8.2 Continental Drift Theory and Sea-Floor Spreading

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Sea Floor Spreading and Continental Drift
Advertisements

Continental Drift, Sea Floor Spreading and Plate Tectonics
Unit 4 Lesson 2 Plate Tectonics
If you look at a map of the world, you may notice that some of the continents could fit together like pieces of a puzzle…..the shapes of the coastlines.
Unit 4 Lesson 2 Plate Tectonics Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
Continental Drift 225 million years ago. Continental Drift million years ago.
Plate Tectonics.
Structure of the Earth and Plate Tectonics Notes.
Earth’s Structure and Pangaea. Review Inside the Earth The Earth has 4 main layers. 1.Crust (rock) 2.Mantle (rock) 3.Outer Core (metal) 4.Inner Core (
Plate Tectonics Unit:. Composition of the Earth: Layers of the Earth: 1.Crust: 5-100km thick. a.Oceanic crust: thin and more dense, mostly basalt b.Continental.
“Restless Continents”. A. One scientist who looked at the pieces of this puzzle was Alfred Wegener. 1. In the early 1900s, he wrote about his hypothesis.
Earth’s Structure and Pangaea. Review Inside the Earth The Earth has 4 main layers. 1.Crust (rock) 2.Mantle (rock) 3.Outer Core (metal) 4.Inner Core (
Continental Drift Notes
HOW DOES EARTH PLATES HELP SHAPE LANDFORMS Chapter 8 Section 2.
Continental Drift Theory Proposed by Alfred Wegener in million years ago, all of the continents were combined into one super-continent called.
Earth’s Structure and Pangaea. Review Inside the Earth The Earth has 3 layers. 1.Crust 2.Mantle 3.Core.
Earth’s Structure and Pangaea. Review Inside the Earth The Earth has 4 main layers. 1.Crust (rock) 2.Mantle (rock) 3.Outer Core (liquid metal) 4.Inner.
Plate Tectonics.
Unit 4 Lesson 6 Plate Tectonics
Unit 4 Lesson 2 Plate Tectonics
PLATE TECTONICS.
Plate Tectonics A Giant Jigsaw Puzzle and Continental Drift
Sea-Floor Spreading.
Breakup of Pangaea.
Unit 4 Lesson 2 Plate Tectonics
Plate Tectonics Table of Contents Drifting Continents
Unit 4 Lesson 2 Plate Tectonics
Plate Tectonics.
INTRO TO CONTINENTAL DRIFT…SORT OF 
Earth Materials – Geology Plate tectonics
Chapter 3: Plate Tectonics
Plate Tectonics.
Plate Tectonics.
Unit 6 Lesson 4 Plate Tectonics
Sea Floor Spreading Assignment # 23
Sea-Floor Spreading.
Earth’s Layers The three main layers of Earth are the crust, mantle, and the core. These layers vary greatly in size, composition (what they are made of),
Restless Continents Chapter 4: Lesson 2 Page95-98.
Plate Tectonics 8th Grade Science.
Continental Drift.
Review from yesterday!.
Continental drift, seafloor spreading & magnetic reversals
Pop Quiz: Explain the theory of continental drift
Continental Drift Theory
Sea Floor Spreading.
Chapter 9 Plate Tectonics.
Layers of the Earth and Continental Drift Jeopardy
Earth’s Structure and Pangaea
Unit 1 Lesson 3 Earth’s Plates
Unit 4 Lesson 2 Plate Tectonics
Seafloor Spreading and Plate Tectonics
Chapter 4 Plate Tectonics
Plate Tectonics A Giant Jigsaw Puzzle and Continental Drift
The mechanism for continental drift
Sea Floor Spreading EQ:What is seafloor spreading and how does it account for the movement of continents?
Part 2 of # 8 Continental Drift and Plate Tectonic Notes
Earth’s Structure and Pangaea
Earth’s Structure and Pangaea
Chapter 7 Section 2.
Unit 4 Lesson 2 Plate Tectonics
Earth’s Structure and Pangaea
Earth’s Structure and Pangaea
Earth’s Structure and Pangaea
Earth’s Structure and Pangaea
12.1 Evidence for Continental Drift
Earth’s Structure and Pangaea
Continental Drift Theory
Continental Drift Theory
The Changing Earth.
Earth’s Structure and Pangaea
Presentation transcript:

8.2 Continental Drift Theory and Sea-Floor Spreading How do Earth’s Tectonic Plates Help to Create Landforms?

Intro Brain Teaser Why are the continents located where they are today? Have they always been there? Are the continents moving right now? If yes, WHY? If no, WHY?

A RADICAL Change! Until the 1600s people thought that the continents were always in the same place Scientists OBSERVED: coasts of continents looked like they fit together. . . So Alfred Wegener made an important INFERENCE. . .

Theory of Continental Drift Theory is ????

