SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 41
Plate Tectonics:
Earth's Plates and Continental
Drift
Motion is our Motto
Geography Notes
September 5 -10
• Some questions we will answer today:
– How is the earth always changing?
– What forces inside the earth create and change
landforms on the surface?
– What is the theory of plate tectonics and how does it
work?
– What two theories help make up the theory of plate
tectonics?
– What is continental drift and sea floor spreading?
– What happens when the plates crash together, pull
apart, and slide against each other?
The Earth’s Layers
• The Earth is made of many different and distinct layers. The
deeper layers are composed of heavier materials; they are
hotter, denser and under much greater pressure than the
outer layers.
• Natural forces interact with and affect the earth’s crust,
creating the landforms, or natural features, found on the
surface of the earth.
Before we start to look at the forces that contribute
to landforms,lets look at the different layers of
the earth that play a vital role in the formation of
our continents, mountains, volcanoes, etc.
crust - the rigid, rocky outer surface of the Earth, composed mostly of basalt
and granite. The crust is thinner under the oceans.
mantle - a rocky layer located under the crust - it is composed of silicon,
oxygen, magnesium, iron, aluminum, and calcium. Convection (heat) currents
carry heat from the hot inner mantle to the cooler outer mantle.
outer core - the molten iron-nickel layer that surrounds the inner core.
inner core - the solid iron-nickel center of the Earth that is very hot and under
great pressure.
Crust
Mantle
Outer Core
Inner Core
DID YOU KNOW?
Land and Water
• Photographs of the earth taken from space
show clearly that it is a truly a ”watery
planet.”
• More than 70 percent of the earth’s
surface is covered by water, mainly the
salt water of oceans and seas.
• The large landmasses in the oceans are called
continents.
List the continents in your notes.
Landforms are commonly classified according to
differences in relief. The relief is the difference in
elevation between the highest and lowest points. Another
important characteristic is whether they rise gradually or
steeply.
•The major types of landforms are mountains, hills,
plateaus, and plains.
Land
• Together, lets look at your Land and Water
Features handout.
• Please join me in filling out the correct
answers. Use a map pencil to color the
different types of land and water features.
• Most people know that Earth is moving
around the Sun and that it is constantly
spinning.
• But did YOU know that the continents and
oceans are moving across the surface of the
planet?
• Volcanoes and earthquakes as well as
mountain ranges and islands all are results
of this movement.
• Why is this?
Plate Tectonics
• Most of these changes in the earth’s
surface takes place so slowly that they are
not immediately noticeable to the human
eye.
• The idea that the earth’s landmasses have
broken apart, rejoined, and moved to other
parts of the globe forms part of the
– plate tectonic theory.
Plate Tectonic Theory
About forty years ago, scientists exploring the seafloor found that it is full of tall
mountains and deep trenches, a single seafloor mountain chain circles Earth and
contains some of Earth’s tallest mountains.
Along this mountain chain is a deep crack in the top layers of earth. Here the
seafloor is pulling apart and the two parts are moving in opposite directions,
carrying along the continents and oceans that rest on top of them. These pieces of
Earth’s top layer are called tectonic plates. They are moving very slowly, but
constantly. (Most plates are moving about as fast as your fingernails are growing
-- not very fast!) Currently Earth’s surface layers are divided into nine very large
plates and several smaller ones.
According to the theory of plate tectonics, the
earth’s outer shell is not one solid piece of
rock. Instead the earth’s crust is broken into
a number of moving plates. The plates vary
in size and thickness.
• The North American Plate stretches from
the mid-Atlantic Ocean to the northern top of
Japan. The Cocos Plate covers a small
area in the Pacific Ocean just west of
Central America.
• These plates are not anchored in place but
slide over a hot and bendable layer of the
mantle.
– How is the earth always changing?
– What is the theory of plate tectonics and how
does it work?
To really understand how the earth became to look
as it does today, and the theory of plate
tectonics, you also need to become familiar with
two other ideas:
Continental Drift
and
Seafloor Spreading.
Less than 100 years ago, many scientists thought the continents
always had been the same shape and in the same place.
A few scientists noted that the eastern coastline of South America and
the western coastline of Africa looked as if they could fit together.
Some also noted that, with a little imagination, all the continents could
be joined together like giant puzzle pieces to create one large
continent surrounded by one huge ocean.
• In your study groups for today, take your
continent cut outs and shape them into one
large land mass.
So, if my contintents fit together,
why does the earth look like it
does today?
