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9. Our Living Earth. Earth ’ s atmosphere , oceans & surface Earth ’ s interior & e arthquakes Earth’s plate tectonics activity Earth ’ s magnetic field & magnetosphere Earth ’ s evolving atmosphere Earth ’ s human population & biosphere. The Earth: A Portrait From Space.
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9. Our Living Earth • Earth’s atmosphere, oceans & surface • Earth’s interior & earthquakes • Earth’s plate tectonics activity • Earth’s magnetic field & magnetosphere • Earth’s evolving atmosphere • Earth’s human population & biosphere
Earth’s Environmental Spheres • Earth’s spheres • Geosphere Rock & metallic Earth materials • Hydrosphere Water as ice, liquid & humidity • Atmosphere ~78% nitrogen & ~21% oxygen • Biosphere All living things (biomass) • Earth’s ecosystem • Matter flows • A closed system for most practical purposes • Meteoroids enter daily, spacecraft leave occasionally • Energy flows • An open system for most practical purposes • Sunlight brings extremely large amounts of energy on one side • Radiant heat in extremely large amounts leaves onallsides
Rocks • Definition • Consolidated mixture of one or more minerals • Monomineralic rocks have many crystals of 1 mineral • Polymineralic rocks have many crystals of >2 minerals • Making rocks • Igneous processes Fiery origins • Sedimentary processes Cemented small particles • Metamorphic processes Changed by heat/pressure • Destroying rocks • Physical / mechanical weathering • Chemical weathering
Rock Cycle: Materials & Processes • Materials • Magmasolidifies & becomes… • Igneous rockweathers & becomes… • Sedimentlithifies & becomes… • Sedimentary rockmetamorphoses & becomes… • Metamorphic rockmelts & becomes… • Processes • Solidificationproducesigneous rock • Weatheringproducessediment • Lithificationproducessedimentary rock • Metamorphismproducesmetamorphic rock • Meltingproducesmagma
Magma: Source of Igneous Rocks • Earth’s interior is hot • Residual heat of formation ~ 4.6 billion years ago • Decay of radioactive isotopes • Earth’s interior is mostly solid or “plastic” • Solid: Rigid / brittle under intense pressure • Plastic: Flows slowly under intense pressure • Localized areas are hot enough to melt rocks • Magma temperatures vary ~ 600°C to ~ 1,400°C • Iron turns red at ~ 600°C& melts at ~ 1,500°C • Magma has ~ 10% greater volume than source • Same mass ⇒ Greater volume ⇒ Lower density
Sedimentary Rock Categories • Organic Remains of plants & animals • Coal Fossilized fern leaves • Clastic Broken rock & mineral fragments • Sandstone, shale & limestone • Bioclastic Broken shell fragments • Coquina Limestone “fossil hash” • Chemical Crystallization from water solution • Gypsum A common “evaporite” mineral
Three Metamorphic Processes • Heat Absolutely essential • Hot enough for atoms & molecules to slowly migrate • Cool enough so that nothing melts • Pressure Common but not essential • Subduction zones Pacific Northwest • Regional subsidence Mississippi Delta • Fluids Only near active volcanoes • Volcanically active areas Eastern Oregon
Oregon’s Metamorphic Environment Portland Astoria
Characterizing Earth’s Interior • Chemical composition Mineral composition • Low density minerals Crust • Granite continents & basalt ocean basins • Intermediate density minerals Mantle • Peridotite • High density minerals Core • Iron & nickel • Physical condition Solid / plastic / liquid • A function of temperature & pressure • Temperature increases slowly with depth • Pressure increases rapidly with depth • Solid Lithosphere Old & cool enough • Plastic Asthenosphere Lubricating layer • Solid Mantle Very slightly plastic • Liquid Outer core Temperature wins • Solid Inner core Pressure wins
Earth’s Interior Facts & Evidence • Some basic facts • Overallaverage density ~ 5.5 g . cm–3 • Surface average density ~ 2.7 to 3.0 g . cm–3 • Interior must have higher density materials • Much higher atomic number ⇒ Metals • Greater compression due to greater pressure • Some suggestive evidence • Asteroids orbiting the Sun • Range of materials from rock to iron/nickel • Proportions would produce a planet like Earth • Meteorites found on Earth • Range of materials from rock to iron/nickel • Proportions would produce a planet like Earth
The focus is also called the hypocenter Earthquake Focus & Epicenter
Seismic (Earthquake) Waves • Body waves • Source location: Focus • Place of maximum underground shaking • Place where the earthquake begins Usually ! ! ! • Varieties • Compressional waves P-waves Primary waves • Transverse waves S-waves Secondary waves • Surface waves • Source location: Epicenter • Place of maximum surface shaking • Place directly above the focus Usually ! ! ! • Varieties • Compressional waves Sideways jolting • Transverse waves Up & down jiggling
Compressional Seismic Waves Transverse Seismic Waves Compressional & Transverse Waves
