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Title: Plate Tectonics: A Scientific Theory Unfolds Chapter 5


1
Plate Tectonics A Scientific Theory
UnfoldsChapter 5
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Continental Drift An idea before its time
  • Before the 1960s geologists believed the ocean
    basins and continents were fixed
  • During the 1600s the jigsaw puzzle idea came
    about, but the idea was never pushed
  • Edward Suess (1831-1914) conceived the first idea
    of a large land mass
  • Alfred Wegener (1880-1930) followed with the same
    idea and had followers

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Continental Drift An idea before its time
  • Alfred Wegener
  • First proposed his continental drift hypothesis
    in 1915- breakup of sea ice
  • Published The Origin of Continents and Oceans
  • Continental drift hypothesis
  • Supercontinent called Pangaea (all lands) began
    breaking apart about 200 million years ago (early
    part of the Mesozoic era)
  • Continents drifted to present positions
  • Pangaea Breakup

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  • Evidence used in support of continental drift
    hypothesis
  • Fit of the continents
  • Fossil evidence
  • Rock type and geologic features
  • Paleoclimatic evidence

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Matching mountain ranges
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Paleoclimatic evidence
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The great debate
  • Objections to the continental drift hypothesis
  • Lack of a mechanism for moving continents
  • Wegener suggested the same gravitational forces
    from the Moon and Sun that cause tides caused
    continental drift
  • Wegener incorrectly suggested that continents
    broke through the ocean crust, much like ice
    breakers cut through ice
  • Strong opposition to the hypothesis from the
    scientific community

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  • Continental drift and the scientific method
  • Wegeners hypothesis was correct in principle,
    but contained incorrect details
  • A few scientists considered Wegeners ideas
    plausible and continued the search

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  • Continental drift and the scientific method
  • Following WWII, the oceanic ridge system was
    discovered
  • Dredging of the sea floor did not bring up any
    oceanic crust older than 180 MY
  • Sediment accumulations in the deep-ocean trenches
    were found to be thin
  • By 1968, these new developments led to the theory
    known as Plate Tectonics

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Plate Tectonics A modern version of an old idea
Cracked egg shell
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Plate Tectonics A modern version of an old idea
  • Earths major plates
  • Associated with Earths strong, rigid outer layer
  • Known as the lithosphere
  • Consists of uppermost mantle and overlying crust
  • Overlies a weaker region in the mantle called the
    asthenosphere

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  • Earths major plates
  • The crust is broken up into oceanic and
    continental
  • Oceanic crust is cooler and denser (3.3g/cm3)
  • Continental crust is warmer and less dense
    (2.7g/cm3)

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  • Earths major plates
  • Seven major lithospheric plates
  • Pacific, North American, Eurasian, African,
    Australian-Indian, South American, and Antarctic
  • Other minor lithospheric plates
  • Caribbean, Nazca, Philippine, Arabian, Cocos,
    Scotia, and Juan de Fuca
  • Plates are in motion and continually changing in
    shape and size
  • Largest plate is the Pacific plate
  • Several plates include an entire continent plus a
    large area of seafloor

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  • Earths major plates
  • Plates move relative to each other at a very slow
    but continuous rate
  • About 5 centimeters (2 inches) per year
  • Cooler, denser slabs of oceanic lithosphere
    descend into the mantle

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  • Plate boundaries
  • Interactions among individual plates occur along
    their boundaries
  • Types of plate boundaries
  • Divergent plate boundaries (constructive
    margins)
  • Convergent plate boundaries (destructive margins)
  • Transform fault boundaries (conservative margins)

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Divergent plate boundaries
  • Most are located along the crests of oceanic
    ridges
  • Oceanic ridges and seafloor spreading
  • Along well-developed divergent plate boundaries,
    the seafloor is elevated forming oceanic ridges
  • Seafloor spreading occurs along the oceanic ridge
    system