Continental Drift Theory
• When the tectonic plates under the
continents and oceans move, they carry
the continents and oceans with them.
• In the early 1900s a German explorer and
scientist proposed the continental drift theory.
He proposed that there was once a ingle
“supercontinent” called Pangaea.
• Wegner’s theory was that about 180 million
years ago, Pangaea began to break up into
separate continents. To back this theory up, he
perserved remains and evidence from ancient
animals and plants from South America, Africa,
India, and Australia that were almost identical.
Seafloor Spreading
• The other theory theory supporting plate
tectonics emerged from the study of the ocean
floor.
• Scientists were suprised to find that rocks taken
from the ocean floor were much younger than
those found on the continents. The youngest
rocks were those nearest the underwater ridge
system which is a series of mountains that
extend around the world, stretching more than
64 thousand kilometers (40 thousand miles).
• The theory of seafloor spreading suggests that
molten rock (think of a melted chocolate bar that
has been left in your pocket for too long)... This hot
substance (lava) from the mantle rises under the
underwater ridge and breaks through a split at the
top of the ridge (the crust... Remember, the plate).
The split is called a rift valley. The rock then
spreads out in both directions from the ridge as if it
were on two huge conveyor belts. As the seafloor
moves away from the ridge, it carries older rocks
away. Seafloor spreading, along with the
continental drift theory, became part of the theory of
plate tectonics.
Plate motions also can be looked at into the future, and we can have a
stab at what the geography of the planet will be like. Perhaps in 250
million years time there will be a new supercontinent.
– What two theories help make up the theory of
plate tectonics?
– What is continental drift and sea floor
spreading?
• When a geologist or a geographer looks at
a piece of land they often ask, ”What
forces shaped the mountains, plains, and
other landforms that are here?”
So....
• What is their answer?
Plate Tectonics
But this doesn’t actually tell me how the
mountains or volcanoes were formed or
how earthquakes happen, does it?
YES!
• As mentioned earlier, those tectonic plates
are always moving. They are always
moving:
– pulling away from each other
– crashing head-on
– or sliding past each other.
Depending on which way these plates are moving will decide what is
happening on the earth you and I are standing on.
They’re Pulling Apart!
• When plates pull away from
one another they form a
diverging plate boundary, or
spreading zone.
Thingvellir, the spreading zone in Iceland between the North American (left
side) and Eurasian (right side) tectonic plates. January 2003.
The Crash!
• What happens when plates crash into
each other depends on the types of
plates involved.
– Because continental crust is lighter
than oceanic crust, continental plates
”float” higher.
– Therefore, when an oceanic plate
meets a continetnal plate, it slides
under the lighter plate and down into
the mantle. The slab of oceanic rock
melts when the endges get to a depth
which is hot enough. A temperature
hot enough to melt si about a thousand
degrees!) This process is called
subduction. Molten material produced
in a subduction zone can rise to the
earth’s surface and cause volcanic
building, mountains, and islands.
When they Crash
• When two plates of the same type meet,
the result is a process called converging.
– Depending on what type of plates these are,
depends on what occurs.
• When both are oceanic plates, one slides
under the other. Often an island group
forms at this boundary.
Converging... They crash!
And they’re both ocean plates!
Converging...They Crash!
And they’re both Continental Plates
• When both are continental plates, the plates
push against each other, creating mountain
ranges.
They Crash and are both
continental plates!
• Earth’s highest mountain range, the Himalayas, was formed millions
of years ago when the Indo-Australian Plate crashed into the
Eurasian Plate. Even today, the Indo-Australian Plate continues to
push against the Eurasian Plate at a rate of about 5 cm a year!
They meet and slide past each
other!
• Sometimes, instead of pulling away from
each other or colliding with eac hother,
plates slip or grind past each other along
faults. This process is known as faulting.
• These areas are likely
to have a rift valley,
earthquake, and
volcanic action.
For example: Here, the San Andreas
Fault lies on the boundary between
two tectonic plates, the north
American Plate and the Pacific Plate.
The two plates are sliding past each
other at a rate of 5 to 6 centimeters
each year. This fault frequently
plagues California wit hearthquakes.
– What forces inside the earth create and
change landforms on the surface?
– What happens when the plates crash
together, pull apart, and slide against each
other?
• All graphics were taken from Google
Images, enchanted learning, boom zone,
and other educational sites.
• All written information was taken from
Prentice Hall, World Geography, PBS.org,
and other educational websites.
• A good website for a deeper
understanding is
www.observe.arc.nasa.gov/

