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Introduction to Plate Tectonics

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Composed of lithosphere - crust plus the extreme outer mantle. Lithosphere comes from lithos, meaning stony, and sphere - hard and rigid ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Introduction to Plate Tectonics


1
Introduction to Plate Tectonics
  • A Revolution in the Earth Sciences -
  • Peter Wyllie
  • GLY 2010 , Lecture 3

2
Alfred Wegener, 1880-1930
  • German meteorologist
  • Published a book in 1915 whose
  • (translated) title is
  • The Origin of Continents and Oceans
  • Wegener proposed the idea of Continental Drift

3
Continental Drift
  • Pangaea supercontinent containing all land
  • Based on evidence available in early 1900s

4
Wegeners Evidence
  • Fit of continents when map cut apart and
    rearranged
  • Climate similarities in adjacent areas

5
Lithologic (Rock) Evidence
  • Unusual rocks found only where continents fit
    together
  • Cratons cores of continents, strongly showed
    this pattern
  • Karoo (South Africa) and Santa Catarina (Brazil)
    formations appear identical

6
Fossil Evidence
  • Glossopteris had left leaf remains in large areas
    of Southern Hemisphere
  • Wegener concluded that southern continents must
    have been joined

7
Fate of Continental Drift Hypothesis
  • Biggest objection How to move a continent?
  • Wegener died in Greenland in 1930 before most
    people accepted his ideas
  • Wegeners ideas languished until the end of WWII
  • Use of submarines during the war spurred research
    after the war
  • This lead to oceanographic exploration

8
Oceanographic Exploration
  • Ocean floors were mapped to add submarine
    navigation
  • Knowledge gained revitalized Wegeners ideas

9
What Does Plate Tectonics Mean?
  • Plate Large, Rigid slab of rock
  • Tectonics comes from Greek root meaning to
    build

10
Plates
  • The earths surface is divided into about a dozen
    major plates
  • Composed of lithosphere - crust plus the extreme
    outer mantle
  • Lithosphere comes from lithos, meaning stony, and
    sphere - hard and rigid
  • Lithosphere extends from the surface to the top
    of the mantle

11
Map of Major Tectonic Plates
12
Mid-ocean Ridge Map
13
MOR Video
14
Alvin
  • Jan Morton entering Alvin

15
East Pacific Rise SegmentComputer Generated Image
  • Yellow to red shows high elevation
  • Green to blue shows lower elevation
  • Latitude 9 north

16
Asthenosphere
  • Behaves as a plastic - a solid that may deform
    slowly
  • Plastic because it is hot and under pressure
  • Extends a few hundred kilometers below the
    lithosphere
  • It is entirely in the upper mantle

17
What Supports the Plates?
  • Lithospheric plates float on the asthenosphere,
    which is denser than the lithosphere

18
Sea-floor Spreading
  • Concept came from oceanographic investigations
  • Uses Convection cells, an idea Wegener would have
    been familiar with

19
Convection Cell
  • Heat beaker
  • Water expands and rises
  • It spreads and cools at the top
  • Cool water sinks

20
Harry Hess, 1906-1969
  • In Navy during WWII
  • Rear Admiral in Naval intelligence
  • Commented that geologists make good intelligence
    officers because they can work with incomplete
    data sets

21
Hess in WWII
  • Keenly interested in geology of ocean basins
  • Used time between battles to collect data
  • Collected echo-sounding surveys of ocean depths

22
Hess at Princeton
  • After WWII, Hess became Professor of Geology at
    Princeton University
  • Used WWII data to publish a paper called History
    of the Ocean Basins in 1962
  • Paper outlined idea of sea-floor spreading
  • Robert Dietz, working independently, proposed a
    very similar concept

23
Hess-Dietz Hypothesis
  • Asthenosphere contains numerous convection cells
  • Cells cause molten rock (magma) to rise
  • Some magma erupts on surface
  • Most magma stays beneath the surface and spreads,
    carrying lithospheric plates with it, and slowly
    cooling

24
Hess-Dietz Hypothesis, Cont.
  • Cooling magma sinks, completing convection cell
  • Mobile sea-floor helped to answer several puzzles

25
Mid-Ocean Ridge
  • Click to start

26
Spreading Center
  • Click to start

27
Mantle Convection Cells
  • New crust created by magma hardening at the
    Mid-Ocean Ridge (MOR)
  • From other data, we know the earth is not
    expanding
  • Crust must be destroyed somewhere

28
Puzzles Solved
  • Why is there so little sediment on ocean floor?
  • What are the rock ages so young?

29
Seismic Evidence
  • In 1935, K. Wadati showed earthquakes occur at
    greater depths toward the interior of the Asian
    continent
  • Earthquakes further toward the Pacific Ocean
    occurred at shallower depths
  • H. Benioff later observed the same distribution
    in other regions

30
Age of Ocean Fossils
  • Continental fossils are at least 3.5 billion
    years old
  • Oldest marine fossils are about 180 million years
  • Since life is though to originate in the oceans,
    why arent ocean fossils older?

31
Subduction Zones
  • The key to subduction is the density of the rock
    types involved
  • Density mass/unit volume

32
Rock Densities
  • Continental lithosphere is about 3.00 grams/cubic
    centimeter
  • Oceanic lithosphere gradually increases in
    density as it ages, reaching a maximum value of
    about 3.28 grams/cubic centimeter

33
Converging Plates
  • When two plates collide, the denser plate will
    sink (subside) beneath the less dense plate
  • Density differences as small as 1 are enough to
    cause subduction

34
Subduction
35
Plate Movement
  • Plates move slowly (up to 15 cm/yr)
  • Plates may collide, move apart, or slide past
    each other
  • Friction during plate movement often generates
    earthquakes

36
Asthenosphere Density
  • The density of the asthenosphere is about 3.3
    g/cm3
  • Density increases with depth below the surface
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