Title: Dynamic Earth
 1Dynamic Earth
- Plate Tectonics, Earthquakes, Subduction, and 
 other significant events
2Earth is a System
- Integrated system consisting of rock, air, water, 
 and living things that all interact with one
 another--Biosphere
- Geospheresolid part 
- Atmospheremixture of gases to make air we breath 
- Hydosphereall water on or near Earths surface 
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 4Discovering Earths Interior 
 5What is the Lithosphere?
- The crust and part of the upper mantle  
 lithosphere
- 100 km thick 
- Less dense than the material below it so it 
 floats
6What is the Asthenoshere?
- The plastic layer below the lithosphere  
 asthenosphere
- The plates of the lithosphere float on the 
 asthenosphere
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 8Plate Tectonics 
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 10Global Tectonic Movement 
 11Causes of Plate Tectonics 
 12Convection Currents
- Hot magma in the Earth moves toward the surface, 
 cools, then sinks again.
- Creates convection currents beneath the plates 
 that cause the plates to move.
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 17  18Features of Divergent Boundaries
- Mid-ocean ridges 
- rift valleys 
- fissure volcanoes
19Mid-Atlantic Ridge 
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 22Sea Floor Spreading 
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 26Hypothermal Vents 
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 29Pillow Lava forms when magma cools in water. This 
is evidence of volcanic activity! 
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 31This shows you the age of the sea floor. The red 
areas are new rocks and the blue areas are the 
oldest oceanic rock. 
 32Iceland is spreading open on the Mid-Atlantic 
Ridge! 
 33Can you see where the Mid-Atlantic Ridge bisects 
Iceland? This is a rift valley! 
 34Subduction is a process where the ocean floor 
sinks back into the mantle at a deep ocean trench. 
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 36Convergent Boundaries
- Boundaries between two plates that are colliding 
-  ? ? 
- There are 3 types
37Type 1
- Ocean plate colliding with a less dense 
 continental plate
- Subduction Zone where the less dense plate 
 slides under the more dense plate
- VOLCANOES occur at subduction zones 
38Aleutian Islands, Alaska 
 39Type 2
- Ocean plate colliding with another ocean plate 
- The less dense plate slides under the more dense 
 plate creating a subduction zone called a TRENCH
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 47Type 3
- A continental plate colliding with another 
 continental plate
- Have Collision Zones 
- a place where folded and thrust faulted mountains 
 form.
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 49Transform Fault Boundaries
- Boundary between two plates that are sliding past 
 each other
- EARTHQUAKES along faults
50Earthquake Belts 
 51Earthquakes
- An earthquake is the shaking and trembling that 
 results from the sudden movement of part of the
 Earths crust.
- The most common cause of earthquakes is faulting. 
 During faulting, energy is released. Rocks
 continue to move until the energy is used up.
52Tsunamis
- Earthquakes which occur on the ocean floor 
 produce giant sea waves called tsunamis.
 Tsunamis can travel at speeds of 700 to 800 km
 per hour. As they approach the coast, they can
 reach heights of greater than 20 meters.
53Focus
- Most faults occur between the surface and a depth 
 of 70 kilometers.
- The point beneath the surface where the rocks 
 break and move is called the focus. The focus is
 the underground origin of an earthquake.
54Epicenter
- Directly above the focus, on the Earths surface 
 is the epicenter. Earthquake waves reach the
 epicenter first. During an earthquake, the most
 violent shaking is found at the epicenter.
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 56Ring of Fire 
 57Pacific Ring 
 58Seismic Risk Map of the U.S. 
 59- http//earthquake.usgs.gov/learning/animations/
60Formation of a Volcano 
 61Volcanic Eruptions
- During volcanic eruptions, many rock fragments 
 are blown into the air. The smallest particles
 are called volcanic dust. (less than 0.25 mm)
- Volcanic Ash ( 0.25 -5mm) falls to the Earth and 
 forms small rocks.
- Volcanic bombs (a few cm to several meters) are 
 molten and harden as they travel through the air.
62Cinder Cone Volcano 
 63Shield Volcanoes 
 64Mount Vesuvius-composite volcano 
 65Composite Volcano 
 66Effects of Volcanic Eruptions
- Volcanic Ash mixing with watter produces mudflows 
- Volcanic Ash buries crops 
- Volcanic Ash enters the troposphere and sometimes 
 the stratosphere impacting amount of sunlight and
 temperatures on Earth
67Erosion
- Water erosion by rivers and oceans dramatically 
 changes the Earths surface
- Wind erosion blows away top soil and erodes soft 
 rocks, such as sandstone.
