1 / 35

Natural Disasters

Natural Disasters. Plate Tectonics & Physical Hazards Chile Earthquake Chile Tsunami. Continental Drift. Geographic fit of continents Fossils Mountains Glaciation. Researchers noted geographic fit of continents e.g. Africa and S. America

talon
Télécharger la présentation

Natural Disasters

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. Natural Disasters Plate Tectonics & Physical Hazards Chile Earthquake Chile Tsunami

  2. Continental Drift • Geographic fit of continents • Fossils • Mountains • Glaciation • Researchers noted geographic fit of continents • e.g. Africa and S. America • Atlantic formed by separation of Africa from S. America • Seuss, 1885, proposed super continent by studying fossils, rocks, mountains • Wegener and Taylor, early 1900’s, proposed continental drift and Pangaea • Evidence supporting the idea that the continents had drifted.

  3. Continental Drift – Geographic Fit • Continents seem to fit like pieces of a puzzle

  4. Continental Drift - Fossils • Similar distribution of fossils such as Mesosaurus

  5. Continental Drift – Mountain Ranges • Mountain ranges match across oceans

  6. Continental Drift - Glaciation • Grooves left by glaciers indicate location of glaciers and direction of movement • Past glaciation indicates position of paleocontinents

  7. Problem with Continental Drift • Alfred Wegener • Presented hypothesis to other professionals • Did not provide plausible mechanism to explain how continents drifted

  8. New Theory Developed – Seafloor Spreading • Harry Hess suggested new seafloor is created at mid-ocean ridges and destroyed in deep ocean trenches

  9. Seafloor Spreading • Continental drift reexamined in 1960’s with new information • Supporting evidence for seafloor spreading • Earthquakes • Volcanos • Age of Seafloor • Paleomagnetism

  10. Evidence for Seafloor SpreadingWorld Seismicity • Earthquake distribution matches plate boundaries

  11. Evidence for Seafloor SpreadingVolcanism • Volcanoes match some plate boundaries; some are hot spots

  12. Evidence for Seafloor Spreading • Age of Seafloor • Youngest sea floor is at mid-ocean ridge • Oldest sea floor away from mid-ocean ridge

  13. Seafloor Spreading - Paleomagnetism • Earth has a magnetic field • When rocks cool at the Earth’s surface, they record Earth’s magnetic field • Earth’s magnetic field reverses approx. every 600,000 years • As seafloor spreads, normal and reverse polarities are preserved in the rock record

  14. Seafloor Spreading – Age of Seafloor • Young rocks (red) found near mid-ocean ridges (MOR) • Away from MOR, age of seafloor gets progressively older (blue)

  15. What Drives Plate Motion? • Convection Currents • Air heats up, expands, and rises • As air moves away, it cools, contracts, and sinks

  16. Mechanism for Seafloor Spreading • Convection Currents • As heat rises, it moves away at spreading centers pulling plates apart • Plates slide over asthenosphere • The upper mantle then cools and becomes more dense – sinking at ocean trenches

  17. Plate Tectonics Theory • John Tuzo Wilson combined ideas of Continental Drift and Seafloor Spreading into “Plate Tectonics”

  18. Earth’s Structure • Earth’s internal structure • Chemical Composition • Physical Property

  19. Earth’s Structure • Chemical Composition Layers divided by its composition • Crust • Continental crust • Granite (2.8 g/cm3) • Oceanic Crust • Basalt (3.0 g/cm3) • Mantle • Composed of Fe & Mg • Core • Composed of Fe & Ni • Two parts • Outer core • Inner core

  20. Earth’s Structure • Physical Properties Layers divided into rigid, plastic, or liquid • Lithosphere • Rigid • Asthenosphere • Plastic • Mesosphere • Rigid • Outer Core • Liquid Layer • Inner Core • Solid Layer

  21. Lithospheric Plates • Comprise approx. 12 large plates and 12 smaller plates • Lithospheric plates are rigid layers that flow over a partially molten (plastic) asthenosphere

  22. Plate Boundaries • Where plate boundaries meet . . . • Divergent • Convergent • Transform

  23. Divergent Plate Boundary • Boundaries where plates pull apart • New crust is being formed

  24. Divergent Examples • East Africa Rift Zone • Mid-Atlantic Ocean Ridge

  25. Convergent Plate Boundary • Plates move toward each other (collide) • Crust is being destroyed • Three types: • Ocean-continent • Ocean-ocean • Continent-continent

  26. Ocean-Continent Collision • Produce volcanic arc system

  27. Ocean-Continent Examples • Cascade Ranges – Northern California, Oregon, and Washington (left) • Form as oceanic crust collides with continental crust • Mount St. Helens, Washington (right)

  28. Ocean-Ocean Collision • Form a chain of island arc volcanoes

  29. Ocean-Ocean Examples • Japanese Islands • Form along a trench as two oceanic plates collide • Mount Fuji (right) active volcano in Japan

  30. Continental-Continental Collision • Continental crust have same densities • Neither plates sink (subduct) • Form high mountain chains

  31. Continental-Continental Examples • Himalayas – home of Mount Everest (highest mountain in the world)

  32. Transform Plate Boundaries • Plates slide past one another • Crust is neither created nor destroyed

  33. Convergent Boundary Examples • San Andreas Fault • Runs almost the entire length of California

  34. Hot Spot Volcanism • Hot spot volcanoes around the world • Site of mantle plumes from deep within the core-mantle boundary • Lithospheric plates slide over hot spots leaving a chain of dormant (not active) volcanoes

  35. Hot Spot Examples • Formation of a volcanic island chain as oceanic plate moves over a stationary hot spot • The age of the islands increases toward the left • New islands will continue to form over the hot spot • Loihi will be the next island in the chain

More Related