present
- Different continents show different APWPs
- Hence it must be the continents that moved
North America
Europe
362. Remanent magnetism
- Other changes are recorded by remanent magnetism
- N. and S. magnetic poles appear to have
"flipped' through time
Volcano showing magnetized lava flows
372. Remanent magnetism
- N. and S. magnetic poles appear to have
"flipped' through time
Gary A Glatzmaier University of California,
Santa Cruz www.es.ucsc.edu/glatz
382. Remanent magnetism
- Time scale of magnetic reversals
393. Reversals and ocean-floor anomalies
- Magnetic anomaly
- field slightly stronger or weaker than normal
- Surveys in the oceans show
- Central positive anomaly
- Symmetric pattern
403. Reversals and ocean-floor anomalies
- Vine-Matthews hypothesis
- Magnetic anomalies result from remanent magnetism
acquired during spreading of ocean-floor while
magnetic reversals occurred.
413. Reversals and ocean-floor anomalies
- Match with reversal history
- Measure rates
- Map age of ocean floor
- New ocean floor is found along mid-ocean ridges
42E. Earthquakes and seismicity
- Intensity and magnitude
- Seismic waves
- Origin of earthquakes
- Locating earthquakes
- Earthquakes at plate boundaries
- Interior of the Earth
431. Intensity and magnitude
PS 18.18
- Effect of earthquake in Japan
441. Intensity and magnitude
Ancient seismic detector
- Seismographs seismometers
Seismometer
451. Intensity and magnitude
- Intensity Strength of ground shaking at a point.
- Intensity depends on many factors e.g. distance
from the focus.
461. Intensity and magnitude
- Magnitude a measure of total energy released
- Charles Richter
- Ground movement at standardized distance
- Log scale
- Modern scale based on Richter's
- Each step on scale multiplies energy by v1000.
- E.g., M 8 releases 1000 times more energy than M
6.
471. Intensity and magnitude
PS 18.11
481. Intensity and magnitude
- http//wwwneic.cr.usgs.gov/neis/bulletin/
492. Seismic waves
- Body waves and surface waves
Epicentre
502. Seismic waves
- Body waves Primary or P-waves
- 3-7 km/s in the crust
- Similar to sound waves
- Compression and expansion ('dilation')
- Vibration direction parallel to propagation
- Pass through solid, liquid or gas.
512. Seismic waves
- Body waves Secondary or S-waves
- 1.5- 5 km/s in the crust
- Shear waves
- Vibration direction perpendicular to propagation
- Solids only
522. Seismic waves
- Surface waves on land
- Surface waves form when body waves reach the
surface - Slower but larger than body waves
- Cause most damage
Rayleigh waves
Love waves
532. Seismic waves
- Tsunami surface waves on ocean
- Low on open ocean ( 1 m)
- 600 km/hr
- In shallow water, slow down, get higher (gt10 m)
- Devastate coastal communities
Effect of 1929 tsunami on Burin Peninsula,
Newfoundland
543. Origin of earthquakes
- Most earthquakes originate lt 70 km deep.
- Result from
- Elastic strain
- Brittle fracture (or brittle failure).
- These processes occur in cold rocks, typically
near Earth's surface
553. Origin of earthquakes
564. Locating earthquakes
- Distance of focus is found from interval between
P and S arrival
574. Locating earthquakes
- Example
- Station A 1500 km
- Station B 5600 km
- Station C 8600 km
B
C
A
585. Earthquakes at plate boundaries
- Epicentre is point on Earths surface directly
above focus - Map of epicentres Earthquakes are concentrated
at plate boundaries
595. Earthquakes at plate boundaries
- All deep (gt 100 km) events are at subduction
zones. - Why?
- Only cold rocks display brittle fracture
- In Benioff zone cold rocks are found deep.
606. Interior of the Earth
- Body waves tell us about Earth's interior
- Reflection
- Refraction
616. Interior of the Earth
- S-waves cannot pass through liquid
626. Interior of the Earth
Focus
- Evidence for core
- P waves from major earthquake
142
636. Interior of the Earth
Focus
- Evidence for core
- S waves from major earthquake
646. Interior of the Earth
- S-waves are blocked by liquid core
656. Interior of the Earth
- P-waves are refracted by core
- Acts as lens
66Seismicity summary
- Earthquakes are a major hazard when located close
to population centres - Intensity amount of shaking at a point
- Magnitude total energy released at focus
- Seismic waves
- Surface waves
- L-waves, R-waves, Tsunami waves
- Body waves
- P-waves, S-waves
- Arrivals of P and S waves at locations distant
from the epicentre can be used - To locate earthquakes
- To recognize plate boundaries
- To identify major features of Earths interior
67F. Direct measurement of plate movement
- Global Positioning System (GPS) is a network of
satellites, used to provide very accurate
locations on Earths surface - By reoccupying sites over a period of years it is
possible to measure plate movement directly
http//www.unavco.org/pubs_reports/brochures/1998_
UNAVCO/1998_UNAVCO.html
68F. Direct measurement of plate movement
- Global Positioning System (GPS) is a network of
satellites, used to provide very accurate
locations on Earths surface - By reoccupying sites over a period of years it is
possible to measure plate movement directly
http//www.unavco.org/pubs_reports/brochures/1998_
UNAVCO/1998_UNAVCO.html
69F. Direct measurement of plate movement
- Global Positioning System (GPS) is a network of
satellites, used to provide very accurate
locations on Earths surface - By reoccupying sites over a period of years it is
possible to measure plate movement directly
http//www.unavco.org/pubs_reports/brochures/1998_
UNAVCO/1998_UNAVCO.html