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Published byChristiana Newman Modified over 9 years ago
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Inside the Earth
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Why does the earth look the way it does today? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p0dWF_ 3PYh4http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p0dWF_ 3PYh4
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2 ways to describe layers: Composition, Physical Properties
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Composition (What it is made of) Crust – outer layer, thin, broken into tectonic plates Mantle – middle layer, thick, convection currents from heat of earth’s core movement of Earth’s plates Core – middle, very hot, dense
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Physical Structure of the Earth (5 Layers) Lithosphere- rigid outer layer (crust) Asthenosphere- solid rock that flows slowly (like hot asphalt) Mesosphere- middle layer Outer Core- liquid layer Inner Core- solid, very dense
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Why does the earth look the way it looks today? Theory of Plate Tectonics Earth’s surface = about a dozen major rigid, moving crustal plates +several smaller plates
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Plates - Slabs of Earth’s lithosphere (crust + upper mantle) - Average thickness ~ 100 km (62 miles) - Most support both continent and ocean Continental Drift – states that the continents have drifted and still are drifting apart.
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Animated Plate Tectonic Reconstruction
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Why do the plates move? 1.Tremendous heat in asthenosphere 2.Plates “ride” on hot, flowing rock 3. Plates move b/c heat is released from deep inside earth. 4. Convection currents cause hot material to rise and expand (plates diverge) and cooler material to sink and contract (plates converge). http://www.wisc- online.com/Objects/ViewObject.aspx?ID=SCE304
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Alfred Wegener Wegener – proposed that in the distant past, the Earth’s continents were all joined as a single landmass.
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Evidence for Wegener’s theory a.South America + Africa fit like a puzzle b.Match of ancient continental rocks and tectonic (fold & fault) structures in Americas and Africa/Europe. c.Pangaea c.Pangaea – hypothetical “super continent” made of all current continents d.Fossil evidence
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Fossil Evidence
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What do you think of this theory and the evidence behind it? Turn and talk with the people at your table to discuss the strengths and weaknesses of Wegener’s ideas
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Divergent Convergent Transform Three types of plate boundary
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Day 2 – Why does the earth look the way it does today? What forces are at work that we cannot see? –Convection currents in the mantle We saw this yesterday: http://www.wisc- online.com/Objects/ViewObject.aspx?ID=SCE304http://www.wisc- online.com/Objects/ViewObject.aspx?ID=SCE304 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gFU9n_GhsdM How would this motion affect plate tectonics? –http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p0dWF_3P Yh4http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p0dWF_3P Yh4
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Divergent Convergent Transform Three types of plate boundary
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Spreading ridges –As plates move apart new material comes up to fill the gap Divergent Boundaries
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Iceland has a divergent plate boundary running through its middle Iceland: An example of continental rifting
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Oceanic-oceanic divergent Effects: Magma rises to surface & cools mid-ocean ridges, volcanic activity, shallow earthquakes, sea-floor spreading Example: Mid-Atlantic ridge
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Continental-continental divergent Effects: Rift valleys, sometimes with lakes or shallow oceans, shallow earthquakes, occasionally volcanoes Ex: Rift valley of East Africa
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There are three styles of convergent plate boundaries –Continent-continent collision –Continent-oceanic crust collision –Ocean-ocean collision Convergent Boundaries
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Called SUBDUCTION Continent-Oceanic Crust Collision
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Oceanic-continental convergent Effects: subduction, earthquakes, ocean trench, line of volcanoes Examples: Andes mountains in South America
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When two oceanic plates collide, one runs over the other which causes it to sink into the mantle forming a subduction zone. The bottom plate bends down to form a trench. The world’s deepest parts of the ocean are found along trenches. –E.g. The Mariana Trench is 11 km deep! Ocean-Ocean Plate Collision
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Oceanic-oceanic convergent Effects: earthquakes, ocean trenches, chain of volcanic islands Ex: Japan
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Forms mountains, ex. European Alps, Himalayas Continent-Continent Collision
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Continental-continental convergent Effects: Mountains, shallow earthquakes Example: Himalaya mountains in India
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Himalayas
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Where plates slide past each other Transform Boundaries Above: View of the San Andreas transform fault
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Transform plate boundaries Effects: lots of earthquakes and faulting Example: San Andreas fault in California
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Earth on the Move Earth Structure & Plate Tectonics Notes
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Earth, Inside & Out The Earth is divided into three layers 1.Crust 2.Mantle 3.Core
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Crust (1) This is the outermost layer of the Earth. (2) This is the layer we walk on. (3) It is a thick, rocky skin. (4) If we think of the Earth as a pool ball, this crust is as thin as a postage stamp stuck on a pool ball. (5) At its thickest, which is under mountain ranges, the crust is only about 35km (22mi) thick.
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And what type of crust would you like with your Earth? There are two types of crust
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Continental Crust: 1. Makes up the continents 2. Contains light colored rocks such as granite. 3. Floats high on the mantle
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Oceanic Crust 1. Makes up the ocean floor 2. Contains the dense rocks such as basalt Thinner than the continental crust
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Mantle (1) Hotter and denser than the crust because the deeper you go inside the earth, the temperature & pressure increases. (2) Made of solid rock. The Mantle is made of two zones
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Mantle Zones (a) Lithosphere (i) Thin, uppermost part of the mantle; cooler & less rigid (ii) Floats on the athenosphere, and slides around very slowly. (iii) The upper part of the lithosphere melts rocks, forming a substance called magma.
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Magma 1. Magma (melted rock) moves like hot oatmeal. Uneven heating causes material in the mantle to constantly and slowly rise & fall in convection currents. Convection Current: process by which hot fluid rises to the surface, and then sinks again, like soup being heated in a saucepan
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Asthenosphere Hot, weak zone directly under the lithosphere Flows at a very slow rate
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Core i) Deep within the Earth is the core ii) The core is made mostly of nickel & iron iii) Twice as dense as the mantle. Main source of heat that triggers the convection currents
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The core is made of two layers (1) Outer core: molten & is responsible for the Earth’s magnetic field. Inner core: solid
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