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Chapter 10 Plate Tectonics

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1 Chapter 10 Plate Tectonics

2 Section 1: Continental Drift
If you look at a map of Earth’s surface, you can see that the edges of some continents look as though they could fit together like a puzzle. Continental drift- this is a hypothesis that the continents have moved slowly to their current locations.

3 Alfred Wegener The theory of continental drift came from a German meteorologist by the name of Alfred Wegener.

4 Pangaea

5 Pangaea Wegener suggested that all continents once were connected as one large landmass, that broke apart about 200 million years ago. He called the large landmass pangaea.

6 Controversy Although many scientists and geologists accept this theory today, many did not in his time. It wasn’t until after his death in that his theory was accepted. He lacked the explanation of how the continents drifted apart. Think for yourself!

7 Fossil Clues Fossils of the reptile Mesosaurus have been found in South America and Africa. This swimming reptile lived in freshwater and on land. How could fossils of the Mesosaurus be found on land areas separated by a large ocean of salt water?

8 Mesosaurus

9 Mesosaurus

10 Glossopteris Another fossil that supports the hypothesis of continental drift is glossopteris. This fossil has been found all over the world including Antarctica.

11 Glossopteris

12 Glossopteris

13 Used in Climate Change? Wegener used continental drift to also explain evidence of changing climates. For example, fossils of warm weather plants were found on the island of Spitsbergen in the Arctic Ocean. He hypothesized that Spitsbergen drifted from tropical regions to the arctic.

14 Section 2: Seafloor Spreading

15 Harry Hess In the early 1960s ( groovy period) Princeton University scientist Harry Hess suggested an explanation. His now famous theory is known as seafloor spreading. Hess proposed that hot, less dense material below Earth’s crust rises toward the surface at the mid- ocean ridges. Then it flows sideways, carrying the seafloor away from the ridge in both directions.

16 Harry Hess

17 Seafloor spreading continued
As the seafloor spreads apart, magma is forced upward and flows from the cracks. It becomes solid as it cools and forms new seafloor!

18 Magnetic Time Scale Iron bearing minerals, such as magnetite, that are found in the rocks of the seafloor can record Earth’s magnetic field direction when they form. Whenever Earth’s magnetic field reverses, newly forming iron minerals will record the magnetic reversal.

19 Magnetometer A magnetometer is a sensing device that detects magnetic fields. Scientists found that rocks on the ocean floor show many periods of magnetic reversal. The magnetic alignment in the rocks reverses back and forth over time in strips parallel to the mid- ocean ridges.

20 Section 3: Theory of Plate Tectonics
In the 1960s, scientists developed a new theory that combined continental drift and seafloor spreading. According to the theory of plate tectonics. This is when Earth’s crust and part of the upper mantle are broken into sections. These sections are called plates. The plates move on the plasticlike layer of the mantle.

21 Lithosphere The lithosphere is simply the crust and a part of the upper mantle. This rigid layer is about 100km thick and generally is less dense than material underneath.

22 Asthenosphere The asthenosphere is the plasticlike layers below the lithosphere. The lithosphere floats and moves around on top of the asthenosphere.

23 Divergent Boundary This is when two plates are moving apart from eachother.

24 Convergent Boundary This is when two plates move together.

25 Subduction Zone This is where an oceanic plate subducts or goes down, into the mantle.

26 Transform Boundary This happens when two plates slide past one another.

27 Convection Current This is the entire cycle of heating, rising, cooling, and sinking of in this case molten rock.

28


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