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Plate Tectonics

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Title: Plate Tectonics


1
Plate Tectonics
2
Sources of Earths energy
  • Internal- radioactive decay.
  • External- The Sun.

3
Producers
  • Organisms that use sunlight energy to make sugars.

4
Photosynthesis
  • Plants and certain microorganisms, such as algae,
    make their own food.

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  • We get our energy by eating plants or
    plant-eating animals.
  • We are heterotrophs.

7
Earth is divided into three layers
  • The crust.
  • The mantle.
  • The core.

8
Lithosphere
  • The crust and rigid upper part of the mantle.
  • It is divided into tectonic plates.

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Tectonic Plates
  • Pieces of lithosphere that float on a denser,
    molten layer of Earth, known as the asthenosphere.

12
Asthenosphere
  • Soft layer of the mantle made up of semi-solid
    rock that flows slowly.

13
Plate Tectonics Theory
  • Theory that Earths lithosphere is divided into
    tectonic plates that can move around on top of
    the asthenosphere.

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Types of Plates
  • Continental plates.
  • Oceanic plates.

16
Diverging boundaries
  • When two tectonic plates move away from each
    other.
  • They form deep valleys called rift valleys.

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  • When magma rises through the gaps between the
    plates, it cools, creating a ridge (new crust).
    This is called sea-floor spreading.

19
Mid-Ocean Ridges
  • Long underwater mountain chains along divergent
    boundaries.

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Converging boundaries
  • When two tectonic plates push into one another.

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  • If the two convergent plates are oceanic, one is
    subducted, or pushed under the other.
  • Volcanoes form.
  • Hawaiin islands formed this way.

25
  • When a continental plate collides with an oceanic
    plate, the oceanic plate slides under the
    continental plate, forming volcanoes.

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  • When two continental plates collide, mountains
    form, such as the Himalayas.

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Transform Boundaries
  • When two tectonic plates slide past each other.
  • This causes earthquakes.

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Wind
  • Moving air.
  • Air moves from areas of high pressure to areas of
    low pressure.

33
Offshore Breeze
  • When air over the land moves out toward the sea.
  • At the beach in the morning air over land is
    cooler with high pressure.

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Sea Breeze
  • Later in the day, the sun warms the land, air
    over land becomes less dense and pressure drops.
    Cooler air rushes from the sea.

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Surface Currents
  • A shallow ocean current.
  • They are produced by the wind.

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39
Reservoirs
  • Areas where various elements are stored for
    periods of time and from which they are recycled.

40
Climate
  • The average weather of a region over a long
    period of time.
  • Climate of northern Europe is cool and damp.

41
What determines climate?
  • Latitude.
  • Prevailing winds.
  • Elevation.
  • Mountains.
  • Water bodies.

42
Weather
  • Short lived atmospheric phenomena, such as
    thunderstorms and blizzards.

43
Rain Shadow
  • An area of decreased rainfall on the leeward side
    of a mountain.

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The Law of Superposition
  • Layers of older rocks lie under layers of younger
    rocks.

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Fossil
  • The remains of a living thing.
  • Fossils can be used to find the relative age of a
    rock.

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49
Radioactive Dating
  • A technique that involves comparing the amount of
    a radioactive and non radioactive forms of an
    element in a rock or fossil.

50
  • Radioactive dating tells us the actual age of a
    rock or fossil.

51
Half-Life
  • The amount of time for half the substance to
    decay into a nonradioactive form.

52
  • Earth was formed 4.6 billion years ago.
  • Living things appeared 3.5 billion years ago.

53
Nebular Cloud
  • An interstellar haze of particles.
  • Gravity drew particles together to form the Sun,
    planets, and moons.

54
The Big Bang Theory
  • An explosion that produced all the matter and
    energy of the universe.
  • Occurred about 13.7 billion years ago.

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Galaxies
  • Families of billions of stars.
  • Ewe live in the Milky Way Galaxy.

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  • Evidence that the universe is expanding comes
    from observing the light emitted by stars.

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The Red Shift
  • When an object is moving away, the light it
    reflects seems to have wavelengths shifted toward
    the red end of the spectrum.

61
  • The red shift indicates that the universe is
    expanding!

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  • Star Development

64
The life cycle of stars
  • Nuclear fusion? red giant? white dwarf.
  • In more massive stars nuclear fusion?
    supergiants? supernova? neutron or black hole.

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Protostar
  • When a nebula (cloud of gas and dust) contracts
    and shrinks, forming a sphere of matter.
  • A beginning star!

67
Red Giant
  • A large, reddish star in late in its life cycle
    that fuses helium into carbon or oxygen.

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Black hole
  • An object so massive and dense that not even the
    light can escape its gravity.

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Neutron star
  • A dead star with the density of atomic nuclei.

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White dwarf
  • A small, very dense star that remains after
    fusion in a red giant stops.

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  • Very large stars become supergiants. Supergiants
    create elements as heavy as iron. This stops
    fusion, and explodes into a supernova, and the
    massive star dies.

76
  • If the mass of the dead star is 1.4 to 3 times
    that of the sun, it can become a neutron star.
  • If the mass is more than 3 times that of the sun,
    it becomes a black hole.
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