Plate Tectonics Wrap-Up Fit of the Continents
Paleoclimate & Glaciers Ancient climatic zones and large glaciated areas match up.
Fossil Record
Glossopteris Fossils These seeds are very large and do not float in water, so how could they have survived transport to all these different continents?
Ancient mountain chains match up.
Bathymetry
Magnetic Anomalies in Seafloor
Earthquakes
Volcanoes
Lithospheric Plates Fig 4.3
The Theory of Plate Tectonics The continents are riding along on tectonic plates, which move across the Earth’s surface driven by mantle convection (the very slow “boiling” of the mantle beneath the crust).
Three types of plate boundaries Divergent – plates are moving apart from one another. Ex: Mid-Ocean Ridges Convergent – plates are colliding with one another. Ex: Nazca plate and South American plate pushing up the Andes. Ex: Indian plate and Asian plate colliding to form the Himalayas Transform – plates are sliding past one another Ex: Pacific plate and North American plate moving past one another along the San Andreas Fault
Divergent boundaries Hot mantle material rises up and causes the crust to thin and move apart. Mainly found in the middle of oceans shallow, weak earthquakes very few volcanoes high topography on the sea floor the youngest sea floor crust
Mid-Atlantic Rift in Iceland
Convergent boundaries Deep trench on ocean side and then high elevations toward continent. Shallow to deep earthquakes as you move toward continent. Arc of volcanoes on the continent side. No age relationship
Convergent boundaries Ocean crust always moves below continental crust because ocean rocks (basalts) are more dense than continental rocks (granites).
Transform Boundaries Lots of shallow earthquakes (some very strong) dispersed along the boundary. San Andreas Fault