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Published byCharles Willis Modified over 8 years ago
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Layers of the Earth Subtitle
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The Earth is Made up of Three Layers ▪ The Core ▪ The Mantle ▪ The Crust
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The Core-The Center ▪ The core makes up 31% of the total mass of Earth ▪ The Core is made up of mostly Iron metal. ▪ The inner layer of the core is solid ▪ The outer layer of the core is liquid. Inner Core Outer Core
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The Mantle- The Middle ▪ The Mantle is the biggest portion of the Earth ▪ It is 68% of the Earth’s mass ▪ The mantle is rock, BUT it is extremely soft, very hot, and it moves! ▪ The two outer layers of the mantle play an important role in plate tectonics. Mantle
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The Mantle- It’s Outer Layers ▪ Lithosphere is made of both the upper mantle and the crust. ▪ Broken into 15 tectonic plates ▪ Layer is solid and strong ▪ Asthenosphere is found below the lithosphere. ▪ Rocks are partially molten meaning they behave like a liquid. ▪ This “liquid” is what the Earth’s crust floats on top of. ▪ Layer is flexible, it behaves almost like silly putty. How the Mantle Moves the Plates
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The Crust- The Outside ▪ The crust is the thinnest portion of the Earth representing 1% of it’s mass ▪ If the Earth was an avocado the crust would be the skin of the avocado. ▪ It is made up of solid rocks and minerals ▪ Contains all life on the planet ▪ There are 2 types of crust: ▪ oceanic ▪ continental Crust
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Oceanic vs Continental Oceanic ▪ Oldest Oceanic Rock is 200 million years old ▪ Density of this rock is 3.0 g/cm 3 ▪ 3 – 8 miles thick ▪ Made of Basalt Rock Continental ▪ Oldest Continental Rock is 4 billion years old ▪ Density of this rock is 2.7 g/cm 3 ▪ Can be up to 22 miles thick ▪ Made mostly of Granite
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Dating Oceanic & Continental Rocks ▪ Why do you think that oceanic rocks are so much younger than continental rocks? (look at the image below, what is happening to the oceanic crust?)
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Finding the Age of Ancient Things ▪ Logically we can see now that because Oceanic Crust is more dense than Continental Crust AND because Oceanic Crust is re-absorbed into the Mantle at Subduction Zones between plates, it makes sense that Oceanic Crust is younger than Continental Crust…. ▪ BUT, How can scientists possibly know the actual ages of these plates?!?
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Radioactive Dating Radioactive Dating uses Radioisotopes to determine ages ▪ Radioisotopes have nuclei that are unstable ▪ Unstable nuclei naturally lose energy and protons allowing them to decay into a more stable element ▪ The is called radioactive decay
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Radioactive Decay ▪ Radioisotopes decay at a constant rate, no matter the temperature or pressure ▪ The rate at which radioisotopes decay is called its half-life ▪ The length of time that it takes for half of the parent isotope to decay into the daughter isotope ▪ Age is determined by measuring the ratio of parent isotope to daughter isotope
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Which radioisotope to use? ▪ Different radioisotopes have different half lives ▪ Scientist use radioisotopes with longer half lives to date older rocks ▪ Uranium -235 is used to date older rocks like those at the bottom of the Grand Canyon ▪ Carbon-14 is used to date younger rocks such as those at the top of the Grand Canyon
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Oceanic & Continental Rock Ages ▪ Oldest oceanic rock is 200 million years old ▪ Oldest continental rock is 4 billion years old
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