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Introduction to Plate Tectonics Continental Drift

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Title: Introduction to Plate Tectonics Continental Drift


1
Introduction to Plate Tectonics (Continental
Drift)
  • Plate Tectonics is the unifying theory of geology
  • Considerable geologic, paleontologic, and
    paleoclimatic evidence is used to support the
    theory
  • Three types of plate boundaries are recognized
  • Interior processes are involved in plate movement

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Cross Section of Oceanic Crust
4
Earth structure - basics
Continental crust is an average of 30-40 km
thick Oceanic crust is 6-7 km thick The
uppermost mantle behaves rigidly (like a solid),
and together with the overlying crust is referred
to as the lithosphere Underneath the lithosphere
is the less rigid asthenosphere, which is
partially molten Below about 200 km the mantle is
fully solid
5
Plate Tectonic Theory
  • Plates of rigid lithosphere (oceanic and
    continental) move from the energy of heat
    transfer below
  • Their interactions define divergent, convergent,
    and transform boundaries and control many surface
    processes

6
What Were Some of the EarlyIdeas about
Continental Drift?
  • Early maps of South America and Africa led people
    to speculate that the continents may have been
    joined together and split
  • Similarities exist between plant fossils on the
    southern continents. Glossopteris is the most
    conspicuous example of a unique flora in India,
    South Africa, Australia
  • Similar glacial evidence also exists on these
    southern continents
  • The southern supercontinent was named Gondwana

7
What Were Some of the Early Ideas about
Continental Drift?
  • Early 1900s Alfred Wegener wrote of a single
    supercontinent named Pangaea, meaning all land
  • He portrayed the breakup of Pangaea and the
    movement of continents to their present position
  • 1937 Alexander du Toit named Laurasia, the
    northern continental masses, and placed them so
    that extensive coal deposits on them were located
    at the equator

8
What Is the Evidence for Continental Drift?
  • Continental Fit
  • In 1965 Sir Edward Bullard demonstrated that a
    better fit between the continents could be made
    if the continental shelf/slope boundary was used
  • Similarity of Rock Sequences and Mountain Ranges
  • Marine, nonmarine, and glacial rock sequences are
    nearly identical for Gondwana continents
  • Trends of several major mountain ranges on
    separate continents match when the continents are
    repositioned

9
What Is the Evidence for Continental Drift?
  • Glacial Evidence
  • Striations and glacial deposits of the same age
    in the five southern continents suggest this
    reconstruction of Gondwana

10
The Evidence for Continental Drift
  • Fossil Evidence
  • Glossopteris
  • Cynognathus
  • Mesosaurus
  • Lystrosaurus
  • Paleomagnetism
  • remnant magnetism in ancient rocks recording the
    direction of Earths magnetic poles at the time
    of the rocks formation
  • documents continental movement over time

11
Exploring the Deep
12
Relationship between Magnetic Reversals and
Seafloor Spreading
  • Newly formed seafloor basalts record Earths
    magnetic field at the time of crystallization
  • Patterns of magnetic reversal correlate on either
    side of ridges
  • Ocean basins are relatively young features

13
Deep-Sea Drilling and the Confirmation of
Seafloor Spreading
  • Oceanic crust is youngest at the ridges and
    becomes progressively older with increasing
    distance from them
  • Seafloor sediments are absent at the ridges and
    thicken with distance from them

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Digital Bathymetric/Topographic Model of Planet
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What Features are Found in the Deep-Ocean Basin?
18
What Are the Three Types of Plate Boundaries?
  • Divergent
  • Spreading ridges occur where plates are
    separating
  • may occur under oceanic or continental crust
  • rift valleys may lengthen and deepen, fill with
    sea water, basalts, and sediment to become a new
    sea

19
Divergent Plate Boundaries
20
Convergent Boundaries
  • Oceanic-oceanic
  • Subducting plate bends downward forming an
    oceanic trench
  • Volcanic island arc forms on the overlying plate
  • Back-arc basin fills with volcanoclastic sediment

21
Convergent Boundaries
  • Oceanic-continental
  • The denser oceanic plate is subducted under the
    continental plate
  • A subduction complex forms on the continent side
    of the trench
  • Partial melting of the descending oceanic plate
    forms an andesitic volcano mountain range

22
Convergent Boundaries
  • Continental-continental
  • Low density continental crust is not subducted,
    but may partially underlie the other continental
    plate
  • Mountain ranges are formed in the interior of a
    new and larger continent

23
Transform Boundaries
  • Transform faults mark fractures in the crust
    where plates slide laterally past each other
  • The San Andreas fault separates the Pacific plate
    from the North American plate

24
Determining Plate Motion
  • Absolute dates of magnetic anomalies and distance
    traveled from ridge rate
  • Hot spots and associated features are used as
    fixed reference points to determine absolute
    motion

25
Types of Continental Margins
  • Active margins narrow, descend into a trench
  • develop at the leading edge of a continental
    plate
  • Passive margins wider, built up from
    sedimentation
  • found within plates rather than at a boundary

26
Oceanic Crust - Its Structure and Composition
  • Formed at spreading ridges, generally basalts and
    gabbro
  • Pillow lavas, sheeted dikes, layered gabbros, and
    peridotites make up the oceanic crust
  • Ophiolites are used to support plate collisions
    when they are found on continents

27
Plate tectonics - basics
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29
The age-depth relationship
In general, the depth of the oceanic crust
increases predictably with age. This is pertinent
to several things well discuss, including today
the differences in average depths of the ocean
basins. Note, this curve is for unsedimented
oceanic crust.
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35
Earthquakes!
36
Earthquake Zone at a Convergent Margin
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38
The Elastic Rebound Theory
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