Title: Plattentektonik
1Plattentektonik
- Institut für Geowissenschaften Universität Potsdam
2Übersicht zur Vorlesung
3Plattentektonik
Ozeane
Kontinente
3 Typen von Plattengrenzen
4(No Transcript)
5Earths Plates
6Divergent boundaries are located mainly along
oceanic ridges
7 Divergent plate boundaries
- Oceanic ridges and seafloor spreading
- Seafloor spreading occurs along the oceanic ridge
system - Spreading rates and ridge topography
- Ridge systems exhibit topographic differences
- Topographic differences are controlled by
spreading rates
8 Ridge morphology
- Faster spreading ridges are characterized by
- more volcanism
- smoother topography - less faulting
- fewer moderate earthquakes
- Slower spreading ridges are characterized by
- less volcanism
- rough topography - more extension by faulting
- more moderate sized earthquakes
The differences are related to temperature.
9 Divergent plate boundaries
- Spreading rates and ridge topography
- Topographic differences are controlled by
spreading rates - At slow spreading rates (1-5 centimeters per
year), a prominent rift valley develops along the
ridge crest that is wide (30 to 50 km) and deep
(1500-3000 meters) - At intermediate spreading rates (5-9 cm per
year), rift valleys that develop are shallow
with subdued topography
10 Divergent plate boundaries
- Spreading rates and ridge topography
- Topographic differences are controlled by
spreading rates - At spreading rates greater than 9 centimeters per
year no median rift valley develops and these
areas are usually narrow and extensively faulted - Continental rifts
- Splits landmasses into two or more smaller
segments
11 Divergent plate boundaries
- Continental rifts
- Examples include the East African rifts valleys
and the Rhine Valley in northern Europe - Produced by extensional forces acting on the
lithospheric plates - Not all rift valleys develop into full-fledged
spreading centers
12The East African rift a divergent boundary on
land
13Convergent plate boundaries
- Older portions of oceanic plates are returned to
the mantle in these destructive plate margins - Surface expression of the descending plate is an
ocean trench - Called subduction zones
- Average angle at which oceanic lithosphere
descends into the mantle is about 45?
14Convergent plate boundaries
- Although all have the same basic
charac-teristics, they are highly variable
features - Types of convergent boundaries
- Oceanic-continental convergence
- Denser oceanic slab sinks into the asthenosphere
15Convergent plate boundaries
- Types of convergent boundaries
- Oceanic-continental convergence
- As the plate descends, partial melting of mantle
rock generates magmas having a basaltic or,
occasionally andesitic composition - Mountains produced in part by volcanic activity
associated with subduction of oceanic lithosphere
are called continental volcanic arcs (Andes and
Cascades)
16An oceanic-continental convergent plate boundary
17Convergent plate boundaries
- Types of convergent boundaries
- Oceanic-oceanic convergence
- When two oceanic slabs converge, one descends
beneath the other - Often forms volcanoes on the ocean floor
- If the volcanoes emerge as islands, a volcanic
island arc is formed (Japan, Aleutian islands,
Tonga islands)
18An oceanic-oceanic convergent plate boundary
19Convergent plate boundaries
- Types of convergent boundaries
- Continental-continental convergence
- Continued subduction can bring two continents
together - Less dense, buoyant continental lithosphere does
not subduct - Result is a collision between two continental
blocks - Process produces mountains (Himalayas, Alps,
Appalachians)
20A continental-continental convergent plate
boundary
21The collision of India and Asia produced the
Himalayas
22Transform fault boundaries
- The third type of plate boundary
- Plates slide past one another and no new
lithosphere is created or destroyed - Transform faults
- Most join two segments of a mid-ocean ridge as
parts of prominent linear breaks in the oceanic
crust known as fracture zones
23Transform fault boundaries
24East Pacific Rise west of Costa Rica
25Transform fault boundaries
- Transform faults
- A few (the San Andreas fault and the Alpine fault
of New Zealand) cut through continental crust
26Transform Margin
27Testing the plate tectonics model
- Paleomagnetism
- Ancient magnetism preserved in rocks at the time
of their formation - Magnetized minerals in rocks
- Show the direction to Earths magnetic poles
- Provide a means of determining their latitude of
origin
28- Dip of needle inclination
- When a rock cools below the Curie point, the
magnetization direction is locked in - We can determine the paleolatitude
- Also used in archeology
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30Paleomagnetism
- The measurement of remnant magnetism can provide
information important information about where a
rock may have come from. - Measuring a paleomagnetic direction
- An individual lava flow may not record an
average pole (secular variation), so samples
from a series of flows may be taken - Oriented (azimuth and dip) rock cores separated
by up to a few meters are drilled (using
non-magnetic equipment). - If the rock has been tilted since its formation,
this has to be measured. - The magnetization direction is measured (by
measuring all three axis of the core) using a
very sensitive magnetometer. - The direction, which is relative to the cylinder
is calculated with respect to north and the
vertical. - The magnetization direction is plotted on a
stereonet.
