Plate Tectonics. And Plate Boundaries HORRAH!!!

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1 Plate Tectonics And Plate Boundaries HORRAH!!!

2 History of Plate Tectonics and Alfred Wegener

3 In the 1500 s, a Dutch mapmaker, Abraham Ortelius noticed the continents across the Atlantic Ocean fit like puzzle pieces. He proposed that North and South America had been separated from Europe and Africa by earthquakes and floods. History

4 Abraham Ortelius Map

5 Edward Suess An Austrian geologist, in the late 1800 s, proposed the southern continents had once been joined together in a single landmass He named this landmass Gondwanaland.

6 Gondwanaland

7

8 In 1912 a German meteorologist, Alfred Wegener, had an idea about continental movement. His hypothesis was called Continental Drift. Alfred Wegener

9 His hypothesis proposed that the continent s had once been joined as a single landmass, called PANGAEA. Pangaea is a greek word meaning All the Earth

10 PANGAEA Wegener believed that Pangaea began to break apart 250 million years ago. The continents have been continuously moving since then to where they are now.

11 Wegener s Evidence 1. Rocks Believed there should be similar rock types on opposite sides of the Atlantic Appalachian Mtns. are similar to the Scottish Highlands Rocks in Brazil matched those in Africa (similar age of 2.2 billion years old)

12 More Evidence 2. Fossils Animal Fossils Lystrosaurus land reptile Mesosaurus freshwater reptile Cynognathus land reptile ALL couldn t have swam across Atlantic Ocean (salt water)

13 Fossil Evidence Plants Glossopteris Animals Seeds too heavy to blow across ocean Too fragile to float across ocean Land animals couldn t swim Freshwater animals can t swim in ocean (salt water) Couldn t have evolved the same way in different locations!

14 Even More Evidence 3. Climate Coal deposits found in Antarctica Glacier deposits found in Africa, India, Australia, and South America

15 Science Haters Other scientists rejected his hypothesis because he couldn t explain what was causing the continents to move (a.k.a. HOW?) He thought rotation of the Earth but physicists said no Also thought continents plowed through ocean floor but there was no evidence for that.

16 Arthur Holmes 1929, a geoscientist, Holmes proposed that convection occurred in the mantle. This convection could push and pull plates (continents) apart or together. But NO evidence!!!

17 FINDING EVIDENCE The first way to map the ocean floor used Sonar. This way stunk because it didn t accurately map the floor.

18 The then invented the Magnetometer. This could detect small changes in the magnetic field in rocks and map them.

19 Seafloor Spreading Mid-Atlantic Ridge

20 Seafloor Spreading new ocean crust is formed at ocean ridges and destroyed at deep sea trenches.

21 Harry Hess Used paleomagnetism and seafloor mapping to prove convection is a source for continental drift

22 Convection current/plate motion noes_erupt/img/1.jpg Plate motion is thought to be caused by convection currents in the asthenosphere. Since the hotter material deep in the asthenosphere is less dense it will slowly rise, as it reaches the base of the lithosphere it begins to cool, become more dense, and will sink. Rising convection currents will move plates apart (divergent), while sinking convection currents will move plates together (convergent).

23 Plate Boundaries and Convection Currents

24 These new maps showed the different magnetism in different layers of rock. As new crust is created the iron bearing minerals point to where the magnetic pole is at the time of creation. This is called Paleomagnetism

25 Mid-Ocean Ridge Isochron line of same aged rock

26 Magnetic Pole Reversals Random reversal of Earth s Polarity Average irregular 300,000 year cycles Last one was over 780,000 years ago = overdue Unknown as to why Maybe external, maybe internal

27 This proved that new sea floor was being created at mid-ocean ridges. Identical magnetism on opposite sides of ridges. Thus, the plates where moving.

28 Plate Boundaries and Convection Currents

29 Types of Boundaries

30 Divergent Boundaries two plates move apart

31 Ocean/Ocean Formations- ocean ridge, fissures

32 Mid-Atlantic Ridge it is 40,000 miles long

33

34 Mid-Ocean Ridge Magnetic Reversals

35 Land/land Formations rift valley

36 Great African Rift Valley

37

38 Video Website - Divergent action?quick=12n

39 Convergent two plates come together

40 Land/ocean Formations- subduction zone, trench, volcanoes, earthquakes

41

42 subduction Video - Subduction

43 Mt St. Helens

44

45

46 Ring of Fire

47 Land/land Formations Large Mountains (Orogeny)

48

49 Video Convergent Mtns. converging mts

50 Himalayas

51

52

53 Ocean/ocean Formations island arc, trench

54

55 Eastern Caribbean

56

57 Video Convergent - Island Arc island arc

58 Transform the plates slide past each other, they form faults

59 Friction builds up between the plates until they snap and cause EARTHQUAKES

60 San Andreas Fault

61

62

63 Hotspot

64 Hotspots The hotspot is also known as a magma chamber, it is located in the mantle

65 The Hotspot then explodes, creating a volcano

66 The plate then moves. Notice the volcano moves with the plate, but the hotspot stays were it was

67 The Hotspot then explodes again, forming a new volcano

68 The plate moves again, starting the process over

69 Another volcano is then created forming a Volcanic Chain

70 An example of a hotspot is Hawaii

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