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Energy . Drives earthquakes and volcanic eruptions Concentrated at certain tectonic settings Associated with the Earth’s formation. Driving Forces on and within the Earth?. Driving Forces within the Earth. Heat formation: Impact of asteroids and comets in Earth’s early history
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Energy • Drives earthquakes and volcanic eruptions • Concentrated at certain tectonic settings • Associated with the Earth’s formation
Driving Forces within the Earth • Heat formation: • Impact of asteroids and comets in Earth’s early history • Decay of radioactive elements • Gravitational contraction • Differentiation into layers Artist Impression, NASA
Driving Forces on and within the Earth? • Earth’s internal heat • Flows within the mantle (largest volume of Earth) • Release in terms of volcanic activity and earthquakes • Long-term: continents, oceans and atmosphere • Movement of tectonic plates Greg Houseman, University of Leeds
Driving Forces on the Earth • Gravity: the attraction between bodies • Segregating elements within the Earth • Movement along the Earth’s surface • landslides • Movement within the Earth • Subducting oceanic slab moving into the mantle Landslide, China
Driving Forces on the Earth • The Sun • ¼ of the Sun’s energy reaches the Earth • Evaporation • Warming of atmosphere and hydrosphere • Weather: movement of air from warm to cooler areas
Formation of Solar System • What happened in the past and how is this currently reflected? • Gravitional force • Variations of temperatures • Rotation • Composition of material • Different states of matter
The Nebular Hypothesis • A nebula is formed from a collection of gases (98%) and dust (2%) • The mass rotates and is held together by gravity. The solar system formation
Where do we see this in our sky? • Third star down on Orion’s belt • Star nursery • 100 light years across (1 light year equals 6 trillion miles) • Reflection of dust and hydrogen
Orion Constellation • Winter sky constellation • Hunter in Greek mythology • New stars in several hundred million years
Nebula exists and through time: Contracts causing the nebula to increase temperature in center and increase speed of rotation Nebula: Step I
The Nebula collapses: step 2 • The collapsed mass forms a proto-sun and disc-shape rotating mass of gas and dust. • The Orion nebula contains about 153 visible protoplanetary disks • 2-17 times larger than our solar system
Rotation increases Temperature increases: 1,800,000 degrees Fahrenheit Fusion begins Protosun
Fusion • What does “to fuse” mean? • Remember, what is the composition of the nebula? • Look on the periodic table • What is the relation or difference between Hydrogen and Helium? • Can you predict what fuses?
Fusion • Hydrogen (1 proton) fuses with another Hydrogen (1 proton) = Helium (2 protons) • E = mc2 • E = energy • m= mass (very small) • c squared =speed of light (186,000 miles/second)
Step 3: Sun Forms • The disk is “cleared out” due to the immense amount of energy released. • Dust and gases cool, condense and accrete forming planetesimals. • Defined orbits around the sun
Our Sun • Collapsed disk not shown • Sun is about 5 billion years old • 5 billion years until a red giant is formed
Step 4: Material Cools and Condenses; planet formation • Temperature differences with respect from the sun • Terrestrial planets (closer) • Jovian or gaseous planets (farther away)
Solar System • The first four planets are terrestrial (iron and silicate) • The last planets are composed of gases
Moon’s Formation 5:20 • A large size planet , thought to be the size of Mars, collided with Earth- 4.4 billion years ago • The debris formed the moon • The impact, set the Earth on its axis • 23 degrees
The Early Earth • Hot • Homogenous • Crust as we know it, not developed • 4.6 billion years ago • Melted again due to the collision of the Mars size planet
Transitional Earth • Segregation of elements by density • Iron moves to the center • Gravitational pull and rotation
Chemically distinct layers • Crust: oxygen and silicon (70%) • Mantle: iron, magnesium, lower % Si, O • Core: iron and nickel
Inner core: solid Outer core: liquid Mantle: capable of flow Asthenosphere: acts like a hot plastic Lithosphere: rigid Physically Distinct Layers
Lithosphere • Rigid layer that lies between the surface and 60-100 miles • “Floats” on the asthenosphere • The tectonic plates are composed of lithosphere Lithosphere Contains crust and upper mantle
Continental Crust • Less dense • Higher % of silicon and oxygen • Lower % of iron and magnesium • Thicker (15-25 miles) • 30 % of Earth’s surface
Oceanic Crust • More dense • Higher % of iron and magnesium • Lower % of silicon and oxygen • Thinner (5-7 miles) • 70 % of Earth’s surface
Asthenosphere • Relatively soft layer capable of flow that lies below a depth of 60-100 miles (upper mantle) Dr. Railsback, University of Georgia
The Mantle • Largest portion of the Earth • Very rich in iron and magnesium • Very poor in silicon and oxygen • The mantle is solid but because of high temperatures and pressures, it is soft enough to flow • The asthenosphere is part of the upper mantle
The Core • Outer core-liquid which can flow and generates the Earth’s magnetic field • Inner core- solid and rotates faster than the Earth • Mostly iron, some nickel Complex fields in the core contribute to the dipole field at the surface (UC Berkeley)
External Source of Earth’s Water • The collision of comets with the Earth’s surface • As the ice hits the warm Earth, the ice melts to water • Gravity holds the water to the surface Haley’s comet contains ices and dust. The tail is created by ice to sublimate to steam.
Internal Source of Earth’s Water • Water vapor is released during volcanism • Cooling of the hot Earth involved intense volcanism • Water condenses
Formation of Atmosphere • Gas is expelled from magma during volcanic eruptions • Nitrogen, carbon dioxide, hydrogen, sulfur dioxide and water • Early Earth’s atmosphere did not contain which gas? Why?
History of the Earth • 4.6 billion years old • 4.4 bya, formation of moon • 3.9 bya, oldest rock (sedimentary rock) • sedimentary rocks are made-up of fragments of preexisting rocks • Sediments are carried and deposited by water and wind • implies the existence of weather and water • 4.1 bya, age of particles within the sedimentary rock Early Earth
Fossil Worm, Cambrian History of the Earth Sponge • 3.5 bya, first bacteria • 3.2 bya, algae (product?) • plants • photosynthesis, by-product is oxygen • worms and jelly fish • 500 million years ago, Cambrian (life) explosion: marine fauna; modern phyla: sponges, mollusks (clams and snails), echinoderms (sea urchins and stars), anthropoda -trilobites(crabs, lobsters) Trilobite
Earth as an evolving system • Creation and early Earth • Earth’s chemically and physically distinct layers • Atmosphere (air) • Hydrosphere (water) • Biosphere (plants and animals)
Summary • The Nebular Hypothesis • Earth’s heat sources • Radioactive decay • Initial heat produced by collision of other objects • Moon, water and gas formation • Earth’s layers, differences and locations • Importance of gravitational pull Think Quest