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Published byMariah Lucas Modified over 8 years ago
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Alfred Wegener – developed the Continental Drift hypothesis The continents were once joined as one single “supercontinent” Pangea was the name given by Wegener for the connected large landmass (means “all land”)
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A. Continental Drift Similarities in the coastlines of South America and Africa raised questions about “one big land mass”
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Evidence to support the Continental Drift The coasts of different continents look similar Especially South America and Africa Similar rock formations and coal deposits found on different continents
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Similar fossils on different continents Several mountain belts end at a coastline but reappear on a landmass across the ocean Appalachian Mountains run NE through the Eastern US Similar mountains of the same age and same type of rocks are found in British Isles When put together, they form a continuous chain
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Evidence of past tropical climates in the Antarctic. Fossils of Glossopteris, a fern-like tropical plant found in colder areas Arctic climates (glacier marks) in the tropics.
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Wegener’s Theory was heavily criticized He could not provide evidence or the cause of the force that moved the continents to their current positions A new theory was born – Plate Tectonics!
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B. Plate Tectonics The geological theory that states the pieces of Earth’s lithosphere are in constant slow motion This is driven by currents in the asthenosphere The lithosphere is divided into segments called plates which effect each other Collide Pull apart Grind past each other
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These movements affect Earth’s surface Volcanoes & Earthquakes Mountains & Valleys Mid-Ocean Ridges & Deep Sea Trenches
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Plate Boundaries & Faults The edges of each piece of a plate is called a boundary The cracks in the Earth’s crust along these boundaries are called faults
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Types of Plate Boundaries Transform Fault Boundaries 2 plates grind past each other without creating nor destroying the Earth’s crust San Andreas Fault in California These can create NEW PLATE boundaries Responsible for Earthquakes
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Divergent Plate Boundaries When 2 plates move apart or divide Creates Mid-Ocean Ridges Mid-Atlantic Ridge formed by divergent boundaries Longest chain of mountains/volcanoes in the world even though its all under water
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Seafloor spreading – new oceanic lithosphere produced Rift valleys also formed – plate separation on land Rio Grand and Great Rift Valley
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Convergent Plate Boundaries When 2 plates come together Forms deep water trenches The canyon forms where the ocean crust plunges back The more dense and older rock sinks – called subduction Andes, Cascades, Sierra Nevadas
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Can form volcanoes The subducted plate melts The melted rock is less dense and rises to create the volcano
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C. Causes of Plate Motion Slab Pull Old ocean crust that is more dense sinks into the asthenosphere and pulls some of the lithosphere with it Ridge Push Oceanic lithosphere slides down the sides of an oceanic ridge (gravity)
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Mantle Convection Mantle is the middle layer of the Earth It is constantly cooled and heated causing uneven heating of the Earth It’s like the crust “floats” on the mantle
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D. The Earth’s Major Plates
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