1 / 31

Plate Tectonics and the Ocean Floor

Plate Tectonics and the Ocean Floor. Continental Drift. Theory proposed by Alfred Wegener in 1912 Continents once formed a single landmass. Early Evidence. Age of Oceanic Crust. Courtesy of www.ngdc.noaa.gov. Paleomagnetism. Plate Tectonics – 1960’s. Explains HOW the plates moved.

barton
Télécharger la présentation

Plate Tectonics and the Ocean Floor

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Plate Tectonics and the Ocean Floor

  2. Continental Drift • Theory proposed by Alfred Wegener in 1912 • Continents once formed a single landmass

  3. Early Evidence

  4. Age of Oceanic Crust Courtesy of www.ngdc.noaa.gov

  5. Paleomagnetism

  6. Plate Tectonics – 1960’s • Explains HOW the plates moved

  7. The Crust • Continental Crust • thick (10-70km)- buoyant (less dense than oceanic crust) - mostly old Oceanic Crust - thin (~7 km)- dense (sinks under continental crust)- young

  8. Plate Movement • “Plates” of lithosphere are moved around by the underlying hot mantle convection cells

  9. Three types of plate boundary • Divergent • Convergent • Transform

  10. Divergent Boundaries • Spreading ridges • As plates move apart new material is erupted to fill the gap

  11. Mid-Ocean Ridge • Underwater mountain ranges • Due to plates pulling away from each other • A Rift Valley forms in the middle where magma comes out • Have many fracture zones which break the ridge up

  12. Black smoker at a mid-ocean ridge hydrothermal vent in the Atlantic.

  13. Close up at the mid-ocean ridge

  14. Iceland: An example of continental rifting • Iceland has a divergent plate boundary running through its middle

  15. Convergent Boundaries • There are three styles of convergent plate boundaries • Continent-continent collision • Continent-oceanic crust collision • Ocean-ocean collision

  16. Continent-Continent Collision • Forms mountains,e.g. European Alps, Himalayas

  17. Himalayas

  18. Continent-Oceanic Crust Collision • Called SUBDUCTION TRENCH

  19. Subduction • Oceanic lithosphere subducts underneath the continental lithosphere • Oceanic lithosphere heats and dehydrates as it subsides • The melt rises forming volcanism • E.g. The Andes

  20. Trenches • Due to one plate subducting (going below) another plate • Earthquakes • Many volcanoes and volcanic island arcs form here

  21. Ocean-Ocean Plate Collision • When two oceanic plates collide, one runs over the other which causes it to sink into the mantle forming a subduction zone. • The subducting plate is bent downward to form a very deep depression in the ocean floor called a trench. • The worlds deepest parts of the ocean are found along trenches. • E.g. The Mariana Trench is 11 km deep!

  22. Transform Boundaries • Where plates slide past each other Above: View of the San Andreas transform fault

  23. Pacific Ring of Fire Volcanism is mostly focused at plate margins

  24. Other Ocean Features

  25. Continental Shelf • Part of a continent covered by water • Gentle slope • Average depth is 60 m • Amount exposed changes with sea level

  26. Continental Slope • Steep • May be cut by submarine canyons • Sediment piles up at the bottom and forms continental rise

  27. Abyssal Plains • Flattest area on earth • Cover ½ of deep ocean • Covered with fine sediment

  28. Seamounts • Submerged volcanic mountains • Called oceanic island if they rise above water

  29. Guyot • Seamounts that have been eroded and are now flat on top

More Related