31Paleomagnetism
- Magnetic inclination varies from vertical in the
center to horizontal at the circumference. - Declination is the angle around the circle
clockwise from north. - Downward magnetizations (positive inclination)
are plotted as open circle. Negative
magnetizations are plotted as solid circles. - Plot mean direction and 95 confidence interval
(95 probability of containing the true
direction).
From Mussett and Khan, 2000
32Magnetostratigraphy
- By measuring the polarity of magnetization of a
rock of know age (radiometric data, sediment on
ocean floor above basement) we can build up a
magnetic polarity timescale. - At even smaller scales we can examine secular
variation within a series of lava flow (assuming
a high resolution series of flows). - If these flows are historic, we could probably
date them. - If they are very old, we could use the pattern of
secular variation to correlate between outcrops. - Archeological applications dating ancient
fireplaces. - The resultant magnetic timescale can be used to
date sediments and the seafloor by the
recognition of distinctive reversal patterns.
From Mussett and Khan, 2000
33Geomagnetic Reversals
- The first comprehensive magnetic study was
carried out off the Pacific coast of North
America. - Researchers discovered alternating strips of
high- and low- intensity magnetism. - In 1963 Vine and Matthews demonstrated that
stripes of high intensity magnetism formed when
the Earths magnetic field was in the present
direction, and stripes of low intensity magnetism
formed when the Earths magnetic field was in the
reversed direction.
34A scientific revolution begins
From SeaBeam operators manual
From http//www.navsource.org/archives/09/09570302
.jpg
- During the 1950s and 1960s technological strides
permitted extensive mapping of the ocean floor
35A scientific revolution begins
- An Extensive oceanic ridge system was discovered.
- Part of this system is the Mid-Atlantic Ridge.
- A central valley shows us that tensional forces
are pulling the ocean crust apart at the ridge
crest. - High heat flow.
- Volcanism.
36A scientific revolution begins
- Deep earthquakes showed that tectonic activity
was taking place beneath the deep trenches. - Flat topped seamounts were discovered hundreds of
meters below sea level. - Dredges of rocks from the seafloor did not
recover any rocks older than 180 million years
old. - Sediment thickness on the seafloor was much less
than expected (the seafloor being younger than
expected).
37Testing the plate tectonics model
- Paleomagnetism
- Polar wandering
- The apparent movement of the magnetic poles
illustrated in magnetized rocks indicates that
the continents have moved - Polar wandering curves for North America and
Europe have similar paths but are separated by
about 24? of longitude - Different paths can be reconciled if the
continents are place next to one another
38Apparent polar-wandering paths for Eurasia and
North America
39Testing the plate tectonics model
- Magnetic reversals and seafloor spreading
- Earth's magnetic field periodically reverses
polarity the north magnetic pole becomes the
south magnetic pole, and vice versa - Dates when the polarity of Earths magnetism
changed were determined from lava flows
40Testing the plate tectonics model
- Magnetic reversals and seafloor spreading
- Geomagnetic reversals are recorded in the ocean
crust - In 1963 the discovery of magnetic stripes in the
ocean crust near ridge crests was tied to the
concept of seafloor spreading
41Paleomagnetic reversals recorded by basalt at
mid-ocean ridges
42Inpretation of magnetic anomalies from
ship-track wiggles, (Barckhausen et al. 2001).