More Related Content

What's hot

Tectonic plates 2
Tectonic plates 2Tectonic plates 2
Tectonic plates 2tpark132
 
Plate Tectonics
Plate TectonicsPlate Tectonics
Plate Tectonicsshoaib1982
 
Plate tectonics
Plate tectonicsPlate tectonics
Plate tectonicsChay Kung
 
2.3 theory of plate tectonics
2.3 theory of plate tectonics2.3 theory of plate tectonics
2.3 theory of plate tectonicsmojavehack
 
Plate Tectonics 9
Plate  Tectonics 9Plate  Tectonics 9
Plate Tectonics 9MissWander
 
Earth Science 4.3 : The Theory of Plate Tectonics
Earth Science 4.3 : The Theory of Plate TectonicsEarth Science 4.3 : The Theory of Plate Tectonics
Earth Science 4.3 : The Theory of Plate TectonicsChris Foltz
 
Plate tectonics, earthquakes, and volcanism final(3)1
Plate tectonics, earthquakes, and volcanism final(3)1Plate tectonics, earthquakes, and volcanism final(3)1
Plate tectonics, earthquakes, and volcanism final(3)1Grace Espago
 
Plate tectonics by Rayhanie Pangcoga
Plate tectonics by Rayhanie PangcogaPlate tectonics by Rayhanie Pangcoga
Plate tectonics by Rayhanie PangcogaRayhanie Pangcoga
 
2.4 tectonic plate boundaries
2.4 tectonic plate boundaries 2.4 tectonic plate boundaries
2.4 tectonic plate boundaries mojavehack
 
Study of plate tectonics of the earth, or plate movement,
Study of plate tectonics of the earth, or plate movement, Study of plate tectonics of the earth, or plate movement,
Study of plate tectonics of the earth, or plate movement, Jahangir Alam
 
Plate Tectonics
Plate TectonicsPlate Tectonics
Plate Tectonicskmacdevitt
 

What's hot (20)

Tectonic plates 2
Tectonic plates 2Tectonic plates 2
Tectonic plates 2
 
Plate Tectonics
Plate TectonicsPlate Tectonics
Plate Tectonics
 
Plate tectonics
Plate tectonicsPlate tectonics
Plate tectonics
 
Plate Tectonics
Plate TectonicsPlate Tectonics
Plate Tectonics
 
Plate tectonics
Plate tectonicsPlate tectonics
Plate tectonics
 
Tectonic processes
Tectonic processesTectonic processes
Tectonic processes
 
Plate tectonics
Plate tectonicsPlate tectonics
Plate tectonics
 
2.3 theory of plate tectonics
2.3 theory of plate tectonics2.3 theory of plate tectonics
2.3 theory of plate tectonics
 
Plate Tectonics 9
Plate  Tectonics 9Plate  Tectonics 9
Plate Tectonics 9
 
Plate tectonics
Plate tectonicsPlate tectonics
Plate tectonics
 
Plate tectonics
Plate tectonicsPlate tectonics
Plate tectonics
 
Tectonic Plates
Tectonic PlatesTectonic Plates
Tectonic Plates
 
Earth Science 4.3 : The Theory of Plate Tectonics
Earth Science 4.3 : The Theory of Plate TectonicsEarth Science 4.3 : The Theory of Plate Tectonics
Earth Science 4.3 : The Theory of Plate Tectonics
 
Plate tectonics, earthquakes, and volcanism final(3)1
Plate tectonics, earthquakes, and volcanism final(3)1Plate tectonics, earthquakes, and volcanism final(3)1
Plate tectonics, earthquakes, and volcanism final(3)1
 
Plate tectonics
Plate tectonicsPlate tectonics
Plate tectonics
 
Plate tectonics by Rayhanie Pangcoga
Plate tectonics by Rayhanie PangcogaPlate tectonics by Rayhanie Pangcoga
Plate tectonics by Rayhanie Pangcoga
 
Plate Tectonics
Plate TectonicsPlate Tectonics
Plate Tectonics
 
2.4 tectonic plate boundaries
2.4 tectonic plate boundaries 2.4 tectonic plate boundaries
2.4 tectonic plate boundaries
 
Study of plate tectonics of the earth, or plate movement,
Study of plate tectonics of the earth, or plate movement, Study of plate tectonics of the earth, or plate movement,
Study of plate tectonics of the earth, or plate movement,
 
