1 / 56

Chapter 9 and 10

Chapter 9 and 10. The interior of the earth and it’s surface. The Interior of the Earth. We can’t go there Use the shock waves an earthquake makes to investigate it. Called seismic waves Two types S waves (sheer waves) P waves (pressure waves) Measured with a seismograph. Seismograph.

odele
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 9 and 10

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 9 and 10 The interior of the earth and it’s surface

  2. The Interior of the Earth • We can’t go there • Use the shock waves an earthquake makes to investigate it. • Called seismic waves • Two types • S waves (sheer waves) • P waves (pressure waves) • Measured with a seismograph

  3. Seismograph Heavy object Drum

  4. Seismograph As ground shakes the base moves but the weight stays still

  5. Seismic waves • Penetrate earth and return to surface. • Speed and direction change • S waves can’t go through liquids • P waves can, but they slow down. • As the waves go through the earth at 2900 km down, the S waves stop and the P waves slow down • At 5105 Km down the P waves speed up • What does this tell us?

  6. The Earth’s Core • The center of the earth • Two layers • Inner core • Iron and Nickel • 5000º C • Pressure keeps it solid • Responsible for magnetic field?

  7. The Earth’s Core • The outer core • Iron and Nickel • 2200º C to 5000º C • Not as much pressure so it is liquid • How do they know • P waves are pressure waves • Will go through liquid • S waves are sheer waves • won’t go through liquids

  8. S waves Liquid

  9. P waves

  10. Total Shadow No waves

  11. The Mantle • Above the outer core • 80% of the earth’s volume • 68% of the earth’s volume • Studied rocks from volcanoes • Have studied rocks from the ocean floor • Silicon, oxygen, iron, magnesium • Density increases with depth • Because there’s more iron • Measured by speed of the seismic waves

  12. The Mantle • Temperature increases with depth • Has plasticity • What is plasticity? • A solid that can flow like a liquid • Silly putty • 870º C -2200º C

  13. The Moho • the thin boundary layer between the mantle and the crust • 32-64 km • Discovered by Andrija Mohorvičić • Found seismic waves changed speed at this level • Either different composition or density.

  14. The crust • Thin outer layer we live on • If the earth were the size of an apple, the crust would be thinner than the peel • 8-32 km • Two kinds • Oceanic • Less than 10 km • all basalt- dense

  15. The crust • Continental crust • Thicker- averages 32 km, up to 70 km • Top layer granite- less dense, on top of dense basalt • Earth’s crust also called lithosphere • Lithosphere broken into large plates (called tectonic plates)

  16. 0 km Crust 32 km Moho Mantle 2900 km Outer Core 5150 km Inner Core 6500km

  17. Continent Ocean Granite Basalt Mantle

  18. Chapter 10 How the crust moves

  19. Crust • Continental – • Thicker • Granite and basalt • Oceanic • Thinner • All Basalt • Stress- the pushes and pulls on the crust • causes changes in the rock • Shape • Volume • Compresses or expands • Deformation- breaking, tilting, and folding of of rocks

  20. Stress • Three types • Compression- pushed together

  21. Stress • Three types • Compression- pushed together • Moves land higher up and deeper

  22. Stress • Tension • Pulled apart • Stretches like taffy • Thinner in the middle

  23. Stress • Tension • Pulled apart • Stretches like taffy • Thinner in the middle

  24. Stress • Shearing- pushes in two opposite horizontal directions • Rocks are torn apart or bent

  25. Stress • Shearing- pushes in two opposite horizontal directions • Rocks are torn apart or bent

  26. Stress changes • Shape • Volume • Density • Can cause cracks - fracture • Fracture along smooth surface is called a joint • Joints are parallel

  27. Faults • A break or crack where rocks move • Where earthquakes happen • Hanging wall- above the fault • Foot wall- below the fault • Three types of fault • tension causes normal fault • Compression causes reverse fault and thrust fault

  28. Normal fault • Tension pulls apart • Hanging wall moves down Hanging wall Foot wall

  29. Normal fault • Tension pulls apart • Hanging wall moves down

  30. Reverse fault • Compression pushes together • the hanging wall up Hanging wall Foot wall

  31. Reverse fault • Compression pushes together • the hanging wall up

  32. Thrust Fault • Compression continues • The hanging wall is pushed over the foot wall • end up with layers of rock repeated • Older rock on top of younger rock

  33. Thrust fault Youngest Rock Oldest Rock

  34. Lateral Fault • Caused by shear stress • Blocks move sideways

  35. Lateral Fault • Caused by shear stress • Blocks move sideways

  36. Faulted Mountains and Valleys • A series of normal faults will cause mountains to be uplifted. • Called Fault-block mountains • Sierras • Valleys will also be formed • Called rift valleys • Death Valley

  37. Fault Block Mountain

  38. Fault Block Mountain

  39. Rift valleys

  40. Rift valleys

  41. Folding • Some times rock doesn’t break • It forms folds- like wrinkles • Upward fold- anticline • Downward fold- syncline • Vary in size, from microscopic to mountain forming

  42. Anticline Syncline

  43. Why Fold • Why don’t they break • Temperature- hot rock is easier to bend • Pressure- higher pressure more likely to fold • Type of rock- some are more brittle, some are more malleable • Gradual force bends, sudden force breaks

  44. Plateau • Flat area made of layers of flat-topped rocks high above sea level • Can be formed like fault block mountains • Or by lava flows (lava plateau) • Colorado plateau- West of the Rocky mountains • formed Grand canyon • Rivers cut large plateau into several smaller ones

  45. Domes • Magma forms a bubble underneath the crust, without erupting • Half sphere surrounded by flat land • If worn into separate peaks they are called dome mountains

  46. The Crust Floats • On the mantle • Because it is less dense • The floating crust pushes down • The crust pushes up. • Balance of forces called isostasy • More material floats lower

  47. Isostasy Crust Mantle

More Related