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Chapter 4.  Inside the Earth  Crust  Mantle  Core  Lithosphere  Asthenosphere  Mesosphere  Tectonic Plate.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 4.  Inside the Earth  Crust  Mantle  Core  Lithosphere  Asthenosphere  Mesosphere  Tectonic Plate."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 4

2  Inside the Earth  Crust  Mantle  Core  Lithosphere  Asthenosphere  Mesosphere  Tectonic Plate

3  The Crust  5-100km thick  Thinnest layer  Two types  Continental  Oceanic  Made of…

4  The Mantle  Thicker  Most of the mass  Crust too thick  Observations  Ocean floor  Made of…

5  The Core  Mantle to the core  Made of…  Not made of..  1/3 of the Earth’s mass

6  Five layers  Inner Core  Solid, dense  Outer Core  Liquid layer  Mesosphere  Strong  Asthenosphere  Plastic layer  Lithosphere  Tectonic plates

7  Names of the plates  Fit together  Difference  Ocean  Continent  Plates include…  Like ice cubes

8  Never drilled through the crust  Seismic waves  Seismographs

9  Restless Continents  Continental Drift  Sea-floor Spreading

10  Alfred Wegener  Continental Drift  Fit together  Similar types of rocks and climatic conditions

11  Observations  Single, huge continent (supercontinent)  245 million years ago  Laurasia and Gondwana (180 million years ago)

12  The Theory of Plate Tectonics  Plate tectonics  Convergent Boundary  Divergent Boundary  Transform Boundary

13  Plates Touch  Three Types  Convergent Boundary  Divergent Boundary  Transform Boundary  How they move  earthquakes

14  Collide  Kind of crust  Three Types

15  Separate  New Sea Floor  Mid-Ocean Ridges

16  Slide Past Each other horizontally  San Andreas Fault

17  Plate Tectonic Theory  Solid Rock Flows  Changes in Density  Thermal Energy  Three possible causes

18  Ridge Push  Convection  Slab Pull

19  Type and Shape of the plate  Interacts with Plates  So Slow and Gradual  GPS  Radio Signals

20  Deforming the Earth’s Crust Vocabulary  Compression  Tension  Folding  Fault  Uplift  Subsidence

21  Spaghetti  Bending  Breaking  Rock Layers  Stress

22  Compression  Squeezed or Collided  Convergent  Mountain Ranges  Tension  Stretch  Divergent  Mid-Ocean Ridge

23  Bending of Rock Layers  Horizontal layers  Types of Folds  Anticlines  Synclines  Monocline  Different sizes

24  Stress is applied  Fault Blocks  Hanging wall and footwall  Two Types  Normal fault  Reverse fault

25  Normal fault  Tension Pull Rocks Apart  Reverse Faults  Compression that pushes rocks together

26  Look at the order of sedimentary rock layers  Compare the two dark layers

27  Third Type of Fault  Opposing forces cause rock to break and move horizontally  Move left or right  San Andreas Fault

28  Plates Collide  Land features start as…  Can become …  Mountains exist  Andes Mountains  Compression or tension

29  Folded Mountains  Highest  Convergent (collide)  Appalachian Mtns.  Fault-Block Mountains  Tension  Drop Down  Tilted up  Volcanic Mountains  Major (Convergent)  Sinks  Islands  Ring of Fire

30  Vertical Movements  Uplift Higher elevations May or May Not Be Deformed  Subsidence Sinking No Deformation

31  Uplifting of Depressed Rock  Formation of Mtns.  Without Deformation Rebound Weight removed  Subsidence of Cooler Rock  Hot More Space  Less Volume (Subsides)  Tectonic Letdown  Stretched rift zones  Stress


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