Plate Tectonics • Tectonic plates = Lithospheric plates • Rigid & brittle • “Glide” over the asthenosphere • Sizes vary greatly • Micro plates Juan de Fuca plate • Macro plates Pacific plate • Three kinds of tectonic plates • Oceanic plates Basaltic composition • Continental plates Granitic composition • Composite plates Both basalt & granite
Mantle Convection & Plate Motion • Thermal gradient: Hotter at core than at crust • Results in a density gradient • Heat sources • Planetesimal impact Dominant as a protoplanet • Radioactive decay Ongoing exponential decay • Gravitational collapse Minimal as a protoplanet • Point of origin • Thought to be the core-mantle boundary • Shape • Elongated “curtains” of rising material
Ridge offset by transform faults Mid-Atlantic Ridge Spreading Zone
Effects of Plate Motion: Volcanoes • Divergent tectonic plate boundaries • Most rising magma spreads out under lithosphere • Lithosphere warms ⇒ Lowers density ⇒ Floats higher • Penetrates the lithosphere, causing eruptions • Convergent tectonic plate boundaries • Highest density plate subducts • Ocean ⇒⇐oceancollision • Oldest (i.e., coldest & densest) basaltic plate subducts • Basaltic to andesitic lavas build gently curving line of volcanoes • Ocean ⇒⇐continent collision • Basaltic (therefore most dense) oceanic plate subducts • Andesitic to rhyolitic lavas build gently curving line of volcanoes
Plate Motion Effects: Earthquakes • Divergent tectonic plate boundaries • All activity is near the Earth’s surface • Virtually all earthquakes are shallow • Most rock is relatively warm & soft • Absence of brittle rock reduces earthquake strength • Convergent tectonic plate boundaries • Ocean – ocean boundaries • Deep & strong earthquakes are very common • Ocean – continent boundaries • All depths & strong earthquakes are very common • Transform tectonic plate boundaries • Ocean – ocean boundaries • Absence of brittle rock reduces earthquake strength • Ocean – ocean boundaries • Presence of brittle rock increases earthquake strength
Plate Motion Effects: Mountains • Volcanoes • Usually occur at convergent & divergent boundaries • At least one plate must have basaltic oceanic crust • Factors contributing to solid rock melting • Thermal gradient ⇒ Deeper is hotter • Friction ⇒ Subducting slab ⇔ country rock • Addition of water ⇒ Under-sea subduction trenches • Folded mountains • Occur primarily at convergent boundaries • Both plates must have granitic continental crust • Thrust faulting is also very common • Significant crustal shortening
Plate Motion Effects: Geography • Continent ⇔ ocean configuration very dynamic • Three probable Pangaea episodes • All major landmasses gather into one supercontinent • Remaining 70% of Earth’s surface is one super-ocean • The present situation • Major continental landmasses are relatively stable • Major ocean basins are very dynamic • Atlantic Ocean is increasing in size • PacificOcean is decreasing in size
Earth’s Magnetic Field • Basic physical processes • Slow circulation of the liquid metallic outer core • Rapid axial rotation of once per day • Basic properties • Combined magnetic field of many smaller “cells” • Reverses on average ~ 0.5 million years • May be in the initial stages of a reversal now • Not perfectly aligned with Earth’s rotational axis • True of almost every planet in the Solar System • Magnetic declination • Deviation of magnetic North [compass] away from true North • Magnetic inclination • Angle between Earth’s surface & Earth’s magnetic field lines
Earth’s Magnetosphere • Basic physical processes • Earth’s relatively strong magnetic field • The ever-changing solar wind • Ionized hydrogen atoms Free protons & electrons • This is an electric current Generates a magnetic field • Strong interaction between two magnetic fields • Basic properties • Earth’s magnetosphere shaped like a teardrop • Blunt side faces Sun, pointed side faces opposite Sun • Solar wind gusts produce striking effects • Geomagnetic storms Disrupt radio signals • Occasionally strong enough to disrupt electric power distribution • Aurorae Ionize atmospheric atoms • Occasionally strong enough to be seen in Florida & Texas
Terrestrial Planetary Atmospheres • Venus • ~100 times more atmosphere than Earth • ~ 96.5% CO2 & ~3.5% N2 • Runaway global warming • Very large amount of CO2 & relatively close to the Sun • Earth • ~ 78% N2 & ~21% O2 • Moderate global warming • Very small amount of CO2 & moderately close to the Sun • Mars • ~100 times less atmosphere than Earth • ~ 95.3% CO2 & ~2.7% N2 • Minimal global warming • Very small amount of CO2 & relatively far from the Sun
Source of Planetary Atmospheres • Volcanic outgassing • Venus • Abundant with no oceans to assimilate gases • Earth • Abundant with oceans to assimilate gases • Mars • Absent with no oceans to assimilate gases • Comet impacts • Very common in the young Solar System • Veryrarein today’s Solar System