Plate Tectonics
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Transcript of Plate Tectonics
PLATE TECTONICSBy: Kayla Bevis
WHAT ARE PLATE TECTONICS
Plate tectonics is the study of how the Earth's plates are driven and shaped by geological forces that keep them in constant motion.
THE CREATOR OF PLATE TECTONICS
Born on November 1, 1880, Alfred Lothar Wegener earned a Ph.D in astronomy from the University of Berlin in 1904. However he had always been interested in geophysics and also became fascinated with the developing fields of meteorology and climatology.
THE CREATOR OF PLATE TECTONICS PT 2During his life, Wegener
made several key contributions to meteorology: he pioneered the use of balloons to track air circulation, and wrote a textbook that became standard throughout Germany.
WHAT EFFECTS DID PLATE TECTONICS HAVE Plate tectonics can cause a number of things. This includes
earthquakes when two plates grind together. Earthquakes occur along fault line. Which is why California gets a lot of earthquakes. It is along the San Andreas Fault. Plate tectonics can also cause mountains and volcanoes when one plate goes under another one. Volcanoes have caused more casualties than other types of volcanoes. Probably because there are more of them, and also because they form steep piles of ash and lava, where landslides and mudslides can occur frequently.
ALFRED WEGENER AFFECTED THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
In the course of Pangaea's formation, what is now North America smashed into northwestern Africa, forming a vast mountain range. Traces of these mountains still can be found on a belt stretching from the southern United States to northern Europe, including the Appalachians.
ALFRED'S DISCOVERY
Alfred Wegener was also accomplished in Meteorology. Usually, meteorologists start out as geologists. Alfred Wegener needed knowledge of meteorology to come up with his pengae theory because in geology the whole purpose is to study rocks and minerals to determine the earth’s history and future. But our earth survives from the sun, and the weather.
ALFRED'S DISCOVERY PT 2
But our earth survives from the sun, and the weather. In Meteorology, all the energy that reaches earth comes from the sun, and then it is distributed by different atmospheric processes. Without the rain and the energy from the sun the earth would eventually die. We depend on it to grow our crops. This is why it is important to know and understand the weather.
ALFRED'S DISCOVERY PT 3
Alfred Wagner needed knowledge of meteorology so he could look at past and current records on the atmospheric changes in order to scientifically back up his Pangaea theory without this knowledge. He would have no way to know what atmospheric changes occurred that could have caused Pangaea breaking into pieces.
CONVERGENT BOUNDARIES Convergent Boundaries is a suture
marking lithosphere plates that have been joined by plate tectonics to make a major geologic discontinuity . Earthquakes and volcanoes are common characteristics of convergent boundaries.
CONVERGENT BOUNDARIES PT 2 In plate tectonics a convergent
boundary also known as a destructive plate boundary because of seduction is an actively deforming region where two or more tectonic plates or fragments of lithosphere move toward one another and collide.
DIVERGENT BOUNDARYDivergent boundaries are places where
plates are moving away from each other. When a divergent boundary occurs beneath oceanic lithosphere, the rising convection current below lifts the lithosphere producing a mid-ocean ridge. Extensional forces stretch the lithosphere and produce a deep fissure.
DIVERGENT BOUNDARY PT 2When the fissure opens, pressure is
reduced on the super-heated mantle material below. It responds by melting and the new magma flows into the fissure. The magma then solidifies and the process repeats itself.
HAZARDS OF DIVERGENT BOUNDARY
The hazards that the divergent boundaries cause are shield volcano's and earthquakes. When tectonic plates start to diverge, the linear feature formed is called a rift. Sometimes, the gap widens and sometimes it stops.
HAZARDS OF DIVERGENT BOUNDARY PT 2
When the gap eventually widens, it then evolves into a rift valley. Divergent boundaries that occur between oceanic plates produce mid-oceanic ridges.
TRANSFORM BOUNDARIESTransform Boundaries are locations
where two plates slide past one another transform plate boundary is known as a transform fault. Most transform boundaries are found in the ocean basin and in the mid-ocean ridges.
TRANSFORM BOUNDARIES PT 2transform boundaries is formed between two
different plates, each moving away from the spreading center of a divergent plate boundary Transform boundaries are locations of recurring earthquake activity and faulting. The earthquakes are usually shallow because they occur within and between plates that are not involved in seduction.
TRANSFORM BOUNDARIES PT 3Volcanic activity is normally not present
because the typical magma sources of an upwelling convection current or a melting sub ducting plate are not present. A smaller number of transform faults cut continental lithosphere.
HAZARDS OF TRANSFORM BOUNDARIES
In transform boundary the tectonic plates will slip in side ways only. These types of earthquakes even if the magnitude is more than 7 in Richter scale and the epicenter in sea will not create Tsunami. But it will damage the buildings in it neighbor islands.
TRANSFORM BOUNDARIES & CONTINENTAL PLATES
In plate tectonics, a convergent boundary can also be known as a destructive boundary because of seduction, is an actively deforming region where two or more tectonic plates or fragments of lithosphere move toward one another and collide.
EARTH (: North American Plate Caribbean Plate We are in some danger because 15
earthquakes have caused damage in Ohio witch means that we could or we are in danger here.
EARTH 2 (: I think that there might be a
earthquake because of the history with them and that plates. The United States probably will become a dangerous and cause a few earthquakes .
WEBSITES USED http://scign.jpl.nasa.gov/learn/plate2.htm http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/pangaea http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/geology/techist.html http://
academic.emporia.edu/aberjame/histgeol/wegener/weger (image)
http://www.bing.com/images/search?q=divergent+boundaries&FORM=BIFD&adlt=strict# (image)
http://www.bing.com/images/search?q=transform+boundaries&FORM=BIFD&adlt=strict# (image)