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Ch 10 Plate Tectonics A Moonenland Production A subsidiary of Moonco. Inc
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Continental Drift Alfred Wegener (1912) German Meteorologist Continents moved slowly to their current locations. Pangaea- the single landmass of Earth that broke apart about 200mya. “All Land”
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Evidence Puzzle-like Fit Coastlines of continents fit together like puzzle pieces. Examples: S.America & Africa
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Fossil Clues Certain fossils of ancient animals & plants are found on distant landmasses. Freshwater/land-dwelling reptile Mesosaurus fossils have been found on South America & Africa.
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Fossils of the ancient plant Glossopteris were found in Africa, South America, Australia, India, & Antarctica.
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Climate Clues -Fossils of warm climate plants were found in present-day cold climates. (Coal) -Rocks deposited by glaciers from the ice ages have been found in present-day warm climates.
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Rock Clues Similar rock structures are found on different continents separated by oceans. -Appalachian mountains of the USA are similar to mountains found in Greenland & western Europe -Rocks of South America match those in Africa
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Main objection to Wegener’s hypothesis was its inability to provide a mechanism for the movement of the continents.
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Seafloor Spreading Hypothesis Radio waves were used to map the ocean floor. Mid-ocean Ridges- underwater mtn ranges
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Less dense magma flows sideways dragging the seafloor along. As the seafloor spread apart, magma flows up through cracks in at the ridge forming new rock.
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Rift Valley Midocean Ridge
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Evidence Drilling – Ocean floor rock samples show that the age of the rock gets older the further the rock is from the mid-ocean ridge
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Magnetism – Changes in the magnetic alignment of the Earth are found in alternating bands in the seafloor rock.
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Theory of Plate Tectonics Theory Combined theory of Continental Drift & Seafloor Spreading. Earth’s crust & upper mantle (lithosphere) are broken into plates and move around on a plastic-like layer of the mantle (asthenosphere.)
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Seven major plates: Pacific (largest) N. American S. American African Eurasian Australian Antarctic
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Plate Boundaries Divergent Boundaries –Two plates spread apart. –Where seafloor spreading occurs. –New crust is formed. Ex: Mid-Atlantic Ridge
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Convergent Boundaries –Two plates come together (collide) –Oceanic plate will sink under a continental plate (subduction) producing a deep trench. Ex: Andes & Cascades
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– Two oceanic plates will converge resulting in a volcanic island arc. Ex: Mariana Islands
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– Two continental plates will converge & crumple forming folded mountains. Ex: Himalayas, Appalachians, & Alps
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Transform Fault Boundary – Two plates slide past each other. – Move at different rates. – Also known as strike-slip faults. Ex: San Andreas Fault
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Causes (Hypothesis) Convection Currents –Hot magma rises in the mantle. –Magma hits the crust & cools. –Cooling magma sinks dragging the lithospheric plate with it (centimeters.) –Magma sinks into the mantle & reheats.
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Features Formed by Tectonics Faults – Cracks in the tectonic plates caused by stress. – Plate boundaries are also faults. – Movement along faults cause earthquakes.
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Volcanoes Magma produced by friction during subduction oozes up through the crust, erupts, & forms volcanoes.
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Mountains Convergent & Divergent boundaries form mountains. Process of mountain building is called orogenesis. -Volcanic Mountains
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Folded Mountains o Horizontal rock layers are squeezed from opposite sides, causing them to buckle & fold.EX: Himalayans & Appalachians
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Fault-block Mountains: Huge, tilted blocks of rock that are separated by faults.EX: Sierra Nevada
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Upwarped Mountains- blocks of Earth’s crust are pushed up by forces inside the Earth. (Domes) EX: Rocky Mountains
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