Plate Tectonics
Plate TectonicsPlate Tectonics
Plate Tectonics
 

Similar to Plate tectonics

Sec.2 slow motion on planet earth
Sec.2 slow motion on planet earthSec.2 slow motion on planet earth
Sec.2 slow motion on planet earthHamdy Karim
 
Layers-of-the-Earth-and-Plate-Tectonics.ppt
Layers-of-the-Earth-and-Plate-Tectonics.pptLayers-of-the-Earth-and-Plate-Tectonics.ppt
Layers-of-the-Earth-and-Plate-Tectonics.pptAmyVilla7
 
Plate Tectonic Theory.ppt
Plate Tectonic Theory.pptPlate Tectonic Theory.ppt
Plate Tectonic Theory.pptSadiq Ramazan
 
Theory of Global Plate Tectonics.pptx
Theory of Global Plate Tectonics.pptxTheory of Global Plate Tectonics.pptx
Theory of Global Plate Tectonics.pptxHannyletOcate1
 
Lecture 3
Lecture 3Lecture 3
Lecture 3RayF42
 
2013 updated plate tectonics new one use this one
2013 updated plate tectonics new one use this one2013 updated plate tectonics new one use this one
2013 updated plate tectonics new one use this oneharvey09
 
2012 updated plate tectonics new one use this one backup
2012 updated plate tectonics new one use this one backup2012 updated plate tectonics new one use this one backup
2012 updated plate tectonics new one use this one backupharvey09
 
Earth&PlateTectonics_Butler_ERBmod.ppt
Earth&PlateTectonics_Butler_ERBmod.pptEarth&PlateTectonics_Butler_ERBmod.ppt
Earth&PlateTectonics_Butler_ERBmod.pptFrancis de Castro
 
Earth&PlateTectonics_Butler_ERBmod.ppt
Earth&PlateTectonics_Butler_ERBmod.pptEarth&PlateTectonics_Butler_ERBmod.ppt
Earth&PlateTectonics_Butler_ERBmod.pptFrancis de Castro
 
Plate Tectonics - Chapter 5
Plate Tectonics - Chapter 5Plate Tectonics - Chapter 5
Plate Tectonics - Chapter 5nilsona
 
Unit 9 Internal dynamics of the earth
Unit 9  Internal dynamics of the earthUnit 9  Internal dynamics of the earth
Unit 9 Internal dynamics of the earthmihayedo
 
Plate tectonics slides re
Plate tectonics slides   rePlate tectonics slides   re
Plate tectonics slides reltanigawa
 
The Structure of the Earth and Plate Tectonics
The Structure of the Earth and Plate TectonicsThe Structure of the Earth and Plate Tectonics
The Structure of the Earth and Plate TectonicsSteven Heath
 
Chapter 1 gateway 123 combined students
Chapter 1 gateway 123 combined studentsChapter 1 gateway 123 combined students
Chapter 1 gateway 123 combined studentsMissST
 
Kuliah GL-3 (Plate Tec).ppt
Kuliah GL-3  (Plate Tec).pptKuliah GL-3  (Plate Tec).ppt
Kuliah GL-3 (Plate Tec).pptRudinyFaraby
 
Our changing earth
Our changing earthOur changing earth
Our changing earthTechy Faz
 

Similar to Plate tectonics (20)

Plate tectonics
Plate tectonicsPlate tectonics
Plate tectonics
 
Sec.2 slow motion on planet earth
Sec.2 slow motion on planet earthSec.2 slow motion on planet earth
Sec.2 slow motion on planet earth
 
unit iii ppt.pptx
unit iii ppt.pptxunit iii ppt.pptx
unit iii ppt.pptx
 
Layers-of-the-Earth-and-Plate-Tectonics.ppt
Layers-of-the-Earth-and-Plate-Tectonics.pptLayers-of-the-Earth-and-Plate-Tectonics.ppt
Layers-of-the-Earth-and-Plate-Tectonics.ppt
 
Plate Tectonic Theory.ppt
Plate Tectonic Theory.pptPlate Tectonic Theory.ppt
Plate Tectonic Theory.ppt
 
Theory of Global Plate Tectonics.pptx
Theory of Global Plate Tectonics.pptxTheory of Global Plate Tectonics.pptx
Theory of Global Plate Tectonics.pptx
 
Lecture 3
Lecture 3Lecture 3
Lecture 3
 
2013 updated plate tectonics new one use this one
2013 updated plate tectonics new one use this one2013 updated plate tectonics new one use this one
2013 updated plate tectonics new one use this one
 
