Title: Plate Tectonics II
1Plate Tectonics II
2Quick Review
- Historical Development
- Continental Drift
- Magnetic anomalies
- Seismic Reflection and Refraction
3Three Layers
4How do we know what the Earth's Interior is like?
- Drilling Wells drilled into Earth are mostly in
the upper 7 km of the crust - Deepest well Soviet (Russian) well in northern
Kola Peninsula 20 year effort to drill a 12 km
hole. Stopped in 1989. - History 5 years to drill 7 km 9 years to drill
the next 5 km got stuck at 12 km. - Target depth is 15 km.
- Costs are more than 100 million.
- Bottom hole temperature is 190 º degrees C
- Current status??
5How do we know what the Earth's Interior is like?
- Deepest US well is next to San Andreas Fault
(Cajon Pass) - Had reached 3.5 km in 1988
- Cost was 5 million (1400 per meter)
- Cost overruns and budget cuts suspended drilling
in 1988 - Other deep holes are planned.
6How do we know what the Earth's Interior is like?
- Volcanic activity Materials are brought up from
below. - Xenoliths foreign rock (pieces of the mantle in
lava) example coarse-grained olivine
(peridotite) xenoliths in basaltic lava - Only useful to depth of about 200 km
7How do we know what the Earth's Interior is like?
- High pressure laboratory experiments
- Samples of the solar system (meteorites)
- Study of seismic waves generated by earthquakes
and nuclear explosions
8Internal Structure of the Earth
9Crust
- 1. Oceanic crust (basaltic 3.0 g cm3)
- a. Approximately 5-12 km thick
- b. Average density of 3.0 g/cm
- c. The upper mantle is the ultimate source for
the lavas that formed the oceanic crust - 2. Continental crust (granitic 2.7 g cm3)
- a. thickest crust (average 35 km 20 to 100 km)
- b. floats due to isostasy
- continents float higher on the denser mantle
than the adjacent oceanic crustal segments
10Crust
- Seismically defined as all of the solid Earth
above the Mohorovicic discontinuity
11Inner Layers of the Earth
- Andrija Mohorovicic
- born in 1857, was a scientist from Croatia who
worked in the fields of meteorology and
seismology - showed how the seismic waves of earthquakes
spread through the Earth
12Inner Layers of the Earth
- What is the Mohorovicic Discontinuity?
- The surface of the earth is called the crust,
which is the uppermost part of the Lithosphere
(which includes the upper portions of the
mantle). The "Moho" is the boundary between the
crust and upper mantle.
13Inner Layers of the Earth
- Mohorovicic discovered the discontinuity in 1909.
The Moho separates crustal rocks with P-wave
velocities of 6 to 7 km/s from underlying mantle
rocks with P-wave velocities greater than 8 km/s
14Divisions of Inner Space
- Seismic Waves
- Generated when rocks are suddenly disturbed they
break or rupture - Vibrations spread out in all directions from the
source of the disturbance they move outward in
waves that travel at different speeds through
materials that differ in chemical composition or
physical properties
15Divisions of Inner Space
- Seismic Waves
- Primary -p-waves
- Compressional or P waves in which particle
oscillate in the direction parallel to the
direction of the wave propagation. P-waves are
the fastest and most abundant therefore easiest
to detect. - are the speediest of the three
- travel through the upper crust of the Earth at
speeds of 4-5 km/sec - near the base of the crust they speed along at
6-7 km/sec
16Seismic Waves
- Secondary or s-waves waves
- travel 1-2 km/sec slower than p-waves
- able to penetrate deep into the interior or body
of the planet - s-waves cannot propagate through fluids
- p-waves are markedly slowed through fluids
17Seismic Waves
18Seismic Waves
- Reflection of seismic waves. These studies use
the principle that as P-waves encounter internal
boundaries in the earth some of the energy is
reflected back to the surface. The energy source
is usually man-made (air or water guns, dynamite)
and is detected by geophones or hydrophones. The
amount of energy returned is a function of the
change in physical properties at that layer
(acoustic impedance).
19Seismic Waves
- Acoustic impedance is the contrast of the density
x velocity. This determines how much energy will
be reflected or returned to the surface. - Function of the velocity and density differences
20Seismic Waves
- Refraction - as the seismic waves propagate
through the earth the wave energy not reflected
by at a boundary is refracted or bent. In
general, where the wave velocity increases with
depth, the waves are bent upwards.