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  • Spreading rates and ridge topography
  • Ridge systems exhibit topographic differences
  • These differences are controlled by spreading
    rates

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Sea floor spreading
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  • Continental rifting
  • Splits landmasses into two or more smaller
    segments along a continental rift
  • Examples include the East African rift valleys
    and the Rhine Valley in northern Europe
  • Produced by extensional forces acting on
    lithospheric plates

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Continental rifting
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Convergent plate boundaries
  • Older portions of oceanic plates are returned to
    the mantle in these destructive plate margins
  • Surface expression of the descending plate is an
    ocean trench (deepest places on earth)
  • Also called subduction zones
  • Average angle of subduction 45 degrees

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Worlds oceanic trenches and ridge system
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  • Types of convergent boundaries
  • Oceanic-continental convergence
  • Denser oceanic slab sinks into the asthenosphere
  • Along the descending plate partial melting of
    mantle rock generates magma
  • Resulting volcanic mountain chain is called a
    continental volcanic arc (Andes and Cascades)

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Oceanic-continental convergence
Animation
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  • Types of convergent boundaries
  • Oceanic-oceanic convergence
  • When two oceanic slabs converge, one descends
    beneath the other
  • Often forms volcanoes on the ocean floor
  • If the volcanoes emerge as islands, a volcanic
    island arc is formed (Japan, Aleutian islands,
    and Tonga islands)

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Oceanic-oceanic convergence
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  • Types of convergent boundaries
  • Continental-continental convergence
  • Less dense, buoyant continental lithosphere does
    not subduct
  • Resulting collision between two continental
    blocks produces mountains (Himalayas, Alps, and
    Appalachians)

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Continental-continental convergence
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Transform fault boundaries
  • Plates slide past one another and no new
    lithosphere is created or destroyed
  • Transform faults
  • Most join two segments of a mid-ocean ridge along
    breaks in the oceanic crust known as fracture
    zones
  • A few (the San Andreas Fault and the Alpine Fault
    of New Zealand) cut through continental crust

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Transform faults
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San Andreas Fault near Taft, California
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Testing the plate tectonics model
  • Evidence from ocean drilling
  • Some of the most convincing evidence confirming
    seafloor spreading has come from drilling
    directly into ocean-floor sediment
  • Age of deepest sediments
  • Thickness of ocean-floor sediments verifies
    seafloor spreading

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  • Hot spots and mantle plumes
  • Caused by rising plumes of mantle material
  • Volcanoes can form over them (Hawaiian Island
    chain)
  • Mantle plumes
  • Long-lived structures
  • Some originate at great depth, perhaps at the
    mantle-core boundary

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The Hawaiian Islands
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Snake River Plain
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  • Paleomagnetism
  • Iron-rich minerals become magnetized in the
    existing magnetic field as they crystallize
  • Rocks that formed millions of years ago contain a
    record of the direction of the magnetic poles
    at the time of their formation

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Tampa airport Magnets
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  • Apparent polar wandering
  • Lava flows of different ages indicated several
    different magnetic poles
  • Polar wandering paths are more readily explained
    by the theory of plate tectonics

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Polar Wandering paths for Eurasia and North
America
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  • Geomagnetic reversals
  • Earths magnetic field periodically reverses
    polaritythe north magnetic pole becomes the
    south magnetic pole, and vice versa
  • Dates when the polarity of Earths magnetism
    changed were determined from lava flows
  • Geomagnetic reversals are recorded in the ocean
    crust
  • In 1963 Vine and Matthews tied the discovery of
    magnetic stripes in the ocean crust near ridges
    to the concept of seafloor spreading

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Paleomagnetic reversals recorded in oceanic crust
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What drives plate motions?
  • Researchers agree that convective flow in the
    mantle is the basic driving force of plate
    tectonics
  • Forces that drive plate motion
  • Slab-pull
  • Ridge-push

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Some of the forces that act on plates
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