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Published byBrittney Terry Modified over 8 years ago
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The Earth
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Layers of the Earth CRUST MANTLE OUTER CORE INNER CORE
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Layers of the Earth(p90) CRUST (Lithosphere) –outermost layer –thinnest layer (5-70km thick) –consists of loose rocks & soil –1% of Earth’s mass
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Layers of the Earth MANTLE (Asthenosphere) -layer on which pieces of lithosphere move (solid rock that moves) -thickest layer (2900km thick) -66% of earth’s mass
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Layers of the Earth CORE –2 parts of the core 1) Outer Core=liquid iron and nickel spinning 2) Inner Core=solid layer of iron and nickel -33% of Earth’s mass
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How do we know? Seismic waves produced by earthquakes travel at different speeds through solid rock and liquids
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2 Types of Crust Continental= dry land Oceanic= ocean floor
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Continental Drift (p95) Theory that continents can drift apart from one another and have done so in the past Pangaea= single landmass
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ALFRED WEGENER THEORY OF CONTINENTAL DRIFT Found evidence for PANGAEA and proposed the theory of continental drift.
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Continents “fit together” like puzzle pieces
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WEGENER’S EVIDENCE Fossil Evidence fossils are remains of living things that lived long ago. similar fossils have been discovered in matching coastlines on different continents.
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WEGENER’S EVIDENCE Mountains –Some mountain ranges on different continents seem to match. Ex: ranges in Canada match Norway and Sweden Ex: Appalachian Mtn. match UK mtn
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WEGENER’S EVIDENCE Climatic evidence such as glacial deposits in areas that are now close to the Equator
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Theory of Plate Tectonics Theory that pieces of lithosphere move around on top of the asthenosphere
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How do the plates move? CONVECTION CURRENTS Hot material from deep within the Earth rises while cooler material near the surface sinks
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How do we know? Sea-floor spreading =new ocean floor is created as two lithospheric plates pull away from one another.
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So the plates move. Now What? As the plates move, they produce changes in Earth’s surface, including volcanoes, earthquakes, mountain ranges, and deep- ocean trenches.
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Plate Boundaries The edges of different pieces of The lithosphere meet at lines called plate boundaries
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3 Types of Plate Boundaries Divergent Convergent Transform
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3 Types of Boundaries Divergent boundary= two plates move apart Magma rises and creates new crust or seafloor Ex: sea-floor spreading or a rift Boundary animation
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3 Types of Boundaries Convergent= when two tectonic plates push into one another.
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Convergent Boundaries Continental vs. Continental Continental vs. Oceanic Oceanic vs. Oceanic
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Continental vs. Continental When two continental crustal plates collide, the continents buckle upward and form mountains. Himalayas- Asia
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Continental vs. Oceanic The oceanic plate slides under the continental plate. The continental crust crumbles and forms new mountains or volcanoes. Subduction Zone
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Oceanic vs. Oceanic Two oceanic plates collide, one of the oceanic plates slides under the other. oceanic plates slides also called a subduction zone subduction zone
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Transform boundary When two tectonic plates slide past each other horizontally Produces? Earthquakes
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San Andreas Fault
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