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Plate Tectonics and the Rock Cycle

Plate Tectonics and the Rock Cycle. Chapter 8. Earth Formed 4.6 billion years ago. Heavier elements sank (Fe) Lighter elements floated above them (silica) The elements/Minerals present when Earth formed are all we have to use! Minerals = nonrenewable resource.

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Plate Tectonics and the Rock Cycle

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  1. Plate Tectonics and the Rock Cycle Chapter 8

  2. Earth Formed 4.6 billion years ago • Heavier elements sank (Fe) • Lighter elements floated above them (silica) • The elements/Minerals present when Earth formed are all we have to use! • Minerals = nonrenewable resource

  3. Minerals Are Not Distributed Evenly on the Globe • Economic and political conflicts • California Gold Rush • Alaskan Gold Rush • Blood Diamonds • Earth contains a finite amount of mineral resources!

  4. Layers of the Earth

  5. Structure of the Earth

  6. Three Geologic Cycles • Tectonic Cycle • Rock cycle • Soil Formation

  7. Plate tectonics • Wegener, 1912: “Earth’s lithosphere is separated into plates that are in constant motion.” • Pangaea • Similar: • Rock formations & Fossil evidence • Plate types: Oceanic Plates & Continental Plates

  8. Plate Tectonic Rules • Oceanic is denser than Continental plates so they sink. • O + O = subduction=trenches • O+ C= O subducts & get Mts & volcanoes • C+C = Mts (both upward) Hot spots = valcanoes island chains

  9. Plate Tectonics-Types of Boundaries • Divergent plate boundary (mid ocean ridge-sea floor spreading) • Convergent plate boundary (trenches & volcanoes) • Transform fault plate boundary (San Andreas)

  10. Which boundary is a transform fault boundary? (A) (B) (C)

  11. What type of plate boundary?

  12. Convection & Hot Spots • Radioactive decay of elements in Mantle and outer core generate heat • Magma well upward (convection currents) • Hot Spots

  13. Earthquakes • Fault zone • Epicenter • Ring of Fire

  14. Living in Areas of Seismic or Volcanic Activity • Run! (just kidding) • Richter Scale (exponential) • Building collapse at 5-5.9 • Concrete (static) buildings: Hatti: 7.0=200,000

  15. Volcanoes • 2010 Iceland eruption • Cinders, ash, dust, rock, lava • Loss of life • Habitat destruction • Alter air quality

  16. Mt St. Helen’s Eruption-1980

  17. Rock Cycle Recycles Minerals & Elements

  18. Minerals • Minerals • Elements or compounds of elements that occur naturally in Earth’s crust • ORES • Naturally formed aggregates of minerals

  19. Mineral Distribution and Formation • Abundant minerals in crust • Aluminum and iron • Scarce minerals in crust • Copper, chromium, and molybdenum • Distributed unevenly across globe • If found in low abundance, mining is not profitable

  20. Three Rock Types • Igneous (intrusive extrusive): obsidian, granitic basaltic • Fractures minerals ppt out  veins • Metamorphic (heat & pressure): slate, marble, anthracite • Sedimentary (from sediments): sandstone, mudstone, conglomerates

  21. Weathering • The breakdown (P/C) • P: Water/wind/freeze-thaw/tree roots • C: Dissolving chemical elements (nutrients) • Feldspar clay & K+ • Lichens (weak acids) • Limestone (CaCO3) & H2CO3 • Anthropogenic Acid Rain via SOx, NOx emissions

  22. Erosion • Transport by wind, water, ice • Gravity • Deposition • Humans exacerbate this: • Land use practices: deforestation, overgrazing • Construction/road building

  23. Formation of Mineral Deposits • Result of natural processes • Magmatic concentration • As magma cools heavier elements (Fe and Mg) settle • Responsible for deposits of Fe, Cu, Ni, Cr • Hydrothermal processes • Sedimentation • Evaporation

  24. (1) Discovering Mineral Deposits • geologists use a variety of instruments and measurements • Aerial or satellite photography • Aircraft and satellite instruments that measure Earth’s magnetic field • Seismographs • Sound Waves • Drill Core Samples • Combine this with knowledge of how minerals are formed

  25. Minerals: A Non-renewable Resource

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