3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

56
03:32 PM Plate Tectonics

Transcript of 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

Page 1: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Plate Tectonics

Page 2: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Plate Tectonics

Page 3: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Mechanism of Plate Tectonics

Page 4: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Cross-section of Atlantic Ocean

Page 5: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Directions and Rates of Plate Motion

Page 6: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

By about 1900, advances in geology, biology and geochemistry (primarily radioactivity)

Earth is billions of years old. Earth is dynamic - The rocks and landforms that we see today evolved over a very long history, including:

• mountain building• erosion• sedimentation• metamorphism• etc.

Geology in the Early 1900’s

Page 7: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Geologic Time Scale

4.5 Billion

540 Million (= 0.540 Billion)

540 Million

Page 8: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Age of the EarthOldest Rocks on Earth(3.9-4.0)

4.6BillionYears

20 million years

6,000 years1,000

10 billion

10,000

100,000

1,000,000

10,000,000

100 million

1 billion

Page 9: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

By about 1900, advances in geology, biology and geochemistry (primarily radioactivity)

Earth is billions of years old. Earth is dynamic - The rocks and landforms that we see today evolved over a very long history, including:

• mountain building• erosion• sedimentation• metamorphism• etc.

However, until the second half of the 20th century, most models of the evolution of the Earth involved:

Vertical Tectonics

Very few geologists believed that large scale horizontal motions could

occur. It was thought that the physical properties of Earth materials could not permit such motions.

Continental Drift ??

Page 10: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Very few geologists believed that large scale horizontal motions could occur.

It was thought that the physical properties of Earth materials could not permit such motions.

Until the second half of the 20th century, most models of the evolution of the Earth involved:

Vertical Tectonics

Continental Drift ??

Page 11: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Rock Cycle

Page 12: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Mountain Building

and Erosion

Page 13: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM Alfred Wegener

Page 14: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

1912-1915: Continental drift proposed by Alfred Wegener

1915-1930: Continental drift debated

1930-1950: Stalemate

1950-1960: Revival of interest in continental drift

• Paleomagnetism

• Ocean Floor Exploration (Mid-ocean ridges/young age of oceanic

crust)

1962: High heat flow over mid-ocean ridges/convection (H. Hess)

1963: Magnetic anomalies parallel to mid-ocean ridges (F. Vine and D.

Matthews)

1965: Transform faults and earthquake locations in ocean basins (J.T.

Wilson)

1968: Earthquake locations and direction of earthquake motion

consistent

with plate motion (J. Oliver, B. Isacks and L. Sykes)

1970-?: Plate tectonics accepted by most geoscientists

Stages in the Development of Plate Tectonics

Page 15: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Although several people had proposed continental drift as far back as the 1600’s, such an hypothesis was not generally accepted.

In 1912, a German climatologist named Afred Wegener published a book entitled Origin of Continents and Oceans in which he proposed an hypothesis of continental drift and listed supporting evidence for it.

Wegener’s evidence came from:

Reconstruction of ancient climates

Similar fossils on widely separated continents

Matching rock structures across ocean basins

Geometrical fit of continental margins

Alfred Wegener and Continental Drift

Page 16: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Directions and Rates of Plate Motion

Page 17: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Wegener proposed that an original super-continent that he called Pangaea (“all land”) existed before continental drift began about 180 million years ago.

Page 18: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Page 19: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

According to Wegener’s hypothesis, South America and Africa began to drift apart about 70 million years ago.

Page 20: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Breakup of Pangaea

Page 21: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Geophysicists countered Wegener’s argument: They argued that physical properties of Earth materials would not permit that much horizontal motion.

Page 22: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

1912-1915: Continental drift proposed by Alfred Wegener

1915-1930: Continental drift debated

1930-1950: Stalemate

1950-1960: Revival of interest in continental drift

• Paleomagnetism

• Ocean Floor Exploration (Mid-ocean ridges/young age of oceanic

crust)

1962: High heat flow over mid-ocean ridges/convection (H. Hess)

1963: Magnetic anomalies parallel to mid-ocean ridges (F. Vine and D.

Matthews)

1965: Transform faults and earthquake locations in ocean basins (J.T.

