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History of Plate Tectonics

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History of Plate Tectonics 1490 Leonardo Da Vinci Noticed on early charts that the continents would fit together like a jigsaw puzzle 1620 - Francis Bacon Also ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: History of Plate Tectonics


1
History of Plate Tectonics
2
1490 Leonardo Da Vinci
  • Noticed on early charts that the continents would
    fit together like a jigsaw puzzle

3
1620 - Francis Bacon
  • Also noticed the fit of the continents

4
1885 Edward Suess
  • Thought that there was once a single large land
    mass.

Source www.usgs.gov
5
1912 Alfred Wegener
  • German meteorologist and polar explorer
  • Proposed the continental drift theory
  • He suggested that all earths land had once been
    joined into a single supercontinent called
    Pangaea.
  • Wegener thought Pangaea had broken into pieces
    about 200 million years ago.

6
1912-1934
  • Most established geologists dismissed Wegeners
    ideas.

7
1935 Kiyoo Wadati
  • Japanese Scientist
  • Speculated that earthquakes and volcanoes near
    Japan might be associated with continental drift

8
1940 Hugo Benioff
  • Plotted the locations of deep earthquakes at the
    edges of the Pacific ocean.
  • Pacific Ring of Fire A circle of violent
    geological activity surrounding much of the
    Pacific Ocean. Found patterns of earthquakes and
    volcanoes

9
1960 Harry Hess Robert Dietz
  • Harry Hess Princeton
  • Robert Dietz Scripps
  • Proposed seafloor spreading and the fit of the
    continents

10
1965 John Tuzo Wilson
  • Toronto
  • Ideas of continental drift and seafloor spreading
    were integrated into the overriding concept of
    plate tectonics.
  • In this theory, Earths outer layer consists of
    about a dozen separate major lithospheric plates
    floating on the asthenosphere.

11
Plate Movement
  • Plate movement is slow in human terms, averaging
    about 5 centimeters per year.
  • Plates interact at
  • Convergent Boundaries
  • Divergent Boundaries
  • Transform Boundaries

12
Plate Boundary Plate Movement Seafloor Events Observed Example Location




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