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Processes that shape the planet.

Date post: 07-Jan-2016
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Processes that shape the planet. Earth’s Internal Layers. The crust ( oxygen , silicon, magnesium and iron) The mantle ( silicon & oxygen) Outer core (iron & nickle – liquid) Inner core (iron & nickle – solid). The Rock Cycle. Three types of rock found in the crust are: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Processes that shape the planet.
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Page 1: Processes that shape the planet.

Processes that shape the planet.

Page 2: Processes that shape the planet.

Earth’s Internal Layers

• The crust (oxygen, silicon, magnesium and iron)

• The mantle (silicon & oxygen)

• Outer core (iron & nickle – liquid)

• Inner core (iron & nickle – solid)

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The Rock Cycle

• Three types of rock found in the crust are:– Igneous: cooled magma/lava– Sedimentary: particles deposited by water

flow. Organic/inorganic matter (fossils)– Metamorphic: as layers build up, this rock is

formed when pressure and heat become great enough to change the rock chemically• The rock cycle is completed through the tectonic

process. Rock returns to the mantle, remelt, become magma, return to the crust as igneous rock.

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Pangaea

• Pangaea is the name given to the single giant continent (Wegener 1912)

• Panthalassa (single ocean)• The theory of continental drift states

that the continents were once a single landmass that drifted apart and are still doing so.

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Wegner’s Evidence for Continental Drift

Fossils of plants and animals of the same species found on different continents.

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The Theory of Seafloor Spresding

• New crust emerges from the rift valley in a mid-ocean ridge.

• Magma from the mantle pushes up through the rift and solidifies into new crust.

• New seafloor forms at the rift valleys and mid-ocean ridges, spreading away from the ridges until it returns as part of the rock cycle at subduction zones (trenches)

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• Divergent boundary (normal)– Tectonic plates moves in opposite directions– Mid-oceanic ridge forms as seafloor spreading creates new crust and

seafloor as magma fills the gap created over geologic time.

• Convergent boundary (reverse)– Tectonic plates move towards each other– Oceanic subduction under continental: volcanoes, earthquakes

• Andes

– Continental /continental convergence: Mountains• Himaylayas – Mt. Everest• Oceanic/oceanic: Trenches – Mariana trench, tsunamis

• Transform boundary (strike-slip)– Tectonic plates move past each other: Earthquakes– San Andeas fault in San Francisco

Boundary Interactions

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Oceanic / oceanic

Oceanic / continental

Continental / continental

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Transform Faults

• Plates move past each other

• strike slip faults

Example: The San Andreas Fault -California

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Bridge across the Álfagjá rift valley in southwest Iceland, the boundary

between the Eurasian and North American continental tectonic plates.

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Hot Spots

• The hot spot theory states that hot spots are small melting areas within the mantle where thermal plumes cause magma columns to push up, breaking the crust

• Hot spots do not move with tectonic plates because they originate in the mantle

• Volcanic island chains are the result of the plate moving over a hot spot (Hawaii, Galapagos, etc.)

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Hawaiian islands

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Hot Spots

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Plate movement

• Convection is the primary force driving seafloor spreading– Convection currents form as hot material rises

and cold materials sink• A second driving force comes from the

seafloor spreading– As new seafloor forms, the plates tend to slide

away from the elevated mid-ocean ridge– Older, denser oceanic plates sink back into

the earth at subduction zones

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EM field reverses from time to time

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Evidence of magnetic reversals due to the mechanics of the way the core spins is

present in the seafloor geology

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The end


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