1 / 25

Forces Acting on the Plates (according to C.M.Fowler’s The solid Earth )

Forces Acting on the Plates (according to C.M.Fowler’s The solid Earth ). By: Jacob Hadley. Forces Acting on the Plates. The Lithosphere : – Cold upper thermal boundary layer – Forms in models of thermal convection of the mantle

Télécharger la présentation

Forces Acting on the Plates (according to C.M.Fowler’s The solid Earth )

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. Forces Acting on the Plates(according to C.M.Fowler’sThe solid Earth) By: Jacob Hadley

  2. Forces Acting on the Plates The Lithosphere: – Cold upper thermal boundary layer – Forms in models of thermal convection of the mantle – Motion of lithospheric plates relative to each other involves many different forces – Some of these forces “drive” motion, and some “resist” motion

  3. Lithospheric Forces… – If plates are at constant velocity, conservation must be in action – Driving = Resistive

  4. Possible Lithospheric Forces: – FDF Mantle-Drag – FCD Extra Mantle-Drag Beneath Continents – FRP Ridge-Push – FTF Transform-Fault Resistance – FSP Slab-Pull – FSR Slab-Resistance (on the slab as it penetrates the asthenosphere) – FCR Colliding-Resistance (which acts between two plates with equal magnitude and and opposite direction) – FSUSuctional Force (which may be capable of pulling the overriding plate towards the trench)

  5. Driving Forces:(primary driving forces) – FRP Ridge-Push – FSP Slab-Pull

  6. Driving Forces: – Ridge-Push Force: • Acts at mid-ocean ridges near edge of plate • Made of two parts: – The pushing by the upwelling mantle material – The tendency of newly formed plate to slide down the sides of the ridge

  7. Ridge-Push: – e = elevation of ridge axis above cooled plate – ρm= density of mantle at base – ρw= density of sea water – L = plate thickness

  8. Driving Forces: (continued) – Another force is the Slab-Pull Force which is simply the “negative buoyancy” of the subducting plate at a convergent boundary – This occurs because the subductingplate is cool and more dense than the mantle in which it descends – An estimate is made “per unit length of subducting zone,” occurring at depth z and simply caused by density contrast

  9. Slab-Pull Force: – z = depth beneath base of plate – α = coefficient of thermal expansion – T1 = temperature of mantle – d+L = thickness of upper mantle – Ret = {cp= specific heat ; and v = rate at which mantle slab sinks}

  10. Slab-Pull Force: – The total force available is evaluated at FSP(0) where z = 0 – As FSP(z) decreases with depth into the mantle it approaches 0 at z = d ; FSP(d) = 0

  11. Driving Forces: (continued) – This graph plots FSP(0) as a function of subduction velocity v – As v −> ∞ a limit becomes prevalent – This plot of subduction velocity displays the dependence of total force on composition of velocity

  12. Driving Forces: (conclusion) – Total FSP is estimated to be ~1013 N m-1 in magnitude – This is greater than the estimate of FRP at ~1012N m-1 – Both of these driving forces (FSP+FRP) are caused by the density difference between the hot and cold mantle – Hot mantle rises as cold mantle sinks

  13. Resisting Forces:(primary resisting forces) – FDF Mantle-Drag – FCD Extra Mantle-Drag Beneath Continents – FTF Transform-Fault Resistance – FSR Slab-Resistance – FCR Colliding-Resistance – FSUSuctional Force

  14. Resisting Forces:

  15. Resistive Force: – These resistive forces occurs at ridge axis of plates • causing shallow earthquakes – Resistivity is alsoalong bases of plates as mantle-dragforce [FDF] •assuming mantle flow < plate velocity (if opposite occurs it simply becomes a driving force)

  16. Resistive Force: (continued) – Transform-Fault Resistance [FTF] • Produces earthquakes – Slab-Resistance [FSR] • Estimates of forces suggest the resistive force on top of sinking slab to be greater than forces acting on its sides

  17. Resistive Force: (continued) – Resistive forces acting on the base of plate are proportional to the area of plate; also, of the same magnitude of resistive forces on descending slab – These forces are calculated by D.E. for flow in a fluid –This is logically proportional to the product of mantle viscosity [η] and plate velocity [v] – The product of [ηv] isestimated at ~1013 N m-1 in magnitude

  18. Resistive Force: (conclusion) – It is difficult to estimate resistive forces on faults – Transform-Fault [FTF] resistive forces are possibly of same magnitude as FRP at ~1012 or smaller – Again, this is still smaller than the mantle-drag force [FDF]

  19. Lithospheric Forces: (conclusion) – Driving Forces • Slab-Pull [FSP] • Ridge-Push [FRP] – Resistive Forces • Slab-Resistance • Transform-Fault Resistance

  20. Mantle Convection ControllingPlate Tectonics????? – Does the mantle convection drag plates around? OR – Do the acting forces at edges of plates simply drive tectonics? Tough to decide…

  21. Mantle Convection: (continued) – Analysis of driving and resistive forces shows that Slab-Pull is vital in determination of mantle flow – Difficulty lies in the fact that not all ridges are above convection cells • Not all plates have a ridge AND subduction • Antarctic and African plates are surrounded by ridges –Ridge-Push and Continental-Collision control stresses in most tectonics

  22. Mantle Convection: (continued) – Analysis of N. American plate displaysforces driving and deforming the continental section of the plate – Primary driving force of N. American plate is the Ridge-Push force from the Mid-Atlantic Ridge – The resistive forces of the Pacific plate against N. American plate is 25% of driving force, resulting in compression of the plate

  23. Mantle Convection: (conclusion) – Flow of mantle and motion of lithospheric plates is still obscure – The pull of descending plates at boundaries due to temperature decrease is a major role on thermal modeling of mantle flow and mechanical models of forces

  24. Archaean Tectonic Activity: – Force-balancing models are used to inspect probability of tectonic activity during Archaean • Plate velocities can be estimated – Earth was likely much hotter in the past • Temperatures at 1700oC during Archaean as opposed to 1300–1400oC today

  25. Archaean Tectonic Activity: (concluded) – Equating driving/resistive forces allows for estimation of viscosity and plate velocities – Plate velocities must have been high (~50cm yr-1) around four billion years ago – High plate velocities ought to have been necessary during Archaean to maintain high rate of heat loss through oceans

More Related