21Seismic Waves
22Refraction
23Refraction
24Inner Layers of the Earth
25Mohorovicic Discontinuity
26Mantle
- Average density is about 4.5 g/cm3
- 1. Stony composition (4.5 g cm3)
- a. oxygen and silicon predominate accompanied by
iron and magnesium - b. the mineral peridotite approximates the kind
of material inferred for the mantle appropriate
for the mantle's density similar in composition
to stony meteorites
27Internal Structure of the Earth
28The Core
- The Gutenberg Discontinuity is the boundary
between the Core and the Mantle - It is located 2890 km from the surface of the
Earth, or 3500 km from the center of the Earth.
29The Core
- 1. Detected by P and S waves shadow zones
- Inferences from Body Waves
- a. The precise boundary of the core was
determined by the study of earthquake waves - b. The outer core barrier to s-waves results in
an s-wave shadow zone on the side of the Earth
opposite the earthquake - passed through a liquid
medium - c. Radius of the core is about 3500 km
30The Core
- d. inner core is solid with a radius of 1220 km
- e. evidence for the existence of a solid inner
core is derived from the study of hundreds of
seismograms - a transition zone approximately 500 km thick
surrounds the inner core with the same
composition as the outer core - Important for Latent Heat of Fusion
31The Core
- 2. Average density 10.7 g/cm3
- The Earth had an overall density of 5.5 g/cm3
- the average density of rocks at the surface is
lt3.0 g/ cm3 - rocks of the mantle have a density of about 4.5
g/cm3 - QED the average density of the core is about
10.7 g/cm3
32The Core
- Composed mainly of Fe and Ni
- Composed of 85 iron with lesser amounts of
nickel as determined from the study of meteorites - consist of metallic iron allowed with a small
percentage of nickel - abundance in the solar system suggests the
existence of an iron-nickel core - additional evidence from the existence of a
magnetic field produced by an electric current
flowing through a wire - 4. Radius 3500 km
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34Plate Boundaries
- Three types
- Divergent
- Convergent
- Transform
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36Divergent Plate Boundaries
- In certain regions, plates are separating. At
these divergent plate boundaries , new
lithospheric crust is being created. In ocean
basins this process is referred to as sea-floor
spreading as magma wells up from the
asthenosphere along mid-oceanic ridges , widening
the ocean basin.
37Divergent Plate Boundaries
- In continents, along continental rift zones ,
huge land masses can be separated by new ocean
basins. Both such regions are referred to as
constructive plate margins because lithospheric
formation is occurring. Perhaps the best example
of this process is along the mid-Atlantic ridge.
38Divergent Boundary
39Divergent Boundary
40Divergent Boundary
41Divergent Boundary
42Divergent Boundary
43Divergent Boundary
44Divergent Boundary
45Divergent Boundary
46Convergent Plate Boundaries
- In other regions, tectonic plates are colliding.
At these convergent plate boundaries , one plate
is driven down under its neighbour in a process
called subduction . Such regions are referred to
as destructive plate margins because the
advancing edge of one lithospheric plate is being
re-absorbed into the mantle .
47Convergent Plate Boundaries
- A very good example of subduction is occurring
along the western coast of South America,
immediately west of the famous Andes mountains.
48Convergent boundary
49The Andes
50The Cascades
51Island Arcs
52Continent-Continent
53Continent-Continent
54Transform Plate Boundaries
- The third type of relative plate movement occurs
when one plate slips laterally past its
neighbouring plate along a major fault . This
horizontal motion is usually called transform
plate movement but is also known as slip-strike
movement, tear faulting ,shear faulting and
sometimes transcurrent faulting . The best
large-scale example of this phenomenon occurs
along the well-known San Andreas fault in
California.
55Transform boundary
56San Andreas Fault
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58Heat - Driver of Plate Tectonics
- Heat is the measure of internal energy of the
atoms and molecules - translational and
rotational motions. - Temperature is an arbitrary numeric scale
proportional to the average translation kinetic
energy. Kinetic energy is the energy associated
with motion.
59Heat - Driver of Plate Tectonics
- The heat flux is the transfer of energy from high
to low temperature. Understanding the earth's
heat flux is important to determine - How is heat transferred within the earth
- Where does it come from
- What processes produce or release heat
- Is the earth heating up or cooling off?