68Atmospheric Layers 
 69Structure of the Atmosphere
Thermosphere
Mesosphere
Ozone Maximum
Stratosphere
Troposphere
Temperature 
 70- Nitrogen 78 
- Oxygen 20 
- Argon 0.9 
- CO2 0.04 
- Water Vapor 1 
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 72Thermosphere
- Absorbs harmful solar radiation resulting in the 
 Aurora Borealis or Northern Lights
73Atmospheric Circulations
Source Wikipedia 
 74Energy received at the surface depends on
1) Sun angle with respect to surface. 2) Path of 
solar radiation through the atmosphere.
Source Wikipedia 
 75Solar Radiation Entering the Atmosphere
-  Absorbed by gases and clouds  goes to heating 
 (19)
-  Scattered and Reflected by Gas Molecules, 
 Clouds, Aerosols, and the Earths surface (30)
About 51
Source Ahrens, C. D., 2008 Essentials of 
Meteorology, An Invitation to the Atmosphere (5th 
Edition) 
 76Earths Energy Balance
Earths overall average equilibrium temperature 
changes only slightly from year to year.
A balance exists between incoming solar energy 
(shortwave radiation) and outgoing energy from 
Earth to space (longwave radiation).
Source Ahrens, C. D., 2008 Essentials of 
Meteorology, An Invitation to the Atmosphere (5th 
Edition) 
 77Without greenhouse gases, the average surface 
temperature of the Earth would be 18 C
No greenhouse gases (only permanent gases)
The current atmosphere (with greenhouse gases)
Source Ahrens, C. D., 2008 Essentials of 
Meteorology, An Invitation to the Atmosphere (5th 
Edition)
33 C difference 
 78Global Average Energy Balance
Top of Atmosphere Energy Balance 
342  107  235
342
107
235
Incoming Solar Radiation Shortwave
z
Outgoing Long-wave Radiation
Reflected Shortwave radiation
Atmosphere Energy Balance 67  350  24  78  
324  165  30
Reflected Shortwave radiation by Clouds 
 Aerosols and Gases
Long-wave Radiation from Clouds
Long-wave Radiation Atmospheric Window
Long-wave Radiation from Atmosphere
30
165
Absorbed Shortwave radiation by Atmosphere
40
77
Latent Heat
67
350
Longwave Radiation Absorbed by Atmosphere
Sensible Heat
Long-wave Radiation Emitted by Atmosphere
Reflected Shortwave radiation by Surface
78
24
30
Longwave Radiation Emmited by Surface
324
168
Evapo- transpiration
390
Thermal heating
Absorbed Shortwave radiation by Surface
Conduction
0
Surface Energy Balance 168  390  324  24 
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 80Greenhouse Effect Animation
- http//earthguide.ucsd.edu/earthguide/diagrams/gre
 enhouse/
81Terrestrial Ecosystems are an
- Integral part of global carbon system 
- Plants take in and store carbon dioxide from the 
 atmosphere through photosynthesis
- Below ground microbes decompose organic matter 
 and release organic carbon back into the
 atmosphere
www.bom.gov.au/.../ change/gallery/9.shtml 
Cycle shows how natures sources of CO2 are self 
regulating  that which is released will be used 
again  Anthropogenic carbon not part of natures 
cycle  is in excess 
 82The Worlds Water
- 97 Salt Water 
- 2.5  Frozen Fresh Water 
- .5 Usable Fresh Water
83Hydrosphere
- All water on or near the Earths surface 
- Includes water in oceans, lakes, rivers, 
 wetlands, polar ice caps, soil, rock layers
 beneath Earths surface and clouds.
84The Water Cycle 
 85Water Cycle 
 86Ocean circulation
Source NOAA 
 87Source Wikipedia 
 88Layers of the Ocean 
 89Global Ocean Temperatures 
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 91Storm Watch, Sept 1, 2011 
 92North Atlantic Coast Sept 1, 2011 
 93Freshwater
- Freshwater is defined as having a low salt 
 concentration  usually less than 1.
- Plants and animals in freshwater regions are 
 adjusted to the low salt content and would not be
 able to survive in areas of high salt
 concentration (i.e., ocean).
94Streams and rivers
- These are bodies of flowing water moving in one 
 direction.
95Wetlands are among the most productive ecosystems 
in the world, comparable to rain forests and 
coral reefs. 
 96Watersheds help the ecosystem 
 97Aquifers
- Aquifers- permeable materials that carry 
 groundwater
98Artesian Formations
- Artesian Formation- aquifer under nonporous 
 layers holds groundwater
- Artesian Wells- release water from Artesian 
 formations
99Recharge Zone 
 100Biosphere 
 101Closed System
- Energy enters the system but matter does not 
- Earth is still a closed system with respect to 
 matter but is still an open system with respect
 to energy
102Open System
- Both matter and energy are exchanged between the 
 system and the surrounding environment.
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