43Testing the plate tectonics model
- Magnetic reversals and seafloor spreading
- Paleomagnetism (evidence of past magnetism
recorded in the rocks) was the most convincing
evidence set forth to support the concept of
seafloor spreading - The Pacific has a faster spreading rate than the
Atlantic
44Testing the plate tectonics model
- Plate tectonics and earthquakes
- Plate tectonics model accounts for the global
distribution of earthquakes - Absence of deep-focus earthquakes along the
oceanic ridge is consistent with plate tectonics
theory - Deep-focus earthquakes are closely associated
with subduction zones - The pattern of earthquakes along a trench
provides a method for tracking the plate's
descent
45Deep-focus earthquakes occur along convergent
boundaries
46Earthquake foci in the vicinity of the Japan
trench
47Testing the plate tectonics model
- Evidence from ocean drilling
- Some of the most convincing evidence confirming
seafloor spreading has come from drilling
directly into ocean-floor sediment - Age of deepest sediments
- Thickness of ocean-floor sediments verifies
seafloor spreading
48Testing the plate tectonics model
- Hot spots
- Caused by rising plumes of mantle material
- Volcanoes can form over them (Hawaiian Island
chain) - Most mantle plumes are long-lived structures and
at least some originate at great depth, perhaps
at the mantle-core boundary
49The Hawaiian Islands have formed over a
stationary hot spot
50Measuring plate motions
- A number of methods have been em-ployed to
establish the direction and rate of plate motion - Volcanic chains
- Paleomagnetism
- Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI)
- Global Positioning System (GPS)
51Measuring plate motions
- Calculations show that
- Hawaii is moving in a northwesterly direction and
approaching Japan at 8.3 centimeters per year - A site located in Maryland is retreating from one
in England at a rate of about 1.7 centimeters per
year
52The driving mechanism
- No one driving mechanism accounts for all major
facets of plate tectonics - Several mechanisms generate forces that
contribute to plate motion - Ridge push
- Slab pull
- Models
- Layering at 660 kilometers
- Whole-mantle convection
- Deep-layer model
53Deformation
- Deformation is a general term that refers to all
changes in the original form and/or size of a
rock body - Most crustal deformation occurs along plate
margins - How rocks deform
- Rocks subjected to stresses greater than their
own strength begin to deform usually by folding,
flowing, or fracturing
54 Faults
- Faults are fractures in rocks along which
appreciable displacement has taken place - Sudden movements along faults are the cause of
most earthquakes - Classified by their relative movement which can
be - Horizontal, vertical, or oblique
55 Faults
- Types of faults
- Dip-slip faults
- Movement is mainly parallel to the dip of the
fault surface - May produce long, low cliffs called fault scarps
- Parts of a dip-slip fault include the hanging
wall (rock surface above the fault) and the
footwall (rock surface below the fault)
56Concept of hanging wall and footwall along a fault
57Faults
- Types of dip-slip faults
- Normal fault
- Hanging wall block moves down relative to the
footwall block - Accommodate lengthening or extension of the crust
- Most are small with displacements of a meter or
so - Larger scale normal faults are associated with
structures called fault-block mountains
58A normal fault
59 Faults
- Types of dip-slip faults
- Reverse and thrust faults
- Hanging wall block moves up relative to the
footwall block - Reverse faults have dips greater than 45o and
thrust faults have dips less then 45o - Accommodate shortening of the crust
- Strong compressional forces
60 A reverse fault
61A thrust fault
62Faults
- Strike-slip fault
- Dominant displacement is horizontal and parallel
to the strike of the fault - Types of strike-slip faults
- Right-lateral as you face the fault, the block
on the opposite side of the fault moves to the
right - Left-lateral as you face the fault, the block
on the opposite side of the fault moves to the
left
63 A strike-slip fault
64Fault
- Strike-slip fault
- Transform fault
- Large strike-slip fault that cuts through the
lithosphere - Accommodates motion between two large crustal
plates
65The San Andreas fault system is a major
transform fault
66 Mountain belts
- Orogenesis the processes that col-lectively
produce a mountain belt - Includes folding, thrust faulting, meta-morphism,
and igneous activity - Mountain building has occurred during the recent
geologic past - Alpine-Himalayan chain
