Chapter 10 Section 1.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
WARM-UPS #1 Use your p to answer the questions. Use your p to answer the questions. 1. What type of boundary occurs where plates collide?
Advertisements

Ch Restless Continents
Restless Continents.
EVIDENCE OF CONTINENTAL DRIFT.
Coach Williams Room 310B.  Plate Tectonics Objectives  Describe one piece of early evidence that led people to suggest the Earth’s continents my have.
Wegener’s principle of continental drift was often dismissed because he failed to produce a mechanism by which the continents moved.
Continental Drift, Sea Floor Spreading and Plate Tectonics
Chapter 4: Plate Tectonics Lesson 1: Continental Drift Quiz G
Chapter 17: Plate tectonics
Plate Tectonics The Dynamic Interior of the Earth.
Plate Tectonics Section 1 Section 1: Continental Drift Preview Key Ideas Wegener’s Hypothesis Sea-Floor Spreading Paleomagnetism Wegener Redeemed Continental.
17.1 ~ Drifting Continents Did Pangea Exist?. The Theory of Continental Drift  Wegener’s idea that the continents slowly moved over the earth became.
Theory of Continental Drift
The Dynamic Earth and Plate Tectonics. Early Ideas on a moving Earth Alfred Wegener proposed idea: “Continental Drift” – Stated that all continents used.
If you look at a map of the world, you may notice that some of the continents could fit together like pieces of a puzzle…..the shapes of the coastlines.
Chapter 10 Plate Tectonics. Alfred Wegener Proposed they hypothesis of continental drift Proposed they hypothesis of continental drift CONTINENTAL DRIFT-
E.S. Plate Tectonic Notes Continental Drift Continental Drift  Alfred Wegener, in 1912 noticed that the continental shorelines on either side of the Atlantic.
Chapter 10 Review By Chelsey Roberts. Continental drift: Wegener’s hypothesis A german scientist, Alfred Wegener (1912), came up with the hypothesis of.
Unit 4 Lesson 2 Plate Tectonics Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
Copyright © by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved. ResourcesChapter menu Chapter 10 Wegener’s Hypothesis Continental drift the hypothesis.
Chapter 4: Plate tectonics The evidence for the theory of plate tectonics has been accumulating for 400 years. It is only since the 1960’s that this theory.
Chapter 17.1 Plate Tectonics.
Earth’s Interior Layers and Continental Drift. Objectives Review Earth’s layers Summarize Wegener’s hypothesis Describe the process of sea-floor spreading.
Part 1 Whose Idea Was This In The First Place?
Chapter Continental Drift a.A hypothesis stating that the continents once formed a single landmass, broke up, and drifted to their present locations.
Chapter 10 Plate Tectonics
Continental Drift.
Continental Drift. Note the Shapes South America & Africa: They Match! What about any others? North America?
Target What is continental drift?. Continental Drift The theory that continents can drift apart from one another and has done so in the past.
Forces behind change Plate tectonics. Focus Questions How does the movement of the earth’s plates cause land features? What evidence supports the theory.
Plate Tectonics ESPS 2015 Hagen.
Continental Drift Chapter 10. Wegener’s Hypothesis  Once a single supercontinent  Started breaking up about 200 mya  Continents drifted to current.
Plate Tectonics. Plate Tectonics is a theory that describes the formation, movements, and interactions of Earth’s plates.
“Restless Continents”. A. One scientist who looked at the pieces of this puzzle was Alfred Wegener. 1. In the early 1900s, he wrote about his hypothesis.
Proving Wegener. Mid Ocean Ridge The Mid-Atlantic Ridge is part of under-seas Mountain Range known as Mid-Ocean Ridge The rocks found on Continents are.
Continental Drift.  The earth is composed of several layers that go through several changes that are driven by processes within the earth. These processes.
Part II The rest of the Story!.   About 20 years after Wegener’s death, the missing mechanism was discovered. Several scientist were mapping the middle.
Plate Tectonics Chapter 10
Bell Questions 9/14/11 1.What do scientists believe the Earth was formed from? 2.How old have scientists calculated the earth to be? 3.List three things.
The Theory of Continental Drift Observations Leading To and Evidences Supporting Theory.
Plate Tectonics Study Guide. Alfred Wegener = Continental Drift Continents were once part of a single land mass called Pangaea (all lands). During the.
Chapter 7 Section 2. What You Will Learn  Describe Wegener’s hypothesis of continental drift.  Explain how sea-floor spreading provides a way for continents.
Section 1: Continental Drift
Earth’s Structure and Pangaea. Review Inside the Earth The Earth has 3 layers. 1.Crust 2.Mantle 3.Core.
Chapter 10 Section 1 Notes Continental Drift.
LECTURE The pictures in this PowerPoint presentation are hyperlinked to a video.
Section 1: Continental Drift
Plate Tectonics Continental Drift.
Bellringer 10/31/16 Make a Cornell notes data sheet.
Chapter 10 Section 1 Notes Continental Drift.
Chapter 10 Section 1 Notes Continental Drift.
Section 1: Continental Drift
Pangaea Nearly 100 years ago, Alfred Wegener proposed that all the continents were once part of a supercontinent called Pangaea. Over time, Pangaea began.
Handout 1 Standard 2-2 Continental Drift.
Chapter 10: Plate Tectonics
Plate Tectonics.
Plate Tectonics plate tect BN.asf.
Restless Continents Chapter 4: Lesson 2 Page95-98.
Alfred Wegener ( ).
Table of Contents Section 1 Continental Drift
The Seafloor.
Continental Drift and Seafloor Spreading
Evidence found and Wegener Redeemed
The mechanism for continental drift
Handout 1 Standard 2-2 Continental Drift.
CHAPTER 10-1 CONTINENTAL DRIFT
Earth Science- The Earth’s Moving Plates
Chapter 7 Section 2.
Chapter 10-1 Continental Drift.
Wegener’s Hypothesis.
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 10 Section 1

