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Chapter 9: Plate Tectonics Review

Chapter 9: Plate Tectonics Review. Feb 11, 2013. What to study?. Layers of the Earth Convection Currents Continental Drift Sea-floor Spreading Theory of Plate Tectonics Plate Boundaries Crustal Features Shadow Zone http://txstar.cpo.com/ Username: mustang Password: science

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Chapter 9: Plate Tectonics Review

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  1. Chapter 9: Plate Tectonics Review Feb 11, 2013

  2. What to study? • Layers of the Earth • Convection Currents • Continental Drift • Sea-floor Spreading • Theory of Plate Tectonics • Plate Boundaries • Crustal Features • Shadow Zone • http://txstar.cpo.com/ • Username: mustang • Password: science • Study Plate Tectonics 8.9A and 8.9B

  3. Layers of the Earth

  4. From the Earth’s Crust to the Inner Core: • Depth Increases • Pressure Increases • Temperature Increases

  5. Lithosphere • This layer is broken down into several large tectonic plates

  6. Asthenosphere • The asthenosphere is the semi-rigid part of the middle mantle that flows like hot asphalt under a heavy weight. • The tectonic plates float on this semi-liquid layer.

  7. Lithosphere Vs. Asthenosphere Lithosphere= rigid Asthenosphere= semi-soft

  8. Convection Currents in the Mantle • According to scientists, convection currents is the driving force behind the movement of the Earth’s plates. http://www.absorblearning.com/media/item.action?quick=12p#

  9. Convection • Heated water is less dense therefore rises while Cooled water is more dense, which sinks. • This is also true with air

  10. Alfred Wegener’s hypothesis on Continental Drift • Evidence from Landform • Evidence from Fossils • Evidence from Climate All the continents had once been joined in a single landmass, called Pangaea, and have since drifted apart.

  11. Evidence of Continental Drift • A mountain range lines up between Argentina in South America and Africa. • Fossils of the reptiles Mesosaurus and Lystrosaurus have been found in places now separated by oceans. • Fossils of the fernlike plant, Glossopteris, have been found in rocks in Africa, South America, Australia, India, & Antarctica. • Deep scratches in rocks show that continental glaciers once covered South Africa.

  12. Continental CoastlinesWhy don’t the continents look like they did millions of years ago? • Coastlines change over time due to beach erosion.

  13. Pangaea • A supercontinent, meaning “all lands”, that existed about 300 million years ago.

  14. Scientists Reject Wegener’s Hypothesis • Wegener could not provide a satisfactory explanation for the force that pushes or pull the continents.

  15. Sea-Floor Spreading Molten material rises from the mantle and erupts along the mid-ocean ridge

  16. Mid-Ocean Ridge

  17. Subduction • Process by which the ocean floor sinks beneath a deep-ocean trench and back into the mantle.

  18. Plate Tectonics • Geological theory that states that pieces of Earth's lithosphere are in constant, slow motion

  19. Earthquakes • Occur usually when 2 plates slide past each other, however, can happen at all plate boundaries. • Release of energy when the lithosphere suddenly breaks and slides

  20. Convergent Boundaries • Two plates collide • Example: Himalayan Mountains • Folding mountains, volcanoes, and trenches can form as a result of plates colliding.

  21. Divergent Boundaries • Plate boundary where 2 plates move away from each other. • Is the result of new ocean floor, such as the mid-ocean ridge and valley’s on land.

  22. Transform Boundaries • Plate boundary where two plates slip past each other, moving in opposite directions. • Earthquakes frequently occur along these boundaries.

  23. Cause of Deep Ocean Trenches • When an ocean plate collides with a continental plate, the plate is subducted under the continent.

  24. Ring of Fire • Volcanoes form where tectonic plates meet other plates.

  25. Seismic Waves (PreAP) • Scientists use the properties of waves to study the internal structure of Earth. Seismic waves are sound waves that may be generated by earthquakes. • Primary waves, also known as P-waves, are longitudinal waves and can travel through both solids and liquids. • Secondary waves, also called S-waves, are transverse waves that only travel through solids. • As these waves pass through the interior of Earth, they change speed or may become refracted or reflected.

  26. Earthquake Epicenter P- and S- Waves P- and S- Waves 103 º 103 º shadow zone shadow zone 143º 143º P-Waves only Shadow Zone • A wave-free shadow zone exists because the waves are refracted from their original path as they pass through the boundary between the mantle and the core where they experience changes in density.

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