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The Restless Continents. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uGcDed4xVD4&feature=related&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1. Have you ever looked at a map of the world?.
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The Restless Continents http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uGcDed4xVD4&feature=related&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1
Have you ever looked at a map of the world? • Did you notice how the coastlines of continents on opposite sides of the oceans appear to fit together like the pieces of a puzzle?
Is this a coincidence? • How is it that the coastlines fit together so well? • Is it possible that the continents were actually together sometime in the past?
Wegener’s Continental Drift Hypothesis • One Scientist who looked at the pieces of this puzzle was Alfred Wegener in the early 1900’s • He wrote about his hypothesis: Continental Drift
Continental Drift • The hypothesis that the continents once formed a single landmass, broke up, and drifted to their present locations.
Continental Drift explained a few puzzling questions • Why do the continents seem to fit together like a giant puzzle? • Why are fossils of the same plant and animal species found on continents that are on different sides of the Atlantic Ocean? • Mesosaurus – SA, Africa • Glossopterous –Antartica, Africa, Australia • Why are rocks with different magnetic alignments found in the same place (paleomagnetism)?
The Hypothesis • Wegener made many observations before proposing his hypothesis of continental drift. • He thought that all the present continents were once joined in a single, huge continent called Pangaea
Pangaea • “Pangaea” means “allearth” • It existed about 245 million years ago • It split into two huge continents about 180 million years ago • Laurasia • Gondwana • These two continents split again about 65 million years ago to form the continents we know today
But Wegener’s theory of continental drift was not widely accepted during his lifetime…. • Many scientists would not accept his hypothesis. • They said that the calculated strength of the rocks that make up the Earth’s crust would not allow the crust to move in that way. • Many years later, other evidences were presented that supported his theory.
What do you think… • Our continents will look like in the future? • Will we move back together? • Will we be further apart? • What evidence will future scientists use to show our current day locations?
Demonstration of Sea Floor Spreading • Fold your 1 meter of paper in half to form a “V” • Slide the paper between two tables. Have them close enough to grip the paper, but far enough apart so that the paper can slide through the crack. • Using the ruler, slide the paper out 10 cm one each side. • Draw a vertical line on the paper at the table’s crack. Label this area “1” on both sides of the paper • Measure out 10 more cm, draw your line and label this area “2”on both sides of the paper • Continue this until you have 5 sections on each side
The Restless Planet: Sea Floor Spreading Unit 2: Sixth Grade
So what did Wegener believe was moving the continents? • Sea-floor Spreading ! • It was proposed that as the tectonic plates move apart, it creates a rift that allows magma to rise to the surface of the ocean floor and solidifies. • Mid-Ocean ridges are places where sea-floor spreading takes place • Mid-Atlantic Ridge • This creates new crust in that area, further pushing the continents apart. • Evidence: older crust is farther away from the mid-ocean ridge than newer crust is.
Sea-Floor Spreadinghttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GyMLlLxbfa4&feature=related&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1
Debate • We will be debating the most compelling evidence to support the theory of continental drift. • There will be three groups. • Group 1: Fossil Similarities • Group 2: Landform Similarities • Group 3: Sea Floor Spreading • You will have 20 minutes to form your argument. • Use notes, ITs, netbooks to find info • Write your points on the construction paper as bullets • Groups will then present their arguments to the class
Other evidence to support continental drift • Stratigraphy: studying the layers of the Earth, showed that the geologic columns in Antarctica and India were similar • Glaciation: Glacial deposits in Canada were also found in India and southern Africa • Marine Corals • Mountain Belts: ancient mountains in South Africa and near Buenos Aires, Argentina align when the two continents are fitted together.
More evidence to support Sea-Floor Spreading • Magnetic Reversals • Throughout Earth’s history, the north and south poles have changed places many times. • The molten rock at the mid-ocean ridges contains tiny grains of magnetic minerals. • They act as compasses, lining up with the magnetic field of the Earth. • When the magma cools, these tiny compasses are preserved in the rock. • When the poles reverse, the mineral grains are aligned in with the “incorrect” pole. • Paleomagetism