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Published byScarlett Gregory Modified over 8 years ago
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Bell Ringer 2/8/2016 Which plate is thicker and less dense? Continental Plate or Oceanic Plate
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Earth’s crust is divided into plates. These plates “ride around” on top of the asthenosphere, which is slowly moving solid layer.
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Lithospheric plates are not necessarily continents. They can contain the continental crust on a piece of oceanic to make up the plate. Plates move 3-10 cm/year
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Convection currents are circulations in the asthenosphere that help move the plates around. Hot, less dense rock rises while cool, more dense rock sinks.
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Earthquakes and volcanoes occurs at plate boundaries where the most tectonic activity is occurring. Ring of Fire: Area of volcanic activity surrounding the Pacific Mount St. Helens Active Volcanoes Mount St. Helens 2
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3 Types of Plate Boundaries 1. Divergent : when two plates spread apart a) Mid-Ocean Ridges: Mountain ranges in the middle of oceans b) Rift Valleys: Deep valleys formed from separating plates Animation
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Divergent Boundary: Mid-Ocean Ridge This is occurring in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, where a chain of underwater mountains is forming. This is where new ocean floor is being formed and the mountain chain is known as the Mid-Atlantic Ridge.
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Bell Ringer 2/9/2016 What ocean does the “Ring of Fire” surround?
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3 Types of Plate Boundaries 2. Convergent : when two plates collide 3 Types of convergent boundaries
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Types of Convergent Boundaries A. Oceanic-Oceanic: When two plates with oceanic crust collide The more dense plate will subduct (sink) beneath the other This forms a trench, or deep valley where the two plates meet Volcanic island arcs form
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Types of Convergent Boundaries B. Continental-Continental: when two plates with continental crust collide Neither plate subducts because both have similar densities Crust “smushes” together to form mountains Plate Tectonics
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Types of Convergent Boundaries C. Continental- Oceanic : When one plate has oceanic crust on it and the other has continental crust on it
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The plate with more dense oceanic crust on it subducts beneath the plate with less dense continental crust on it, again forming a trench (deep valley) Mountains form when the continental crust is pushed upward or when magma rises to the surface from the melting oceanic crust in the Earth to form volcanoes.
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3 Types of Plate Boundaries 3. Transform : occurs when two plates slip past one another San Andreas Fault
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Evidence of Plate Tectonics 1. Earthquakes – occur near plate boundaries 2. Volcanoes – also occur near plate boundaries 3. Puzzle-like fit of the continents
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4. Fossils and rocks match up on separated continents in terms of age and origin 5. Mountain Ranges match up on separated continents 6. Similar minerals are found on separated continents
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7. Climate record – glacial evidence in the present-day tropics and vice versa › Ex: The southern tip of Africa has glacial evidence
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4 Ways that rock layers are changed: 1. Folding: Compression causes layers to bend 2. Tilting: Layer of strata get tipped
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3. Faulting: Rocks are displaced along a crack called a fault 4. Uplift: Rock layers get pushed up many meters
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