Geography 12 Plate Tectonics Ms. Inden. Take a look at this picture of the Ring of Fire! The area...
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Transcript of Geography 12 Plate Tectonics Ms. Inden. Take a look at this picture of the Ring of Fire! The area...
Take a look at this picture of the Ring of Fire! The area that we are discussing is the darker peachy-pink area that surrounds the Pacific Ocean.
The Ring of Fire is where
a lot of volcanoes
and earthquakes occur. WHY
HERE??
The earth’s crust
• The outer crust of the Earth is a thin layer, like the shell of an egg.
• Continental crust is called SIAL
• Under it, and also the ocean floor is called SIMA
Plate Tectonics
• The crust is broken into pieces, or plates
• At the edges of these plates, you will find most of the world’s volcanoes and earthquakes
• The reason is that these plates are MOVING! (more on that in a few slides)
You are here!
Pacific Ocean
Atlantic Ocean
Edges of the plates are in yellow, Earthquakes of the
last 100 years are in red
This is a map of the
Earth – Can you see it?
Africa
Remember that the earth is made up of
broken plates of crust?
The area surrounding the Pacific Ocean is known as the Ring of Fire, because of the volcanoes that occur
around its edges – mainly because of the type of plate boundary – subduction – we’ll learn more about
that.
Ring of Fire
Volcanoes also happen over hotspots – not just where plates come together .
These places are called hot spots – like Hawaii and the Galapagos Islands.
RED DOTS ARE HOT SPOTS
Here are the Earth’s Plates on a map of the world
What plates are next to the British Columbia and the rest of North America (i.e., next to California and the San Andreas Fault?)
Remember that these plates are moving? How?
• Idea: Convection Currents:
Cooled material sinks back down, heats and rises again.
Because the plates move, they create mountains,
trenches, volcanoes, earthquakes
So, these currents of rising and then sinking molten rock (moving very slowly) acts like conveyor belts that move the
plates around – this is the theory of plate tectonics
Here, one plate dives under the other, which creates fold mountains and volcanoes like Mt. St. Helen’s, Mt. Baker, Mt. Bachelor – a row, or arc of volcanoes.
Here, plates slide past each other, creating the San Andreas Fault.
Here are pictures showing the North American land forms we just looked at:
San Andreas Transform Fault
Mt. Bachelor
Mt. St. Helen’s
Mt. Hood
• Diverge means to pull apart• Converge – means to come together• Transform faults slide past each other
When plates pull apart this creates a ridge – because magma wells up• One major diverging
plate is the mid-Atlantic Ridge
• Mid means middle, and the Atlantic is the ocean, right?
• So, this mountain ridge is in the middle of the Atlantic
Transform Faults – plates or faults sliding past each other
• The big one is the San Andreas Fault in California
Two types of land forms occur when plates converge: 1. Subduction
Zone• Remember that converge means to come
together
• Called subduction:– where an ocean plate dives under a continental plate
• Creates a trench – like along the Andes Mountains, and helps build the mountains
• See how it creates volcanoes there – like Mt. St. Helens, Mt. Bachelor, Mt. Baker, Mt. Hood
Two types of land forms occur when plates converge: 2. Fold
Mountains• Remember that converge means to
come together
• Sometimes this creates mountains – like the Rockies, and the Himalayas
This is how BC was formed and we live on a high plateau ourselves
Terms for Volcanoes
• Molten or melted rock that is below the surface is called magma
• Molten or melted rock at the earth’s surface is called lava
• Volcanic ash also comes out of the volcano
When Mt. St. Helens erupted in 1980, ash and light rock was
blown north and west as far as the Manitoba/Ontario border
What is an earthquake?
• Earthquakes happen when the earth (rock masses) moves suddenly along a crack or fault in the earth’s crust
• Faults - cracks or breaks in the earth’s surface
• The movements of the earth can be up and down, and side to side