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Theory of plate tectonics. Continental drift hypothesis. Before the theory of plate tectonics in the 1960’s, there was Alfred Wegener’s hypothesis of continental drift. He thought all the continents were once connected to make a single supercontinent called Pangea. Pangea 300 million years ago.
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Continental drift hypothesis • Before the theory of plate tectonics in the 1960’s, there was Alfred Wegener’s hypothesis of continental drift. • He thought all the continents were once connected to make a single supercontinent called Pangea.
Why do the continents move? • The theory of plate tectonics states that the Earth’s lithosphere is broken up into plates. These plates continually move and change shape and size. • When plates move, they cause earthquakes and volcanoes along the plate boundaries. • Plates move slow-on average 5 cm a year! • Plate motion is caused by convective currents in the asthenosphere
Types of plate boundaries • Divergent- plates pull apart • Real life example: atlantic ocean and east african rift valley • Causes: earthquakes, sea floor spreading, rift valleys, and mid ocean ridges
Mid ocean ridge East African rift valley divergent
Convergent continental continental • 2 continents collide-push together • Example: how Appalachian mountains formed and the Himalayan mountains • Causes earthquakes and mountains
Appalachian mountains form Himalayan mountains
Convergent oceanic oceanic • 2 ocean plates collide-push together • Example: islands of japan, indonesia • Causes: earthquakes, subduction zones, tsunamis, volcanic islands
Convergent oceanic continental • An ocean plate and continental plate collide • Examples: Cascade volcanic mountains in northwestern US (Mt st Helens) • Causes: earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, tsunamis
Transform fault • 2 plates slide past each other • Example: San andreas fault in California • Causes only earthquakes
What evidence supports the theory of plate tectonics? • Paleomagnetism- alternating layers of rock at the bottom of ocean floors show normal and reverse polarity