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Some questions we will answer today:

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0 Some questions we will answer today: How is the earth always changing? What forces inside the earth create and change landforms on the surface? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Some questions we will answer today:


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  • Some questions we will answer today
  • How is the earth always changing?
  • What forces inside the earth create and change
    landforms on the surface?
  • What is the theory of plate tectonics?
  • What two theories help make up the theory of
    plate tectonics?
  • What is continental drift and sea floor
    spreading?
  • What happens when the plates crash together, pull
    apart, and slide against each other?

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The Earths Layers
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  • The Earth is made of many different and distinct
    layers. The deeper layers are composed of heavier
    materials they are hotter, denser and under much
    greater pressure than the outer layers.

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  • Lets look at the different layers of the earth
    that play a vital role in the formation of our
    continents, mountains, volcanoes, etc.

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crust - the rigid, rocky outer surface of the
Earth, composed mostly of basalt and granite. The
crust is thinner under the oceans. mantle - a
rocky layer located under the crust - it is
composed of silicon, oxygen, magnesium, iron,
aluminum, and calcium. Convection (heat) currents
carry heat from the hot inner mantle to the
cooler outer mantle.
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Remember the crust and the upper part of
the mantle make up the lithospherethe rest of
the mantle is the asthenosphereouter core - the
molten iron-nickel layer that surrounds the inner
core. inner core - the solid iron-nickel center
of the Earth that is very hot and under great
pressure.
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  • The continents and oceans are moving across the
    surface of the planet?
  • Volcanoes and earthquakes as well as mountain
    ranges and islands all are results of this
    movement.
  • Why is this?

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  • Plate Tectonics

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  • The idea that the earths landmasses have broken
    apart, rejoined, and moved to other parts of the
    globe forms part of the
  • plate tectonic theory.

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Plate Tectonic Theory
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About forty years ago, scientists exploring the
seafloor found that it is full of tall mountains
and deep trenches, a single seafloor mountain
chain circles Earth and contains some of Earths
tallest mountains.
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  • Along this mountain chain is a deep crack in the
    top layers of earth. Here the seafloor is pulling
    apart and the two parts are moving in opposite
    directions, carrying along the continents and
    oceans that rest on top of them. These pieces of
    Earths top layer are called tectonic plates.
    They are moving very slowly, but constantly.
    (Most plates are moving about as fast as your
    fingernails are growing -- not very fast!)
    Currently Earths surface layers are divided into
    nine very large plates and several smaller ones.

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  • According to the theory of plate tectonics, the
    earths outer shell is not one solid piece of
    rock. Instead the earths crust is broken into a
    number of moving plates. The plates vary in size
    and thickness.

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  • The North American Plate stretches from the
    mid-Atlantic Ocean to the northern top of Japan.
    The Cocos Plate covers a small area in the
    Pacific Ocean just west of Central America.
  • These plates are not anchored in place but slide
    over a hot and bendable layer of the mantle.

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  • To really understand how the earth became to look
    as it does today, and the theory of plate
    tectonics, you also need to become familiar with
    two other ideas
  • Continental Drift
  • and
  • Seafloor Spreading.

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  • Less than 100 years ago, many scientists thought
    the continents always had been the same shape and
    in the same place.
  • A few scientists noted that the eastern coastline
    of South America and the western coastline of
    Africa looked as if they could fit together.
  • Some also noted that, with a little imagination,
    all the continents could be joined together like
    giant puzzle pieces to create one large continent
    surrounded by one huge ocean.

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Continental Drift Theory
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  • When the tectonic plates under the continents and
    oceans move, they carry the continents and oceans
    with them.
  • In the early 1900s a German explorer and
    scientist proposed the continental drift theory.
    He proposed that there was once a ingle
    supercontinent called Pangaea.

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  • Wegners theory was that about 180 million years
    ago, Pangaea began to break up into separate
    continents. To back this theory up, he perserved
    remains and evidence from ancient animals and
    plants from South America, Africa, India, and
    Australia that were almost identical. Rock
    sequences and glaciation also was evidence.

