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Published byKerry Reynolds Modified over 9 years ago
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Starter: 10/9/13 What do you think is occurring at these locations?
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Starter 10-8-13 What, in your words, is plate tectonics? What is so important about this topic?
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NOTES FOR YOUR JOURNAL! Plate Tectonics
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Layers of Earth Core – most dense, 2 layers Mantle – 2 layers Crust – least dense
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2 Kinds of Crust Continental – less dense Oceanic – more dense
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FYI…density of layers (gm/cm 3 ) Inner core 11.5 Outer core 9.0 Mantle 4.5 Oceanic crust 2.9 Continental crust 2.8
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Convection Currents Movement of hot liquid or gas Heated – rises Cools – drops
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Earth’s Crust Cracks… Convection currents in magma (in mantle) cause cracking in crust
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Crustal Plates Huge sections of earth’s crust that move relative to each other
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Alfred Wegener and Pangaea 11 - 11 Pangaea is the name given to the single giant continent in a proposal by Wegener (1912). The theory of continental drift states that the continents were once a single landmass that drifted apart and are still doing so.
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Evidence for Continental Drift 11 - 12 Wegener tried to support his theory with evidence: Maps - continents apparently fit together like a jigsaw-puzzle Plant and animal fossils - coal in Antarctica
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Plate Map
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Seafloor Spreading 11 - 14 Seafloor constantly being created and destroyed New crust at rift valley Crust destroyed at trenches
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Evidence for Seafloor Spreading 11 - 15 Thin sediment in ridges Age of rock at ridges much younger than continents Patterns of magnetic polarity reversal
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Plates Move in 4 Ways Subduction Transform faulting Divergent Convergent
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Types of Movement 11 - 17 Divergent – plates moving apart (rift valleys in MOR) Convergent – plates coming together Transform – plates slide past each other
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Subduction Downward movement of an oceanic plate into the mantle
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Subduction Zones 11 - 19 Ocean plate into continent Trench, mountains, volcanoes formed
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Subduction Plate enters mantle Rock broken Friction heats Magma develops Magma pushed to surface Volcanoes, deep earthquakes
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Subduction causes… Seafloor spreading Magma rises – forms ridges, rises (large!) Shallow earthquakes
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Ocean Trenches Form in subduction zones Deep, narrow, long, steep
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Convergent Continents 11 - 23 Mountains form
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Convergent Boundaries Here crust is destroyed and recycled back into the interior of the Earth as one plate dives under another. These are known as Subduction Zones - mountains and volcanoes are often found where plates converge. There are three different types: oceanic-continental, oceanic-oceanic and continental-continental
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Divergent Boundaries At divergent boundaries new crust is created as two or more plates pull away from each other. Oceans are born and grow wider where plates diverge or pull apart. As seen below, when a diverging boundary occurs on land a 'rift', or separation will arise and over time that mass of land will break apart into distinct land masses and the surrounding water will fill the space between them.
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Transform Faults When two plates slide horizontally past one another Perpendicular breaks or fracture zones Defined by shallow earthquakes Ex. San Andreas fault in Ca.
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CONVERGENT: COLLIDE DIVERGENT: DIVIDE TRANSFORM: SLIIIIDE! WAYS TO REMEMBER THE THREE TYPES OF BOUNDARIES:
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Hot Spots 11 - 28 Magma chambers in mantle push through surface of crust Crust moves over mantle forming island chain
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Continental Collision 2 plates with continents collide Continents don’t sink, subduction doesn’t occur Crust moves up, folds, breaks, etc.
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As plates move over hot spots… New islands formed – island chains (archipelagoes)
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Old islands sink… Atolls – submerged island group in ring-shape, coral reef grows on top Guyots – extinct submerged volcanoes
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