60Heat - Driver of Plate Tectonics
- The downward gradient in the earth's temperature
was first discovered first by measuring the
vertical temperature in caves. Typical gradient
within the earth is 20 to 30C/km.
61Heat - Driver of Plate Tectonics
- Sources of heat within the earth are considered
to be - primordial heat which is heat left over from the
original accretion of the Earth from planetary
nebula. - radioactive decay - less obvious but more
significant. - crystallization of inner core.
62Heat - Driver of Plate Tectonics
- Types of heat transfer
- Conduction
- Convection
- Radiation
63Heat - Driver of Plate Tectonics
- Conduction is the heat that is transferred
through molecular collision. Molecules with
higher vibrational energy collide with molecules
with lower vibrational energy causing a transfer
of energy.
64Heat - Driver of Plate Tectonics
- A good example is the heat that is transferred up
a spoon handle that sits in a pot of boiling
water.
65Convection
- Heat transferred by the motion of the material
itself. Movement of material within the earth
occurs by density differences. As lower mantle
heats upper by conduction heat transfer across
the core mantle boundary, increase temperature
causes decreased density.
66Heat - Driver of Plate Tectonics
67Heat - Driver of Plate Tectonics
- A good example of convection is the rising of air
masses as the sun heats the surface of the Earth.
68Heat - Driver of Plate Tectonics
- Radiative Heat Transfer - occurs as the internal
energy at one place is converted into
electromagnetic radiation which radiates out and
is absorbed by material at another location. The
electromagnetic energy is converted by into
internal energy (Heat).
69Heat - Driver of Plate Tectonics
- Examples would be the radiative warming for the
sun. Electromagnetic waves produced in the sun
are absorbed by your skin and converted into
heat. - Microwave ovens cook by this principle.
70Rheologic Model of Earth
- Traditional subdivisions of the earth interior
are based on compositional changes. Crust,
Mantle, Core. Each of the layers have been
further subdivided based on changes in
geophysical properties that represent
compositonal changes. - The Rheological model of the earth is based on
the flow properties-rigid vs plastic.
71Rheologic Model of Earth
- The large-scale features of the outer part of the
earth show a rigid layer in isostatic equilibrium
underlain by a weaker layer that deforms by flow
72Structure of the Plates
- The Lithosphere is the strong outer layer that
deforms elastically. This layer includes the
crust and upper mantle. - Asthenosphere is weaker and reacts to stress in a
fluid manner. The Asthenosphere extends from the
base of the lithosphere to 700 km. - The lithosphere- Asthenosphere boundary is more
like a transition zone, not distinct.
73Structure of the Plates
- What makes the aesthenosphere?
- Partial Melting
- How Much?
- 2 to 3
74- The Asthenosphere represents the location in the
mantle where the melting point is closely
approached. The rocks in the asthnosphere are
not molten. S-waves penetrate this layer but the
velocity drops considerably. This is partial
melting. It is estimated that only 1 melting
occurred to explain the observed decrease in
Seismic wave velocity.
75Driving Forces
- The large-scale features of the outer part of the
earth show a rigid layer in isostatic equilibrium
underlain by a weaker layer that deforms by flow
76Isostacy
- Isostacy equals the response of the outer shell
of the earth to the imposition and/or removal of
large loads (i.e., continents). The outer shell
of the earth cannot support large stresses. - The Principle of Isostacy is that beneath a
certain depth (Depth of Compensation) the
pressures (weights) of overlying column of
material are equal.
77Isostacy
78Isostacy
- Mid Atlantic Ridge sits higher than older crust
because it is warmer and less dense.
79Plate Tectonics predicts that the earthquakes
with occur and therefore mark plate boundaries.
Examine the figure below which charts the
epicenters of the earthquakes with magnitude
gt4.0.
80Conveyor idea of the mantle convection. This
idea is that the lithospheric plates are passive,
riding the moving rivers of mantle material.
81The Ridge Push Force is the push from a divergent
margin. The topogrpahic slope resulting from the
isotoatic uplift creates forces that pushes the
plate down the slope away from the spreading
center. Essentially, a horizontal pressure
gradient is created by the differential weights
along the plate with a high weight near the ridge
that pushes toward the ends.
82Slab Pull Force originates as the tendancy of the
colder older curst material to sink into the hot
less dense mantle material beneath it. As the
slab sinks it tends to pull the plate behind it.
83Putting it all together