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Crustal Movement

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Chapter 4-1 Crustal Movement * * The EGG Model of the Earth Shell = Crust Very thin compared to entire egg Slimy Skin = Moho Keeps the white from leaking out White ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Crustal Movement


1
Chapter 4-1
  • Crustal Movement

2
The EGG Model of the Earth
  • Shell Crust
  • Very thin compared to entire egg
  • Slimy Skin Moho
  • Keeps the white from leaking out
  • White Outer Core
  • Soft mushy, but still a solid
  • Yolk Inner Core
  • Denser
  • Needs to be divided into 2 layers

3
Layers of the Earth
4
Layers of the Earth
  • Think about the Egg model
  • Always start at the stick person to find the
    location in the Earth, before you look for data
  • Be careful when reading the graphs
  • All rocks are found in the GREEN layer
  • Different crusts have different densities

5
Crust
  • Oceanic
  • Continental
  • High-density rocks (like basalt)
  • Rich in Iron Magnesium (Mafic)
  • Average thickness is 10 km
  • NOT thinner or denser because of the ocean on it
    because of the rock properties
  • Low-density rocks (like granite)
  • Rich in Aluminum (Felsic)
  • Average thickness is 20-40 km
  • Collisions cause sediments at rivers to uplift
    (creating met. possibly igneous rocks in the
    process)

6
Crustal Boundaries
  • Located along the edge of the plates
  • Interaction depends on plate movement
  • Land formations are the result of the crustal
    movement
  • There are 3 types
  • Convergent
  • Divergent
  • Transform

7
Convergent
Boundaries
  • Plates are moving towards each other
  • Resulting landforms depend on plate types due to
    density differences
  • Same Type of Plates (Cont Cont)
  • Neither plate will give in
  • Mountains will form

8
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9
Convergent Boundaries
  • Different type of plates (Cont Oceanic)
  • The denser one (Oceanic) will go under the less
    dense one (subduction) melt into magma
  • Intersection will form a deep trench under water
  • As this plate moves, earthquakes will occur along
    the interface between the plates
  • The less dense one (Cont) will get bent due to
    the collision form mountains (possibly
    volcanoes if magma gets through)

10
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11
Divergent
Boundaries
  • Plates are moving away from each other causing a
    rift valley to form
  • This valley will then fill with magma/lava form
    new crust
  • This new crust is still very warm, so it will be
    elevated form a mountain chain
  • As the crust cools, it will contract
  • Most of these boundaries are under water

12
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13
Divergent Boundary ABOVE Water
14
Transform Boundaries
  • Plates are rubbing against each other, cause lots
    of earthquakes
  • There is little or no lava involved
  • Having many frequent small earthquakes is better
  • otherwise there will be less, but they will be
    stronger cause more damage
  • the end result will still be the same amount of
    movement
  • San Andreas Fault (California)

15
San Andreas Fault
Pacific Plate
North American Plate
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vZxPTLmg0ZCw
16
Cause of Plate Movement
  • Convection of the Magma in the Plastic Mantle
  • Look at the arrows on page 10 of the ESRT

http//www.youtube.com/watch?featureendscreenNR
1vryrXAGY1dmE
17
Pattern of Boundaries
  • Most Earthquakes Volcanoes are concentrated in
    narrow belts
  • These belts help indicate where plate boundaries
    occur
  • See ESRT page 5

18
Theories of Crustal Movement
  • 1910
  • Professor Al Wegener
  • Continental Drift Theory
  • Pieces fit like a puzzle
  • Rocks match (NJ Africa)
  • Fossils match
  • Fossil Fuel Deposits
  • (PA. Alaska, Antarctica)
  • Couldnt explain HOW

19
Sea-floor Spreading
  • 1960
  • Harry Hess
  • Hypothesis that the sea floor forms out of the
    mid-ocean ridges
  • Moves away from the ridge like a conveyor belt
    due to the magma underneath (what Prof Al
    couldnt explain)
  • Age of rocks are older as you move away from the
    ridge on both sides

20
Reversed Polarity
  • If there is magnetic material in molten rock, it
    will be aligned by the magnetic field of the
    Earth
  • When it cools hardens, a record of the Earths
    polarity at that time is preserved in the rock
  • Across the Atlantic ocean, there is a pattern

21
Plate Tectonic Theory
  • Put together
  • Continental Drift
  • Sea-floor Spreading
  • Convection of the plastic mantle
  • Reversed polarity
  • Some plates are all oceanic crust
  • Some plates have continental chunks on them
  • The plates are separating, colliding, or sliding
    past each other (plate boundaries)
  • The plates rest on the athenosphere (plastic
    mantle) which is moving in slow, powerful
    convection cells

22
Just a Theory
  • There are still places that cannot be explained
    by these concepts
  • 3 possible driving forces for plate movement are
  • Plates are pushed from the rear
  • Convection of the magma drag the plates
  • Descending denser plates pull the plate as it
    sinks into the plastic mantle
  • Keep an open mindlike Professor Al

23
Hot Spots
  • Hole in the Moho that the plate slides over
  • Creates an active volcano
  • Once the plate moves the volcano becomes extinct
    because it has lost its source of magma
  • The Hawaiian Island chain is a great example

24
Strata
  • Horizontal layers of sedimentary rock
  • If the layers are NOT horizontal then they are
    evidence of crustal movement

25
Deformed Strata
  • The most common deformed strata are
  • Tilting
  • Folding
  • Faulting
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