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Plate Tectonics Spectra of Science Amole 2013
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Continental Drift Proposed by Alfred Wegener in 1915. Supercontinent Pangaea started to break up about 200 million years ago. Continents "drifted" to their present positions.
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Evidence Some continents coastlines seem to “fit” together Fossils match across oceans Rock types and structures match across oceans Ancient glacial features
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Evidence
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Plate Tectonics In 1965, J. Wilson Earth’s lithosphere is broken into sections called plates. Plates are always shifting and moving. Movement is driven by convection currents in the mantle.
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Earth’s Layers
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The Plates
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Types of Plate Boundaries Convergent –Push together Divergent –Pull apart Transform –Slide past one another
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Convergent Boundaries Oceanic- Continental Oceanic is denser and sinks below continental Creates a subduction zone Creates trenches, volcanic mountain arc
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Mt. St. Helens, Washington
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Convergent Boundaries Oceanic- Oceanic Oceanic being of equal densities both “sink” Creates a subduction zone Creates trenches, island arc
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Japanese Islands- Island Arc
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Convergent Boundaries Continental- Continental Continentals being of equal densities both “push up” Creates folded mountains
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Himalayas, Asia
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Divergent Boundaries Plates move away from each other Create gaps that new magma rises through making new crust Cause of sea-floor spreading Creates rift valleys and the Mid-Oceanic Ridge
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Transform Boundaries Plates slide past each other Creates earthquakes
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San Andres Fault, CA
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Animations http://www.seed.slb.com/flash/science/featu res/earth/livingplanet/plate_boundaries/en/i ndex.html?width=570&height=475&popup=t ruehttp://www.seed.slb.com/flash/science/featu res/earth/livingplanet/plate_boundaries/en/i ndex.html?width=570&height=475&popup=t rue
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