Title: Earth
1Earths Structure
2Origin of the Earth
- Meteors and Asteroids bombarded the Earth
Earth is 4.6 billion years old
3Earths Interior
- Iron and Magnesium silicates
- Upper mantle is partially molten
- Continental granite
- Density 2.8 g/cm3
- Oceanic basalt
- Density 3.0 g/cm3
4Evidence of Internal Structure
- Density
- calculate density of Earth
- Speculate on probable compositions
- Meteorites
- Use composition and age to determine composition
and age of Earth
- Seismic waves
- Travel times and direction give indication of
internal structure of Earth
5Earths Structure
6Earths Layers
7Types of Seismic Waves
- Travel fastest ( 6 km/sec)
- Travel thru solids and liquids
8Seismic Waves Through Earth
9Continents Today
10Continental Drift Theory
- In 1912 a German meteorologist and explorer named
Alfred Wegener presented a theory that the
continents were once joined together in one land
mass and have over millions of years slowly
drifted apart into their present positions as we
see them today. He named the supercontinent
Pangaea after the Greek word meaning all land.
11Continental Drift Geographic Fit
- Continents seem to fit together like pieces of a
puzzle
12Continental Drift Theory
- Through Wegeners research he found evidence to
support his theory - Fossils of Glossopteris, a seed fern, was found
in India, Australia, South America, Africa and
Antarctica - Fossils of Mesosaurus, a small reptile were found
in freshwater deposits in Africa South America.
13Continental DriftFossils
- Similar distribution of fossils such as the
Mesosaurus
14Glossopteris
15Continental Drift
- Layers of the mountains found in S.E. Brazil,
South America and S.W. Africa line up layer for
layer in exact format. - Continents look like puzzle pieces that could fit
together.
16Continental DriftMountains
- Mountain ranges match across oceans
17Continental DriftGlaciation
- Glacial ages and climate evidence
18Continental Drift ModelProblems
- Presented research to professionals
- Did not provide a plausible mechanism to explain
how continents drifted
19Seafloor Spreading
- Continental drift reexamined in 1960s with new
information
- New theory developed Seafloor spreading
- Supporting evidence for seafloor spreading
- Theory combining continental drift and seafloor
spreading termed Plate Tectonics
20Seafloor Spreading
- New sea floor created at the mid-ocean ridge and
destroyed in deep ocean trenches
21Evidence for Seafloor SpreadingWorld Seismicity
- Earthquake distribution matches plate boundaries
22Evidence for Seafloor SpreadingVolcanism
- Volcanoes match some plate boundaries some are
hot spots
23Evidence for Seafloor SpreadingAge of Seafloor
- Youngest sea floor is at mid-ocean ridge
- Oldest sea floor away from mid-ocean ridge
24Evidence for Seafloor SpreadingPaleomagnetism
- Earth has a magnetic field - Probably caused by
rotation of solid inner core in liquid outer core
(both mostly Fe)
- When rocks cool at the Earths surface, they
record Earths magnetic field (normal or reverse
polarity)
25Evidence for Seafloor SpreadingPaleomagnetism
- Paleomagnetic studies indicate alternating
stripes of normal and reverse polarity at the
mid-ocean ridge.
26Seafloor SpreadingConvection Currents
- In 1960, proposed as driving force to move
continents
27Theory of Plate Tectonics
- John Tuzo Wilson combined ideas of continental
drift and seafloor spreading into Plate
Tectonics
28Principles of Plate Tectonics
- Earths outermost layer composed of thin rigid
plates moving horizontally
- Plates interact with each other along their edges
(plate boundaries)
- Plate boundaries have high degree of tectonic
activity - mountain building
- earthquakes
- volcanoes
29Plate BoundariesThree types
30Plate BoundariesDivergent
- Plates move away from each other
- New crust is being formed
31Divergent Plate BoundariesExamples
East African Rift
Mid-Atlantic Ocean Ridge
32Plate BoundariesConvergent
Three Types
- Plates are moving toward each other
33 Convergent Plate BoundariesExamples
Mount Fuji, Japan
Mount Lassen, California
Andes, South America
34Plate BoundariesTransform
- Crust is neither created nor destroyed
- Plates slide past one another
35Transform Plate BoundariesExamples
San Andreas Fault
Calexico, California
Carrizo Plains, Central California