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Sea-Floor Spreading

Discover the fascinating world of sea-floor spreading and its impact on deep-sea life. Learn how tubeworms depend on symbiotic bacteria for survival and explore the evidence that supports this geological process. Dive into the mysteries of the ocean floor with sonar technology and unravel the secrets of subduction zones and deep-ocean trenches.

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Sea-Floor Spreading

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  1. Sea-Floor Spreading

  2. Sea-Floor Spreading Tubeworms have no mouth, eyes, or stomach ("gut"). Their survival depends on a symbiotic relationship with the billions of bacteria that live inside of them. These bacteria convert the chemicals that shoot out of the deep sea vents into food for the worm.

  3. Sea-Floor Spreading Sonar - a device that bounces sound waves off under-water objects and then records the echoes of these sound waves. The time it takes for the echo to arrive indicates the distance to the object.

  4. Sea-Floor Spreading 1. Mid-Ocean Ridge – the longest chain of mountains in the world---these are divergent plate boundaries.

  5. Sea-Floor Spreading 3. Sea-Floor Spreading – Harry Hess in the 1960’s; the process that continually adds new material to the ocean floor while pushing older rocks away from the ridge

  6. Sea-Floor Spreading

  7. Ocean floor moves like a conveyor belt carrying continents with it. • New ocean floor forms along cracks in the ocean crust as molten material erupts from the mantle spreading out and pushing older rocks to the sides of the crack. New ocean floor is continually added by the process of sea-floor spreading.

  8. Sea-Floor Spreading 1. Evidence from Molten Material – Rocks shaped like pillows(rock pillows) show that molten material has erupted again and again from cracks along the mid-ocean ridge and cooled quickly

  9. Sea-Floor Spreading 2. Evidence from Magnetic Stripes – Rocks that make up the ocean floor lie in a pattern of magnetized stripes which hold a record of the reversals in Earth’s magnetic field

  10. Sea-Floor Spreading

  11. Sea-Floor Spreading

  12. Sea-Floor Spreading 3. Evidence from Drilling Samples – Core samples from the ocean floor show that older rocks are found farther from the ridge; youngest rocks are in the center of the ridge

  13. Sea-Floor Spreading 8. Subduction – Process by which the ocean floor sinks beneath a deep-ocean trench and back into the mantle; allows part of the ocean floor to sink back into the mantle

  14. Sea-Floor Spreading: Subduction zone Deep-Ocean Trench – Occurs at subduction zones. Deep underwater canyons form where oceanic crust bends downward

  15. Sea-Floor Spreading

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