- American Cordillera
- Mountainous terrains of the western Pacific
67 Earths major mountain belts
68 Mountain belts
- Older Paleozoic- and Precambrian-age mountains
- Appalachians
- Urals in Russia
- Several hypotheses have been proposed for the
formations of Earths mountain belts
69Mountain building at convergent boundaries
- Plate tectonics provides a model for orogenesis
- Mountain building occurs at convergent plate
boundaries - Of particular interest are active subduction
zones - Volcanic arcs are typified by the Aleutian
Islands and the Andean arc of western South
America
70Mountain building at convergent boundaries
- Aleutian-type mountain building
- Where two ocean plates converge and one is
subducted beneath the other - Volcanic island arcs result from the steady
subduction of oceanic lithosphere - Most are found in the Pacific
- Active island arcs include the Mariana, New
Hebrides, Tonga, and Aleutian arcs
71Mountain building at convergent boundaries
- Aleutian-type mountain building
- Volcanic island arcs
- Continued development can result in the formation
of mountainous topography consisting of igneous
and metamorphic rocks
72Formation of a volcanic island arc
73Mountain building at convergent boundaries
- Andean-type mountain building
- Mountain building along continental margins
- Involves the convergence of an oceanic plate and
a plate whose leading edge contains continental
crust - Exemplified by the Andes Mountains
74Mountain building at convergent boundaries
- Andean-type mountain building
- Stages of development - passive margin
- First stage
- Continental margin is part of the same plate as
the adjoining oceanic crust - Deposition of sediment on the continental shelf
is producing a thick wedge of shallow-water
sediments - Turbidity currents are depositing sediment on the
continental rise and slope
75Mountain building at convergent boundaries
- Andean-type mountain building
- Stages of development active continental
margins - Subduction zone forms
- Deformation process begins
- Convergence of the continental block and the
subducting oceanic plate leads to deformation and
metamorphism of the continental margin - Continental volcanic arc develops
76Mountain building at convergent boundaries
- Andean-type mountain building
- Composed of roughly two parallel zones
- Accretionary wedge
- Seaward segment
- Consists of folded, faulted, and meta-morphosed
sediments and volcanic debris
77Orogenesis along an Andean-type subduction zone
78Orogenesis along an Andean-type subduction zone
79Orogenesis along an Andean-type subduction zone
80Mountain building at convergent boundaries
- Continental collisions
- Two lithospheric plates, both carrying
continental crust - The Himalayan Mountains are a youthful mountain
range formed from the collision of India with the
Eurasian plate about 45 million years ago
81Mountain building at convergent boundaries
- Continental collisions
- The Himalayan Mountains
- Spreading center that propelled India northward
is still active - Similar but older collision occurred when the
European continent collided with the Asian
continent to produce the Ural mountains
82Plate relationships prior to the collision of
India with Eurasia
83Position of India in relation to Eurasia at
various times
84Formation of the Himalayas
85Mountain building at convergent boundaries
- Continental accretion and mountain building
- A third mechanism of orogenesis
- Small crustal fragments collide and merge with
continental margins - Responsible for many of the mountainous regions
rimming the Pacific - Accreted crustal blocks are called terranes
86Mountain building at convergent boundaries
- Continental accretion and mountain building
- Terranes consist of any crustal fragments whose
geologic history is distinct from that of the
adjoining terranes - As oceanic plates move, they carry embedded
oceanic plateaus, volcanic island arcs and
microcontinents to an Andean-type subduction zone
87Vertical movements of the crust
- In addition to the horizontal movements of
lithospheric plates, vertical movement also
occurs along plate margins as well as the
interiors of continents far from plate boundaries
88Vertical movements of the crust
- Isostatic adjustment
- Less dense crust floats on top of the denser and
deformable rocks of the mantle - Concept of floating crust in gravitational
balance is called isostasy - If weight is added or removed from the crust,
isostatic adjustment will take place as the crust
subsides or rebounds
89Der Wilson-Zyklus
Ein Wilson-Zyklus beschreibt die Entstehung, die
Entwicklung und das Verschwinden eines Ozeans.
