Title: Plate Tectonics
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2- Plate Tectonics
- Overview
- Historical Development
- Continental drift and paleomagnetism
3PLATE TECTONICS
1) Overview
4PLATE TECTONICS
1) Overview
5PLATE TECTONICS
1) Overview
6PLATE TECTONICS
2) Historical development
7PLATE TECTONICS
2) Historical development
1915 Alfred Wegener published hypothesis
of continental drift
8200 million years ago
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10PLATE TECTONICS
2) Historical development
Fossil Evidence
Several fossil organisms have been found in
common on different continents
mesosaurus
lystrosaurus
How can the same species evolve on widely
separated continents???
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12PLATE TECTONICS
2) Historical development
Rock evidence
Mountain belts on one continent match up with
another.
Similar rock structure and age
Appalachians (eastern US)
British Isles, Scandanavia
13PLATE TECTONICS
2) Historical development
Paleoclimate evidence
(ancient)
Ice sheets covered big areas of southern
hemisphere 220-300 million years ago
14PLATE TECTONICS
2) Historical development
Paleoclimate evidence
Ice sheets covered big areas of southern
hemisphere 220-300 million years ago
Glacial striations
15PLATE TECTONICS
2) Historical development
1924 Wegeners book translated to English met
with hostile criticism
Main objection no way to explain continental
drift.
163) Continental drift and paleomagnetism
PLATE TECTONICS
Wegeners idea died until 1950s. Renewed
interest from rock magnetism
Paleomagnetism ancient magnetic field of Earth
recorded and frozen into rocks
173) Continental drift and paleomagnetism
PLATE TECTONICS
Rock magnetism
-Certain minerals are magnetic (e.g., magnetite,
iron) -They loose magnetization when heated above
Curie point (580oC for iron) -When cooled below
Curie pt, magnetic grain aligns w/ Earths
magnetic field
183) Continental drift and paleomagnetism
PLATE TECTONICS
Rock magnetism
-Certain minerals are magnetic (e.g., magnetite,
iron) -They loose magnetization when heated above
Curie point (580oC for iron) -When cooled below
Curie pt, magnetic grain aligns w/ Earths
magnetic field
193) Continental drift and paleomagnetism
PLATE TECTONICS
Polar wandering
- discovery in 1950s.
- location of North Pole infered from rock
magnetization - appears to have moved in past
- Either N pole has wandered or continents have
drifted
203) Continental drift and paleomagnetism
PLATE TECTONICS
Sea floor spreading
Harry Hess, in the early 1960s proposed
- ocean ridges are above mantle upwellings, which
cause seafloor to spread, like a conveyor belt - magma replaces seafloor as it moves away,
becoming new oceanic crust - deep ocean trenches are locations where oceanic
crust dives back into planet
213) Continental drift and paleomagnetism
PLATE TECTONICS
Geomagnetic reversals
- Earths magnetic field reverses
- recorded in lava flows
223) Continental drift and paleomagnetism
PLATE TECTONICS
Seafloor magnetic stripes
- 1963, Vine Matthews connected seafloor
spreading continental drift, from magnetic
field reversals recorded in cooling lavas of new
seafloor - symmetric patterns (stripes) on either side of
spreading center (mid-ocean ridge) - changes in width of a given stripe indicate
changes in spreading rate.
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