1 / 28

Plate Tectonics

Plate Tectonics. Sir Francis Bacon 1620: “It appears that South America and Africa fit together” Antonio Snyder published a sketch in 1655 showing S.A. and Africa together Benjamin Franklin in 1782 said

haamid
Download Presentation

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. Plate Tectonics • Sir Francis Bacon 1620: • “It appears that South America and Africa fit together” • Antonio Snyder published a sketch in 1655 showing S.A. and Africa together • Benjamin Franklin in 1782 said • “The crust of the Earth must be a shell floating on a fluid interior. Thus, the surface of the globe would be capable of being broken and disordered by the violent movements of the fluids on which it rested.”

  2. Theory but no evidence • Most scientist thought it was more coincidence than fact that the landmasses appear to “fit together.” • Couldn’t fathom a process where these large landmasses moved, and they didn’t have any “evidence” that they had actually moved.

  3. Drifting Continents…? • first conception of the revolutionary theory of plate tectonics supported by evidence was proposed by the German geophysicist-meteorologist Alfred Wegener (1880-1930)

  4. Pangaea • Alfred Wegener proposed the theory of continental drift in early 1900’s • Wegener’s theorized that all the continents were once a single landmass. (Pangaea) • All continents were once joined and began gradually moving apart, in fact they’re still moving.

  5. 220 million years ago

  6. Wegner’s theorized that all the continents were once a single landmass.

  7. What was the Evidence and where did it come from? • 1- Continental shape • 2- Fossil remains • 3- Sea Floor Depth (Global Bathymetry- SONAR) • 4- Magnetic Stripes –A geomagnetic reversal is a change in the Earth's magnetic field such that the positions of magnetic north and magnetic south are interchanged. The Earth's field has alternated between periods of normal polarity, in which the direction of the field was the same as the present direction, and reverse polarity, in which the field was in the opposite direction. • 5- Global Seismic (tracking Earthquakes) • 6 - Mountain Soil Comparison

  8. 1 Shape

  9. 2 -Fossil remains (Animals and Plants)

  10. Land from the South, moving North

  11. 3 sea floor depth –WWII SONAR

  12. 4 magnetic stripes

  13. 5- Global Seismicity

  14. 6- Mountains -

  15. Mountain formations were once connected

  16. Review of Plate Tectonics • What drives Earth processes? • gravity and density differences • external (e.g. hydrologic cycle, erosion) • internal (e.g. mantle convection)

  17. Plate Boundaries • divergent (e.g. mid-Atlantic ridge) • transform (e.g. San Andreas fault zone) • convergent • ocean-ocean (e.g. Pacific-Pacific near Marianas Islands) • ocean-continent (e.g. Pacific-North America) • continent-continent (e.g. India-Asia)

  18. Transform Faults

  19. Review • Plate Boundaries • divergent (AKA constructive) • transform • convergent (AKA destructive) • ocean-ocean (e.g. Mariana Islands) • ocean-continent (e.g. Pacific-North America) • continent-continent (e.g. India-Asia)

  20. ...to Plate Tectonics • What are the lines of evidence Wegener used to support Continental Drift? • What is seafloor spreading? How do transform faults behave oddly at the Mid-Ocean Ridge? • What was the key development that led to our current theory of Plate Tectonics?

More Related