1 / 69

Chapter 18 Plate tectonics

Chapter 18 Plate tectonics. History of plate tectonics The earth’s surface is divided into several major and minor plates and the interaction between these plates is known as plate tectonics. There are 8 major and about 30 minor plates. N. American S. American African Eurasian Indian

nixie
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 18 Plate tectonics

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. Chapter 18 Plate tectonics

  2. History of plate tectonics • The earth’s surface is divided into several major and minor plates and the interaction between these plates is known as plate tectonics.

  3. There are 8 major and about 30 minor plates. • N. American • S. American • African • Eurasian • Indian • Pacific • Australian • Antarctic

  4. Intense geologic activity occurs at the plate boundaries where plates; • Collide with one another • Move away from one another • Slide past one another

  5. The concept of plate tectonics was developed in 1960s by combining two theories; • Continental Drift • Sea floor spreading

  6. 1. Continental Drift: proposed by Alfred Wagener in 1912. • He found similarities in S. America, Africa, India, Antarctica and Australia.

  7. On this basis he proposed; • All the continental landmasses were once joined together in one supercontinent—Pangea. All the oceans formed one super ocean—Tetheys. • The Pangea then split into a northern Laurasia and a southern Gondwanaland.

  8. Revival of continental drift: Wegener’s mechanism of continental drift was not very convincing and his theory remained discarded till 1960s. • It was revived with the advent of paleomagnetism, which confirmed that the continents have moved relative to one another.

  9. Additional evidence for cont. drift: • The continents fit like a jigsaw puzzle • Rock similarity • Fossils and age similarity

  10. 2. Sea floor spreading: proposed by Harry Hess in 1962. • He proposed that the sea floor moves away from the crest of a mid ocean ridge and finally disappears beneath a continent or an island arc (subduction).

  11. Mantle convection is responsible for ocean spreading.

  12. Plates and plate boundaries • Rigid lithospheric plates move over plastic asthenosphere.

  13. Plate boundaries: 3 types; • Divergent plate boundary: plates move away from one another. Also known as Constructive P.B. or spreading center.

  14. 2. Convergent P.B: plates move towards one another. Also known as Destructive P.B. 3. Transform P.B: plates move horizontally past one another. Also known as Conservative P.B.

  15. Do plates really move? • Plate motion is very slow but predictable. 1-10 cm/year. • Movement is measured by satellites, lasers and GPS.

  16. Do plates really move? • The magnetic anomalies at the sea floor and movement along a transform fault indicate plate motion.

  17. Divergent Plate Boundaries • Two plates move away from one another. • Can occur within a continent or an ocean. If it occurs in a continent—rifting.

  18. Divergent Plate Boundaries • Generally basaltic magma erupts and spreads on either side of the fractures causing the plates to push away from one another.

  19. Examples: • Red Sea. • East African Rift

  20. A passive continental margin forms when one of the moving portions of the plate are covered by sediments.

  21. A mid ocean ridge is formed when divergent P.B. occurs in the middle of an ocean—mid Atlantic ridge.

  22. Convergent P.B. • Two plates move towards each other and collide forming mountains.

  23. Convergent P.B. • Three types of convergent p.b; • Ocean-ocean convergence • Ocean-continent convergence • Continent-continent convergence

  24. Ocean-ocean convergence: one plate subducts under the other, a trench and a volcanic island arc are formed.

  25. Ocean-continent convergence: oceanic plate subducts beneath the continent and an active continental margin is formed.

  26. Continent-continent convergence: neither plate subducts and a collisional mountain chain is formed.

More Related