Title: 5' Evidence for Plate Tectonics from Magnetics William Wilcock
15. Evidence for Plate Tectonics from
MagneticsWilliam Wilcock
OCEAN/ESS 410
Fall 2007
2Earths Magnetic Field
Magnetic north
north pole
Geographic north pole
The Earth is surrounded by a magnetic field that
is strongest near the poles. The magnetic poles
are displaced 11.5 from the geographic poles
about which the Earth rotates.
Geodynamo Theory The magnetic field is generated
in the liquid metal region of the outer core.
The outer core is extremely hot and flows at a
rate of several km/yr in large convection
currents. Convecting metal (Fe) creates
electrical currents, which in turn create the
magnetic field.
Magnetic south
south pole
Geographic south Pole
south pole
After Plummer
3Earths Magnetic Field
- The Earths magnetic field close to a dipole.
The radial (vertical) and tangential
(north-south) components a dipole field are given
by
- - Colatitude (0º at south pole 90º at equator
180º at north pole - ?0 - magnetic permeability of a vacuum 4? x 10-7
N A-2 - r - distance to the center of the earth (6.4 x
106 m at the Earths surface) - M - is the dipole moment which for the earth is
7.95 x 1022 A m2 - B - is the magnetic field. It units are Teslas 1
T 1 kg A-1 s-2. 1 nT 10-9 T 1 Gamma
4Earths Magnetic Field
From The way the Earth Works by P. J. Wyllie,
Wiley 1976
Field is twice as strong at the poles as at the
equator. About 60,000 ? at poles and 30,000 ? at
equator
5Measuring the Orientation of the Earths Magnetic
Field
D
I
D Declination (angle from geographic north) I
Inclination (dip angle)
From The way the Earth Works by P. J. Wyllie,
Wiley 1976
6Rock Magnetization
- Most minerals either repel or concentrate the
Earths magnetic field lines but do not
themselves become magnetized. - A few ferromagnetic minerals retain
magnetization. In the oceanic crust the most
important is magnetite (Fe3O4). Others include
ilmenite (FeTiO3), hematite (Fe2O3), and
pyrrhotite (FeS). - Forms of rock magnetism
- Thermo remnant magnetism - rock becomes
magnetized when it cools below the Currie
temperature (580C) in a magnetic field - Detrital remnant magnetism - sediments settle in
a magnetic field - Chemical remnant magnetism - Hematite
precipitates from a fluid circulating through a
rock.
7Paleomagnetism
- In the 1950s scientists learned how to measure
the remnant magnetism of rock samples. If one
can be sure that the rock has not been rotated by
tectonic processes then - The Declination of the remnant magnetism gives
the apparent direction of the North Pole at the
time the rock formed. - The Inclination gives the latitude of the rock
when it formed
8Geochronology
In the 1950s scientists also developed reliable
techniques of dating rocks using radioactive
isotopes The potassium isotope 40K decays to 40Ar
with a half-life of 1.3x109 years. As argon is a
gas any traces of that element will escape from
rocks when they are molten. Therefore, any argon
found in solid rocks must have been produced
since that molten state ended and the rock
solidified. The ratio of 40K to 40Ar can be
analyzed and a numerical date since the last
molten state can be assigned. By combining
paleomagnetic data from lava flows with the lava
ages, scientists were able to look at changes in
the apparent position of the Earths magnetic
pole with time.
9Polar Wander
- Position of the North pole relative to Europe and
Asia - Position of the North pole relative to Eurasia
and North America
10Opening of the Atlantic
http//museum.gov.ns.ca/fossils/geol/globe.htm
11Polar Wander and Continental Drift
K - 100 Myr Tru - 200 Myr Cu - 300 Myr - 500
Myr
- Polar wander for North America and Eurasia
- Polar wander corrected for the opening of the
Atlantic
12Evidence for Continental Drift - pre1960s
- Evidence
- Fit of the Atlantic Coastlines and Geology
- Paleoclimate
- Paleomagnetism
- Why wasnt this evidence accepted?
- Physical impossibility of drift (the mantle is
solid - it transmits seismic waves) - Difficulties of magnetic measurements - scatter,
reversals - Conservatism
13Polarity Reversals
The mechanism of polarity reversals is poorly
understood but they happen quickly (within no
more than 1000 years)
14Using volcanic rocks to develop a polarity
timescale
Most geoscientists were initially skeptical of
magnetic reversals but interest increased once it
was realized that they provided a means to date
events
15Polarity timescale from magnetized lava flows
The first timescales were obtained in the early
1960s
16History of Polarity Reversals
Cretaceous Quiet Zone
Jurassic Quiet Zone (a period of very rapid
reversals?)
17Measurements of the Earths Magnetic Field in the
Oceans
Measurements of the Earths magnetic field in the
oceans were developed in the 2nd World War as a
way to detect submarines (and later mines)
Measurements of the magnetic field were first
made with a fluxgate magnetometer. Such
instruments are still in use today
18Marine magnetic anomalies
The magnetization of the oceanic crust leads
leads to small variations in the intensity of the
magnetic field measured at the sea surface
19Marine Magnetic Anomalies
If we remove the background earths magnetic
field from the total magnetic intensity, we
obtain the magnetic anomaly
20Relationship Between Magnetic Anomalies and the
Polarity of the Crust
21Magnetic Stripes
Raff and Mason, 1961
22Vine and Matthews Magnetic Tape Recorder
N
Normally magnetized crust
dikes
oceanic crust
Magma
Reversely magnetized crust
N
N
Magma
N
N
Normally magnetized crust
N
Magma
23Vine and Matthews magnetic tape recorder
24Global bathymetry, showing ocean ridge system
25Location of the Eltanin-19 profile
Ship track across the East Pacific Rise which
obtained the magnetic anomaly profile shown in
the next slide. The measurements were made in the
1960s by the Columbia University research vessel
Eltanin.
26Eltanin 19 Aagnetic Anomaly Profile
The vertical scale for total intensity anomaly,
??, is shown in gammas. This is the same as
nanoTeslas or nT. The horizontal lines are at
zero anomaly the scale is thus minus 500 to plus
500 nT.
27Symmetry of the Eltanin 19 profile
ESE
WNW
WNW
ESE
measured profile of total intensity anomalies
mirror image of measured profile to show symmetry
28Polarity Reversals and Sedimentation Rates
29Polarity Reversals and Spreading Rate
30Age of the Seafloor