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Chapter 8: Plate TectonicsChapter 8: Plate Tectonics 8.1: Earth has several layers 8.2: Continents change position over time 8.3: Plates move apart 8.4:

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 8: Plate TectonicsChapter 8: Plate Tectonics 8.1: Earth has several layers 8.2: Continents change position over time 8.3: Plates move apart 8.4:"— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 8: Plate TectonicsChapter 8: Plate Tectonics 8.1: Earth has several layers 8.2: Continents change position over time 8.3: Plates move apart 8.4: Plates converge or scrape past each other

2 8.2: Continents change position over time  Before, you learned:  Earth’s main layers are the core, mantle, and crust  The lithosphere and asthenosphere are the topmost layers of Earth  The lithosphere is made up of tectonic plates  Now, you will learn:  How the continental drift hypothesis was developed  About evidence for plate movement from the sea floor  How scientists devloped the theory of plate tectonics

3 Core, Mantle, CrustCore, Mantle, Crust  Lithosphere: crust and very top of mantle – solid, most rigid layer  Asthenosphere: hotter, softer rock in the upper mantle (just below the lithosphere) – can flow like hot tar Less dense materials rise Denser materials sink Litho – “stone” or “rock” Asthenes – “weak”

4 Continents join together and split apart  As far back as the 1500’s, map makers noticed the western coast of Africa and the eastern coast of South America seemed to fit together  1912, German scientist Alfred Wegener proposed the hypothesis: continental drift

5 Evidence for Continental Drift  Fossils:  Fossils of an ancient (270 million years ago) reptile: Mesosaurus were found in South America AND western Africa, but no where else in the world  Explanation: the continents were once joined  Climate:  Greenland today is mostly covered in ice, yet tropical plant fossils are found there  South Africa is warm, but rocks were deeply scratched by ice sheets  Geology:  Kinds of rocks that make up the continents: those found in Brazil match those in western Africa  Limestone layers in the Appalachian Mountains (NA) exactly like Scotland’s Highlands

6 Pangaea and Continental Drift  Huge supercontinent over 200 million years ago  Pangaea, “all lands”  Centered over where Africa lies today  But how?

7 The theory of plate tectonics explains how plates and their continents move  Mid-1900s – scientists proved tectonic plates move  Evidence from the sea floor:  Huge underwater mountain ranges: mid-ocean ridges circling earth like baseball seams

8 The theory of plate tectonics explains how plates and their continents move  Evidence from the Sea Floor:  Sea-Floor Spreading: the ridges form along cracks in the crust, melted rock rises through these cracks, cools, and forms new oceanic crust

9 The theory of plate tectonics explains how plates and their continents move  Evidence from the sea floor:  Age of the sea floor: youngest rocks cloest to the ridge, oldest rocks farther away  Oldest ocean floor is young – 160 to 180 my old; continental crust much older: 4 billion yrs  Ocean Trenches  Sea floor spreads, then dense oceanic crust sinks into the asthenosphere (upper mantle) into huge trenches (like deep canyons)  Old crust destroyed as new crust forms – Earth remains the same size

10 Causes of Plate MovementCauses of Plate Movement  Tectonic plates rest on the asthenosphere – layer of soft, hot rock  Moves by convection: heat transfer by the movement of a material  Hot soft rock rises, cools, and sinks, then is heated and rises again: convection current – slow few cm/yr  Slab pull: gravity pulls the edge of a cool, dense plate into the asthenosphere – the entire plate is dragged along  Ridge push: material from a mid-ocean ridge slides downhill from the ridge

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12 Putting the Theory Together  Theory of plate tectonics: the Earth’s lithosphere is made up of huge plates that move over the surface of the Earth  One plate could not shift without affecting the others nearby  Plates can move apart, push together, or scrape past each other  Most major earthquakes, volcanoes, and mountain ranges appear where tectonic plates meet

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14  List of animations!  http://www.wwnorton.com/college/geo/egeo/animat ions/ch2.htm http://www.wwnorton.com/college/geo/egeo/animat ions/ch2.htm


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