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Wegener’s arguments and their reception Wegener and Inuit guide during the fatal 1930 Greenland expedition.

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Presentation on theme: "Wegener’s arguments and their reception Wegener and Inuit guide during the fatal 1930 Greenland expedition."— Presentation transcript:

1 Wegener’s arguments and their reception Wegener and Inuit guide during the fatal 1930 Greenland expedition

2 Chronology of Continental Drift & Plate Tectonics 1912 -- First publication of Wegener's hypothesis 1920 -- 2nd edition of Wegener's book – widespread dissemination 1926 -- New York symposium on continental drift 1930 -- Wegener's death 1931 -- Holmes publishes ideas about mantle convection 1937 -- Our Wandering Continents by Du Toit 1956 -- University of Tasmania symposium (Carey) 1956 -- paleomagnetic evidence for North America - Europe motion (Runcorn) 1962 -- sea floor spreading proposed (Hess, Dietz) 1963 -- sea floor magnetic anomalies explained (Vine, Matthews, Morley) 1965 -- transform faults explained (Wilson) 1967 -- confirmation of transform fault motion (Sykes) 1967 -- subduction zones proposed (Oliver and others) 1967 -- plate tectonics described (Morgan, McKenzie)

3 Wegener’s evidence for continental drift Postglacial rebound (isostacy) shows that continents can move over a viscous substrate Oceanic crust is fundamentally different from continental crust, as demonstrated by the bimodal distribution of elevation Geodesy shows that Greenland is separating from Europe (at 36 m/yr!) Continental coastlines fit together Older geological units on opposite continents match Paleontology shows that the geographical range of some species overlap several continents, indicating the continents were joined Paleoclimate studies show a distribution of climates that are not compatible with present-day geography, but are compatible with pre-drift positions

4 Isostacy shows that continents can move over a viscous substrate

5 Oceanic crust is fundamentally different from continental crust

6 Older geological units on opposite continents match

7 The geographical range of fossil species cross the present-day oceans

8 Paleoclimate data are more compatible with pre-drift geography

9 Wegener’s incorrect ideas 1 ) The motive forces proposed by Wegener are very small and unrelated to continental motion 2) Continents do not "plow" through oceanic crust, but instead continental and oceanic crust moves together over the weaker asthenosphere. 3) Had no concept of principal tectonic features (mid-ocean ridges, subduction zones) 4) Claimed that North America and Eurasia separated recently, and Pleistocene glacial features were evidence of drift. Also thought rate was much faster (5-30 m/yr, instead of 2-4 cm/yr)

10 Rebuttal -- Arguments against drift 1) There was no evidence that the seafloor material (sima) was weaker, so that the continental masses could move through it. 2) Geophysicists showed that the motive forces proposed by Wegener were insignificant. 3) Paleontological data for dispersal of species between continents could be explained by "land bridges” 4) Many geologists felt that the fit of the continents by Wegener was not very good and was due to coincidence. 5) The correlation of geologic units between different continents and the paleoclimate evidence was controversial, and there were proposed counter-examples. 6) The geodetic observations favoring drift were not accurate enough to resolve it. 7) Why had Pangea existed for over 4,000 Ma, and then suddenly broken up in the last 150 Ma ? Or even the last 2 Ma, as suggested by Wegener’s incorrect continental velocities?

11 Paleontology is explained by “land bridges” From Texbook of Geology Pirsson & Schuchert, 1915

12 Explanations for Fossil Distribution

13 The best opponent Physicist Sir Harold Jeffries (1891- 1989) The forces proposed by Wegener were miniscule The rheology of the earth’s interior was too rigid for plates to move The forces are too weak by a factor of 10 5

14 Wegener dies in Greenland, 1930 N Y Times, January 17, 1932 Movie SOS Iceberg, 1933 Based on expedition to recover Wegener’s papers

15 Major Questions – 1930 to 1956 1) What is the underlying cause of geosynclines and vertical tectonics? 2)The ocean floor began to be revealed – how to incorporate the new knowledge? - oceanic rocks predominantly basalt –different from continents? - can oceanic regions be transformed into continents and vice-versa? - seafloor morphology – trenches and ridges? 3)Deep earthquakes – Wadati Benioff zones - inclined zones of earthquakes down to 700 km - linked to oceanic trenches and volcanos? 4)What is the mechanism of heat loss of the earth? -Conduction or convection? - If convection how is it related to geology?

16 Developments 1930-1956 Holmes realized with radioactivity some process must be removing heat – proposed mantle convection Jeffries continued to insist that mantle material cannot support movement of continents Southern Hemisphere geologists supported continental drift – Du Toit – Our Wandering Continents Continental drift was regarded as a crazy idea by North American geologists

17 Holmes and mantle convection

18 Southern hemisphere geologists: Du Toit Our Wandering Continents (1937) Early Mesozoic Paleozoic


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