90Die Stadien eines Wilson-Zyklus
An verschieden weit entwickelter ozeanischer
Kruste kann man einzelne Stadien eines
Wilson-Zyklus beobachten
Bildung eines kontinentalen Grabens
(Ostafrikanischer Graben)
Beginnende Ozeanisierung (Rotes Meer)
Maximale Ausdehnung der ozeanischen Kruste mit
passiven Kontinentalrändern
(Atlantik)
Subduktion der ozeanischen Kruste mit aktiven
Kontinental- rändern (Pazifik)
Restozean (Mittelmeer)
Kontinent Kontinent Kollision (Himalaya)
911.) Grabenbildung (Rifting)
Beginnt mit einem Tripelpunkt auf kontinentaler
Kruste
92Entwicklung eines kontinentalen Grabens
Evaporite (Salze)
terrestrische Sedimente
Tuffe, vulkanischer Schutt
Lavadecken
93Der Rhein Rhône-Graben
94Profil durch den Rheingraben
95Der Ostafrikanische Graben
Länge 4 000 km Breite 30 70 km Versatz gt 6
000 m
96Merkmale von kontinentalen Gräben
Hohe Seismizität
Hoher Wärmefluß (gt 2.0 HFU)
Alkaliner Magmatismus und Vulkanismus
Negative Schwere-Anomalie (Bouguer-Schwere)
97Schwere-Anomalie
Gemessen wird die Erdbeschleunigung in gal 1 gal
1 cm/sec2 1000 mgal. normal 980 gal
982.) Stadium
Bildung eines mittelozeanischenRückens
99Entstehung neuer ozeanischer Kruste
Beispiel Rotes Meer, Golf von Aden, Afar-
(Danakil-) Senke
100Unterschiede zu Gräben
Entstehung ozeanischer Kruste
Positive Bouguer-Anomalie
1013. Stadium
Ausbreitung ozeanischer Lithosphäre
102Maximale Öffnung eines Ozeans
nach Press Siever (Spektrum Lehrbuch), 1995
103Profil durch den Atlantik
Schematisches Profil durch den Nordatlantik
104Stadium 4Subduktion ozeanischer Kruste(rezentes
Beispiel Pazifik)
105Subduktion
106paarige metamorphe Gürtel in Japan
107Fossile Subduktionszonen
Eine ehemalige Subduktionszone erkennt man am
Vorhandensein von
Ophiolithen (Ophiolithische Sutur)
magmatischen Gesteinen
Hochdruck-Gesteinen (Blauschiefer)
108Bildung von Randbecken
High Stress Subduktion
Low Stress Subduktion
109Stadium 5Restmeer (Beispiel Mittelmeer)
110Das Mittelmeer und Schwarze Meer als Restmeere
Aus Press Siever, 1995 (Spektrum Lehrbücher)
111Terrankarte des Mittelmeers
112Stadium 6Kontinent-Kontinent-Kollision
113Kontinent-Kontinent-Kollision
Zentral- gürtel
Geosutur
Hinterland
Asthenosphäre
Umgezeichnet nach Eisbacher, 1991
114Kontinent-Kontinent-Kollision
Umgezeichnet nach Press Siever, 1995 (Spektrum)
115Kollision Indiens mit Eurasien
Krustenver- kürzung insgesamt 2000 km in 40 Ma
Aus Press Siever, 1995 (Spektrum Lehrbücher)
116Entstehung des Himalaya
University of Western Australia
117Tektonik im Himalaya-Hinterland
118Zusammenfassung
Die Plattentektonik ist der an der Erdoberfläche
auftretende Ausdruck der Mantelkonvektion im
Erdinneren. Sie beschreibt die Bewegungen der
Lithosphärenplatten und die daraus resultierenden
geologischen Prozesse. Zu diesen zählen u.a. die
Entstehung von Faltengebirgen (Orogenese), von
mittelozeansichen Rücken und von
Transformstörungen. Die großräumigen
Deformationen der Lithosphäre sind wiederum die
Ursache von zahlreichen geophysikalischen
Phänomenen, wie z.B. Vulkanismus oder Seismizität.