Continental Drift Objectives Summarize Wegner’s hypothesis of continental drift Describe the process of sea floor spreading Identify how paleomagnetism provides support for the idea of sea floor spreading Explain how sea-floor spreading provides a mechanism for continental drift

Continental Drift One of the most exciting recent theories in Earth Science began with observations made over 400 years ago As early explorers sailed the globe they collected information on the continents coastlines Map makers used this information to make the first reliable world maps

Continental Drift In 1912 a German scientist named Alfred Wegner proposed the hypothesis of continental drift He hypothesized that the continents all formed one land mass called a super continent, at one time and then began to break apart about 250 million years ago, during the Mesozoic Era

Continental Drift In addition to the similarities of the coastlines Wegner proposed that fossil evidence should exist between areas that once were connected A identical fossil of Mesoasaurus was discovered in both South America and Western Africa

Continental Drift The theory of continental drift is also supported by the age, type, and shapes of the rocks found on the edges of divergent continents

Continental Drift Changes in climate patterns also suggest that continents are not where they once were South Africa displays evidence of glacial activity Fossils of tropical plants found on Antarctica

Continental Drift Despite the evidence Wegner had many scientists at the time rejected his hypothesis of continental drift He spent the rest of his life trying to find the mechanism for continental drift, but died before the discovery occurred

Continental Drift Evidence for Wegner’s theory came two decades after his death Scientists who set out to map the Mid-Atlantic Ridge made some discoveries Amount of sediment near the ridge is less than further away Radiometric dating of rocks showed rocks get older as the move away from the ridge Ocean rocks are much younger than continental rocks

Continental Drift In the 1950’s geologist Henry Hess proposed that the mechanism for Wegner’s hypothesis was sea floor spreading At the center of the valley is a rift were new magma is rising and cooling creating new sea floor

Continental Drift If you have ever used a compass you know Earth has a magnetic pull As magma cools the iron rich minerals in the magma align to Earth’s magnetic field and it is permanent (paleomagnetism)

Continental Drift Earth’s magnetic field has not always pointed north Rocks with normal polarity have the same dating periods as other normal polarity rocks The same holds true for rocks with reverse polarity (south aliened)

Continental Drift The stripped pattern on one side of the mid ocean ridge mirrors the pattern on the other side of the ridge Age of the ocean rocks are symmetrical

Continental Drift Rocks on land have magnetic symmetry also Similar layers and age in rocks Further proof verifying Wegener's hypothesis