Title: Plate%20Tectonics%20and%20Climate
1Plate Tectonics and Climate
Chapter 5 of EARTHS CLIMATE
Institute of Hydrological Sciences
2(No Transcript)
3Plate tectonics The
scientific theory which describe Earth is called
plate tectonics.
- Wegener1914 find the margins of eastern South
America and western Africa, could fit together.
4Structure and Composition of Tectonic Plates
- Earth Outer Layers
- chemical composition
- Continental crust (30-70 km)
- Granites (???) 2.7 g/cm3
- Ocean crust (5-10 km)
- Basalts (???) 3.2 g/cm3
- Mantle (Fe, Mg) to 2890 km
- gt3.6 g/cm3
- Physical behavior
- Lithosphere (100 km)
- hard, rigid unit that forms the tectonic plates
- Asthenosphere (100-250 km)
- softer unit capable of flowing
5Tectonic plates
- The outer rigid layer of Earth is broken into
about dozen major segments called plates.
6Plate boundaries
- Divergent margins
- Convergent margins
- Transform fault margins
7Evidence of past plate motions
- Earth magnetic field ? evidence of Plate
tectonics rearranging Earths geography - Energy from the magnetic field which result from
molten fluids circulating in Earths liquid iron
core.
8Magnetic lineations
- Molten fluid record magnetic field.
9Paleomagnetic determination of past location of
continents
- Basalt is the best rocks to use (rich in highly
magnetic iron). - No ocean crust older than 175 Myrs.
- For earlier interval, it must focus on basalts on
the continent. - 500Myrs less reliable because of increasing
likelihood that their magnetic signatures have
been rest to the magnetic field of a later time.
10Short Summery
- We can reconstruct the position of the continents
with good accuracy back to 300 Myrs ago. - To measure rates of the seafloor spreading in
ocean basin. - Even we can compile spreading rates over enough
of the worlds ocean to estimate the global mean
rate of creation and destruction of ocean crust.
11The Polar Position Hypothesis
- ice sheets should appear on continents when they
located at polar or near-polar latitude, - but no ice should appear anywhere on Earth if no
continent exist anywhere near poles.
12Moving continents
13- Pengaea
- Laurasia North-central Asia, Europe, North
American - Gondwana Africa, Arabia, Antarctica, Australia,
South America, and India.
14Gondwana and South Pole
15Glaciations and Continental Positions since 500
Myr Ago
Why ?
CO2
Icehouse
Greenhouse
16Modeling Climate on the Supercontinent Pangaea
- Climate scientist use general circulation models
(GCMs) to evaluate the impact of geography as
well as several other factors. -
- Questions
- What level of atmospheric CO2 ?
- Dose it match geologic record ?
17Input to the Model Simulation of Pangaean Climate
Distribution of land and sea
1.
Global sea level
2.
Topography
3.
Using simplified symmetrical
1000 m
Comparable to todays
200 Myr ago
18Input to the Model Simulation of Pangaean Climate
cont.
- 4.Climate modelers constrain the likely CO2 level
in atmosphere. - 5.Astrophysical modelers indicate Suns energy
weaker 1 than todays.
19Output from the Model Simulation of Pangaean
Climate
Downward
Uplift
1.the great expanses of land at subtropical
latitudes beneath the dry. 2.trade wind lose
most of their water vapor by the time they
reached the continental interior
20Output from the Model Simulation of Pangaean
Climate cont.
Different rates of response of the land and sea
to heating in summer and radiative heat loss in
winter
21Tectonic Control of CO2 Input
- BLAG1983 (the geochemists Robert Berner,
Antonio Lasaga, Robert Garrels) Climate changes
during the last several hundred million years
have been driven mainly by changes in the rate of
CO2 into the atmosphere by plate tectonic
process.(spreading rate hypothesis)
Spreading rates
Climate change
CO2
Change
22Age of the seafloor
- Spreading rates are as much as ten times faster
in the Pacific than in Atlantic.
23Earths Negative Feedback
24Tectonic-scale Carbon cycle
Imbalance CO2
Climate changes
25A Warmer Earth 100Myr Ago
- The global mean spreading rate was as much as 50
faster 100Myr ago than it is at present, so the
rate of input of CO2 from the rocks to atmosphere
must be higher than today.
26The Uplift Weathering Hypothesis
- Chemical weathering
- Rock exposure
- Fresh rock
- Exposure time
Cooling down!
27Fragmentation of Rock
Weathering and Exposure Time
28Three Hypotheses
29Conclusions
- Plate tectonic process largely explains
alternations between icehouse intervals. - Atmospheric CO2 changes in tectonic-scale in the
last hundred million years needed to explain the
climate variability. - Both spreading rate uplift hypotheses attempt
to link the changes in CO2 and in plate tectonic.