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Seafloor Spreading
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  • The other theory theory supporting plate
    tectonics emerged from the study of the ocean
    floor.
  • Scientists were suprised to find that rocks taken
    from the ocean floor were much younger than those
    found on the continents. The youngest rocks were
    those nearest the underwater ridge system which
    is a series of mountains that extend around the
    world.

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  • The theory of seafloor spreading suggests that
    molten rock, the hot substance (lava) from the
    mantle rises under the underwater ridge and
    breaks through a split at the top of the ridge
    (the plate). The split is called a rift valley.
    The rock then spreads out in both directions from
    the ridge as if it were on two huge conveyor
    belts. As the seafloor moves away from the ridge,
    it carries older rocks away.

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  • Evidence to support sea-floor spreading is
    magnetic mapping. When the rock is magma/lava it
    allows the atoms of the metals to align with the
    magnetic poles of the earth. These magnetized
    metals cool and form rocks and then can be mapped
    using magnetic equipment. This along with
    radiometric dating proves sea-floor spreading.

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  • Seafloor spreading, along with the continental
    drift theory, became part of the theory of plate
    tectonics.

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Plate motions also can be looked at into the
future, and we can have a stab at what the
geography of the planet will be like. Perhaps in
250 million years time there will be a new
supercontinent.
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  • What two theories help make up the theory of
    plate tectonics?
  • What is continental drift and sea floor
    spreading?

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  • As mentioned earlier, tectonic plates are always
    moving. They are always moving
  • pulling away from each other (Divergent plate
    boundary)
  • crashing head-on (Convergent plate boundary)
  • or sliding past each other. (Transform plate
    boundary)

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Theyre Pulling Apart!
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  • When plates pull away from one another they form
    a diverging plate boundary, or spreading zone.

Thingvellir, the spreading zone in Iceland
between the North American (left side) and
Eurasian (right side) tectonic plates. January
2003.
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The Crash!
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  • What happens when plates crash into each other
    depends on the types of plates involved.
  • Because continental crust is lighter than oceanic
    crust, continental plates float higher.
  • When an oceanic plate meets a continetnal plate,
    it slides under the lighter plate and down into
    the mantle. The slab of oceanic rock melts when
    the endges get to a depth which is hot enough.
    This process is called subduction. Molten
    material produced in a subduction zone can rise
    to the earths surface and cause mountains, and
    islands.

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When they Crash
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  • When two plates of the same type meet, the result
    is a process called converging.
  • Depending on what type of plates these are,
    depends on what occurs.

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Converging...They Crash! And theyre both
Continental Plates
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  • When both are continental plates, the plates push
    against each other, creating mountain ranges.

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A Crash and are both continental plates!
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  • Earths highest mountain range, the Himalayas,
    was formed millions of years ago when the
    Indo-Australian Plate crashed into the Eurasian
    Plate. Even today, the Indo-Australian Plate
    continues to push against the Eurasian Plate at a
    rate of about 5 cm a year!

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They meet and slide past each other!Transform
plate boundary
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  • Sometimes, instead of pulling away from each
    other or colliding with each other, plates slip
    or grind past each other along faults. This
    process is known as faulting.

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  • These areas are likely to have a rift valley,
    earthquake, and volcanic action.

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For example Here, the San Andreas Fault lies on
the boundary between two tectonic plates, the
north American Plate and the Pacific Plate. The
two plates are sliding past each other at a rate
of 5 to 6 centimeters each year.
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What evidence supports continental drift.
  • similar rock sequences.
  • Similar glaciation patterns.
  • Similar fossils of plant and animals.
  • All of the above.

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What evidence supports sea floor spreading.
  1. Magnetic mapping.
  2. Igneous intrusion.
  3. Similar glaciation patterns.
  4. All of the above.

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When two plates slide past each other what type
of plate boundary is it?.
  1. Convergent .
  2. Divergent.
  3. Transform.
  4. Subduction.

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When two plates go away from each other what type
of plate boundary is it?.
  1. Convergent .
  2. Divergent.
  3. Transform.
  4. Subduction.

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