Wilson)

1968: Earthquake locations and direction of earthquake motion

consistent

with plate motion (J. Oliver, B. Isacks and L. Sykes)

1970-?: Plate tectonics accepted by most geoscientists

Stages in the Development of Plate Tectonics

Page 23: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Reconstruction of ancient climates

Similar fossils on widely separated

continents

Matching rock structures across ocean

basins

Geometrical fit of continental margins

Wegener’s Evidence for Continental Drift

Page 24: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Glacial Ice

Today

18,000 years ago

Page 25: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Pangaea - Glacial Ice

Page 26: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Reconstruction of Ancient Climates

Page 27: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Climate Zones

Page 28: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Similar Fossils

Page 29: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Fossil Distribution

Page 30: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Explanation of Fossil Evidence

Page 31: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Similar Rock Structures

Page 32: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Fig. 3.06a

W. W. Norton. Modified from Hurley.

Page 33: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

W. W. Norton

Page 34: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Reconstruction of Pangaea

Page 35: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

1912-1915: Continental drift proposed by Alfred Wegener

1915-1930: Continental drift debated

1930-1950: Stalemate

1950-1960: Revival of interest in continental drift

• Paleomagnetism

• Ocean Floor Exploration (Mid-ocean ridges/young age of oceanic

crust)

1962: High heat flow over mid-ocean ridges/convection (H. Hess)

1963: Magnetic anomalies parallel to mid-ocean ridges (F. Vine and D.

Matthews)

1965: Transform faults and earthquake locations in ocean basins (J.T.

Wilson)

1968: Earthquake locations and direction of earthquake motion

consistent

with plate motion (J. Oliver, B. Isacks and L. Sykes)

1970-?: Plate tectonics accepted by most geoscientists

Stages in the Development of Plate Tectonics

Page 36: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Fossil Distribution

Page 37: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Wegener’s Mechanism forContinental Drift

Page 38: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

The Earth’s Crust

Page 39: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

By the early 1900’s, seismologists had already discerned the general structure and physical properties of the Earth’s interior.

Page 40: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

P and S Wave Paths

Page 41: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Page 42: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

M=7.6, ∆=97°

Boston, Massachusetts - First Wave Arrives 4:04 (13 minutes)

Magnitude 7.6 PAKISTAN, October 08, 2005 at 03:51 UTC

Page 43: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Distanced measured in degrees from epicenter.

Travel-time versus Distance

Page 44: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

M=6.7, ∆=25°

Magnitude 6.8 CAYMAN ISLANDS, December 14, 2004 at 23:20 UTC

Boston, Massachusetts - First Wave Arrives 23:26 (6 minutes)

Page 45: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

M=7.8, ∆=62°

Magnitude 7.8 TARAPACA, CHILE, June 13, 2005 22:45 UTC

Boston, Massachusetts - First Wave Arrives 22:55 (10 minutes)

Page 46: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Page 47: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

6371 km

1

2

3

Path Distance (km) Time (sec) Velocity

1 2,758 360 7.7 km/sec 2 6,563 600 10.9 km/sec 3 9,543 780 12.2 km/sec

Page 48: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Crust6-7 km/sec

Mantle8-13 km/sec

Outer Core8-10 km/sec

Inner Core10-11 km/sec

P-wave Velocitie

s

Page 49: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Crust6-7 km/sec

Mantle8-13 km/sec

Outer Core8-10 km/sec

Inner Core10-11 km/sec

P-wave Velocities

Air: 0.3Water: 1.4Concrete: 3.6Granite: 5.5-6.0Iron: 5.8Aluminum: 6.6

Page 50: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Crust:Granite/Basalt

Mantle:Peridotite

Outer Core:Liquid Iron

Inner Core:Solid Iron

Composition of Earth’s Interior

Page 51: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

1909 - Andrija Mohorovicic analysed records of an earthquake in Croatia - discovered the existence of the “mantle” underneath the continental “crust”.

Page 52: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

GraniteBasaltPeridotite

Page 53: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Wegener’s Mechanism forContinental Drift

Page 54: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

Mechanism of Plate Tectonics

Page 55: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM

1912-1915: Continental drift proposed by Alfred Wegener

1915-1930: Continental drift debated

1930-1950: Stalemate

1950-1960: Revival of interest in continental drift

• Paleomagnetism

• Ocean Floor Exploration (Mid-ocean ridges/young age of oceanic

crust)

1962: High heat flow over mid-ocean ridges/convection (H. Hess)

1963: Magnetic anomalies parallel to mid-ocean ridges (F. Vine and D.

Matthews)

1965: Transform faults and earthquake locations in ocean basins (J.T.

Wilson)

1968: Earthquake locations and direction of earthquake motion

consistent

with plate motion (J. Oliver, B. Isacks and L. Sykes)

1970-?: Plate tectonics accepted by most geoscientists

Stages in the Development of Plate Tectonics

Page 56: 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics. 3:48 AM Plate Tectonics.

01:36 AM