Continental Drift: What the Theory Says Wegener said continents were once together in giant super continent called “Pangaea” Pangaea Means “all Earth” Slowly over time Pangaea broke apart and the pieces drifted to different parts to form today’s continents

Continental Drift: The Evidence SHAPE Observation: The shape of the continents look like they once fit together like a jigsaw puzzle Inference: continents were once connected in one landmass

Pangaea: Continents Connected in One Landmass

Continental Drift: The Evidence FOSSILS Observation: Same type of fossils found on coast of South America and Africa and the animal could not swim or fly Inference: two continents were once connected Example: freshwater Mesosarus could not survive swim across salty ocean

Mesosarus

Continental Drift: The Evidence ROCKS Observation: same type of layered rock found on coast of S. America and Africa Inference: thought that the rocks must have been joined at once time; therefore, continents were once connected

What about the other side? Why would you doubt Wegner’s theory during this time? How is his argument weak? What is he missing?

Reason to Doubt Continental Drift Wegener did not have a reason why the continents moved What force was strong enough to move continents????

Years later, Wegener gets some Help!!! In the twentieth century technology advanced so a scientist named Herry Hess discovered a process that provided the missing link to Wegener’s theory. . .

We learn about landforms under water Scientists discovered trenches (dips) and ridges (mountains) at bottom of oceans Mid-Atlantic Ocean Ridge– mountains along floor of Atlantic Ocean Ocean ridges are like seams on baseball

Mid-Atlantic Ocean Ridge

How do these ridges and trenches form???? Herry Hess asked, “how did these underwater ridges and mountains form?” Answer Sea Floor Spreading

Video on Sea Floor Spreading Discovery Exploring the Earth

Seafloor Spreading Definition The process that forms new underwater ridges which involves magma pushing up through the crust Magma Molten (melted) rock that forms underground

WHY?? Why was Harry Hess able to discover seafloor spreading? Better technology developed scientists could map ocean floor

Break it Down! Let’s take look at the steps in this process!!!!

Sea Floor Spreading Process Step 1: Core heats rock in mantle and it rises to crust due to convection currents Convection currents: the process of rock heated in inner mantle turns to magma rises since hot materials weigh less Eventually magma cools, gets heavy and falls back, and process repeats

Sea Floor Spreading Process Step 2: Magma bursts through oceanic crust into ocean, slows down in cold, and hardens into rock Comes through to form mid-ocean ridge

Image of Mid Ocean Ridge

Image of Mid Ocean Ridge

Sea Floor Spreading Step 3: More magma pushes through crust and this pushes existing rock/crust to either side as it bursts through. The crust/rock near the mid-ocean ridge is the youngest and the crust/rock furthest from the ridge is the oldest.

Evidence of Seafloor Spreading Magnetic patterns Age of Rocks Appearance of Rocks

Evidence of Sea Floor Spreading Magnetic Patterns Magnetic poles reverse over time so rocks in crust showed alternating markings of the direction of magnetic poles

Earth's magnetic field is the magnetic field that extends from the Earth's interior to where it meets the solar wind, a stream of charged particles emanating from the Sun. Its magnitude at the Earth's surface ranges from 25 to 65 micro Tesla (0.25 to 0.65 Gauss). It is approximately the field of a magnetic dipole tilted at an angle of 10 degrees with respect to the rotational axis—as if there were a bar magnet placed at that angle at the center of the Earth. However, unlike the field of a bar magnet, Earth's field changes over time because it is generated by the motion of molten iron alloys in the Earth's outer core (the geodynamo).

The North Magnetic Pole wanders, but does so slowly enough that an ordinary compass remains useful for navigation. However, at random intervals, which average about several hundred thousand years, the Earth's field reverses, which causes the north and South Magnetic Poles to change places with each other. These reversals of the geomagnetic poles leave a record in rocks that allow paleomagnetists to calculate past motions of continents and ocean floors as a result of plate tectonics.

Evidence of Sea Floor Spreading AGE OF ROCKS Infer how do you think the rocks would be arranged (in terms of their age) to support the idea of sea floor spreading?

Evidence of Sea Floor Spreading AGE OF ROCKS Oldest rocks were found farthest away from eruption point Newest rocks found in middle (at eruption point)

Evidence of Sea Floor Spreading APPEARANCE OF ROCKS Infer—what do you think rocks would look like if they formed after the magma erupts from the earth’s crust at the bottom of the ocean?

Evidence of Sea Floor Spreading APPEARANCE OF ROCKS Rocks are MOLTEN Rocks found on ocean floor looked like pillows or toothpaste This is what rocks look like after magma has hardened

Pillow or Toothpaste Rocks

How we Detect Oceanic Ridges SONAR Method of bouncing sound waves off objects and measuring the time it takes for wave to return

INFER!!! Make the Connection! How does the process of sea-floor spreading connect back to prove continental drift theory?

Connection to Continental Drift Seafloor spreading is the force strong enough to push the continents

Sea Floor Spreading

What’s Happening Now? North America is being pushed west toward Asia Atlantic Ocean is widening; Pacific Ocean is shrinking