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Page 1: Constructive Forces

Constructive Forces

Building the Crust

Page 2: Constructive Forces

I. Plate Tectonics

A. Moving Plates- current theory is that Earth’s surface is

composed of sections of the lithosphere called plates

- Lithosphere is composed of the crust and the rigid mantle

- The study of the movement of these plates is called plate tectonics

- original concept was proposed by Alfred Wegener as part of his theory of continental drift

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Plate Tectonics (contd.)

- Pangaea - original supercontinent

- Concept that all of the continents were combined at one time to make one, giant landmass

- Geologic forces caused Pangaea to split up

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Plate Tectonics (contd.)

B. Plate Thickness- lithospheric plates

are approximately 100 km thick

- ocean basin is mostly basalt

- continental crust is mostly granite

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Plate Tectonics (contd.)

C. Plate Movement- asthenosphere -

partially melted layer of the mantle that the lithosphere floats on

- convection currents occur inside the asthenosphere

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Plate Tectonics (contd.)- hot material moves

toward the crust because it is less dense

- As material rises, ir cools and becomes more dense

- More dense material sinks back towards the bottom of the asthenosphere

- Movement of mantle material pushes the lithospheric plates that float on top of it

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Plate Tectonics (cpnyd.)

D. Evidence of Plate Tectonics

1. Africa and S. America fit together like the pieces of a jigsaw puzzle

2. Earthquakes and volcanoes occur along plate boundaries

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Plate Tectonics (contd.)3. Paleomagnetism -

oceanic bedrock shows patterns of magnetic reversal that could only be caused by seafloor spreading

4. Seafloor spreading - oceanic crust is growing at the mid-ocean ridges - crust increases in age as you move away from the ridges

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Plate Tectonics (contd.)II. Types of Plate

BoundariesA. Divergent - where two

or more plates are moving away from one another

- occurs primarily at the mid-ocean ridges

- ex.: Mid-Atlantic Ridge- Great Rift Valley

(Africa)

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Plate Tectonics (contd.)B. Convergent - where two or

more plates are colliding1. Subduction Boundary -

where continental and oceanic plates collide

- oceanic crust is more dense than continental crust, so it sinks underneath the continental crust and is pushed into the mantle

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Plate Tectonics (contd.)- as the oceanic crust melts,

pockets of magma are created

- Magma rises through the crust at the boundaries and forms a volcanic mountain on the overriding continental plate

- Also forms deep sea trenches where the oceanic crust plunges into the mantle

- Ex.: Pacific NW - Cascade Mtns.

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Plate Tectonics (contd.)C. Transform Boundary- where plates slide past

one another- Can be right-moving or

left-moving- frequently create faults -

cracks in the crust where movement occurs

- May see faults further inland from the plate boundary

- Ex.: San Andreas fault, CA

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Plate Tectonics (contd.)

III. Moving Plates- plate movement is

evidenced from the occurence of earthquakes and volcanoes

- different hypotheses about the causes of plate movement

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Plate Tectonics (contd.)A. Mantle Convection- asthenosphere is semi-

solid, like slush or putty- as heat radiates from

the mantle, it causes movement in the asthenosphere

- Creates convection currents

- Movement is caused by changes in density

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Plate Tectonics (contd.)

- Hotter material is less dense - floats upward

- rises, cools, and sinks back down towards the bottom of the asthenosphere

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Plate Tectonics (contd.)B. Ridge Push- occurs at mid-ocean ridges- As new rock is formed, it is

less dense and hotter than older rock

- New rock slides down the side of the ridge

- Cools and hardens - becomes more dense

- Creates force pushing on lithosphere from the force of gravity pulling on the denser rock

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Plate Tectonics (contd.)C. Slab Pull- at subduction boundaries, one

plate is colder and more dense than the other

- One plate sinks into the mantle

- The edge of the sinking plate is still colder and more dense than the mantle

- As the plate sinks into the mantle, it pulls the rest of the plate behind it

- Considered to be stronger than ridge push

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Plate Tectonics (contd.)IV. Continental GrowthA. Craton - ancient

continental cores- Continents were

originally much smaller

- large amounts of crustal material has been added to the continental plates over time

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Plate Tectonics (contd.)

B. Sources of Crustal Material

1. Deep sea sediments

2. River sediments (both make sedimentary rock)

3. Volcanic eruptions

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Plate Tectonics (contd.)

C. Thin-skinned thrusting

- pushing of thin, horizontal sheets of rock from continental margins over great distances along level fault surfaces

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Plate Tectonics (contd.)

D. Terranes - large block of a lithospheric plate that has been moved and attached to the edge of a continent


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