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Title: Plate Tectonics: More Interesting than it Sounds


1
Plate Tectonics More Interesting than it Sounds
  • By Jess Friedman

2
Before we get going, lets review
  • Plate
  • Lithosphere
  • Asthenosphere
  • Radioactive Decay
  • Convection

3
  • The story of Plate Tectonics is a fascinating
    story of continents drifting majestically from
    place to place breaking apart, colliding, and
    grinding against each other of terrestrial
    mountain ranges rising up like rumples in rugs
    being pushed together of oceans opening and
    closing and undersea mountain chains girdling the
    planet like seams on a baseball of violent
    earthquakes and fiery volcanoes. Plate Tectonics
    describes the intricate design of a complex,
    living planet in a state of dynamic flux.

4
A Combination of Two Ideas
  • Continental Drift
  • Sea-Floor Spreading

5
The Basics
  • The Earth's surface is covered by a series of
    hard crustal plates
  • The ocean floors are continually, moving,
    spreading from the center, sinking at the edges,
    and being regenerated

6
The Basics, Part II
  • Convection currents beneath the plates move the
    crustal plates in different directions its
    like a conveyor belt, but a little bit slower
  • The source of heat driving the convection
    currents is radioactive decay deep in the Earths
    mantle

7
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8
Plate Tectonic Environments
  • Extensional
  • Convergent (Compressional)
  • Divergent (Transform)

9
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10
What about Hawaii?
  • Hawaii those islands wouldnt be here without
    the Pacific Plate
  • Pacific Plate, which is mostly oceanic
    lithosphere, moves northwest at a variable rate,
    about 8 cm/year on average

11
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12
  • But the islands are more than 3,200 km from the
    nearest plate boundary!

13
Sources
  • http//hypertextbook.com/facts/ZhenHuang.shtml
  • http//pubs.usgs.gov/publications/text/hotspots.ht
    ml
  • http//volcano.und.nodak.edu/vwdocs/vwlessons/plat
    e_tectonics/part12.html
  • http//volcano.und.nodak.edu/vwdocs/vwlessons/atg.
    html
  • http//www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/geology/tectonics.htm
    l
  • http//www.seismo.unr.edu/ftp/pub/louie/class/100/
    plate-tectonics.html
  • http//volcano.und.nodak.edu/vwdocs/vwlessons/plat
    e_tectonics/introduction.html

14
Hot Spots spots that are hot
As interpreted by Jeff Marlow
15
Early Studies
  • Early Hawaiians recognized relative ages
  • James Dana 1840
  • Two strands of volcanoes along parallel paths

16
Mantle Plumes
  • Tuzo Wilson 1963
  • Lithosphere moving across stationary hot spot in
    the mantle
  • small, long-lasting, very hot regions exist below
    the plates These hotspots provide the localized
    source of heat energy to sustain volcanism

17
  • Led to Mantle Plume Theory
  • mantle plume  a buoyant mass of hot mantle
    material that rises to the base of the
    lithosphere. 
  • Mantle plumes commonly produce volcanic activity
    and structural deformation in the central part of
    lithospheric plates

18
Mantle Plume Origin
  • Deep mantle origin
  • Mantle-core boundary?
  • Constant position
  • Higher convection cells very transient, erratic

19
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20
Plumes on Mars?
- (Multiple) Plumes? - Heatflow issues -
75 of topography can be explained by
crustal thickness and surface volcanic
construction - Tectonic Uplift?
21
Problems with Plume Theory
  • Bend in Emperor / Hawaiian Island Chain
  • Change in direction of Pacific plate 50 mya?
  • No such change occurred

22
Problems with Plume Theory
  • Temperature Anomalies
  • Hawaii mantle temp elevated 200 C
  • Core-mantle boundary plumes require 600 C
  • Melt comes from shallow asthenosphere
  • Lavas indicate certain stability field
  • 80-120 km deep

23
Problems with Plume Theory
  • Seismology has not detected a plume
  • Expect low speed earthquake waves when it crosses
    hot mantle
  • Low wave anomalies detected.but in wrong place

24
In Support of Mantle Plume
  • Fixed hot spot
  • High rate of magma output
  • 3He/4He isotope ratios
  • ? Points to Deep Mantle Plume
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