2012 updated plate tectonics new one use this one backup
2012 updated plate tectonics new one use this one backup2012 updated plate tectonics new one use this one backup
2012 updated plate tectonics new one use this one backup
 
Earth&PlateTectonics_Butler_ERBmod.ppt
Earth&PlateTectonics_Butler_ERBmod.pptEarth&PlateTectonics_Butler_ERBmod.ppt
Earth&PlateTectonics_Butler_ERBmod.ppt
 
Earth&PlateTectonics_Butler_ERBmod.ppt
Earth&PlateTectonics_Butler_ERBmod.pptEarth&PlateTectonics_Butler_ERBmod.ppt
Earth&PlateTectonics_Butler_ERBmod.ppt
 
Plate Tectonics - Chapter 5
Plate Tectonics - Chapter 5Plate Tectonics - Chapter 5
Plate Tectonics - Chapter 5
 
Plate Tectonics
Plate TectonicsPlate Tectonics
Plate Tectonics
 
Unit 9 Internal dynamics of the earth
Unit 9  Internal dynamics of the earthUnit 9  Internal dynamics of the earth
Unit 9 Internal dynamics of the earth
 
Plate Tectonic Theory
Plate Tectonic TheoryPlate Tectonic Theory
Plate Tectonic Theory
 
Plate tectonics slides re
Plate tectonics slides   rePlate tectonics slides   re
Plate tectonics slides re
 
The Structure of the Earth and Plate Tectonics
The Structure of the Earth and Plate TectonicsThe Structure of the Earth and Plate Tectonics
The Structure of the Earth and Plate Tectonics
 
Chapter 1 gateway 123 combined students
Chapter 1 gateway 123 combined studentsChapter 1 gateway 123 combined students
Chapter 1 gateway 123 combined students
 
Kuliah GL-3 (Plate Tec).ppt
Kuliah GL-3  (Plate Tec).pptKuliah GL-3  (Plate Tec).ppt
Kuliah GL-3 (Plate Tec).ppt
 
Our changing earth
Our changing earthOur changing earth
Our changing earth
 

Recently uploaded

Orientation, design and principles of polyhouse
Orientation, design and principles of polyhouseOrientation, design and principles of polyhouse
Orientation, design and principles of polyhousejana861314
 
zoogeography of pakistan.pptx fauna of Pakistan
zoogeography of pakistan.pptx fauna of Pakistanzoogeography of pakistan.pptx fauna of Pakistan
zoogeography of pakistan.pptx fauna of Pakistanzohaibmir069
 
Traditional Agroforestry System in India- Shifting Cultivation, Taungya, Home...
Traditional Agroforestry System in India- Shifting Cultivation, Taungya, Home...Traditional Agroforestry System in India- Shifting Cultivation, Taungya, Home...
Traditional Agroforestry System in India- Shifting Cultivation, Taungya, Home...jana861314
 
Neurodevelopmental disorders according to the dsm 5 tr
Neurodevelopmental disorders according to the dsm 5 trNeurodevelopmental disorders according to the dsm 5 tr
Neurodevelopmental disorders according to the dsm 5 trssuser06f238
 
Genomic DNA And Complementary DNA Libraries construction.
Genomic DNA And Complementary DNA Libraries construction.Genomic DNA And Complementary DNA Libraries construction.
Genomic DNA And Complementary DNA Libraries construction.k64182334
 
Scheme-of-Work-Science-Stage-4 cambridge science.docx
Scheme-of-Work-Science-Stage-4 cambridge science.docxScheme-of-Work-Science-Stage-4 cambridge science.docx
Scheme-of-Work-Science-Stage-4 cambridge science.docxyaramohamed343013
 
Recombinant DNA technology( Transgenic plant and animal)
Recombinant DNA technology( Transgenic plant and animal)Recombinant DNA technology( Transgenic plant and animal)
Recombinant DNA technology( Transgenic plant and animal)DHURKADEVIBASKAR
 
Module 4: Mendelian Genetics and Punnett Square
Module 4:  Mendelian Genetics and Punnett SquareModule 4:  Mendelian Genetics and Punnett Square
Module 4: Mendelian Genetics and Punnett SquareIsiahStephanRadaza
 
Dashanga agada a formulation of Agada tantra dealt in 3 Rd year bams agada tanta
Dashanga agada a formulation of Agada tantra dealt in 3 Rd year bams agada tantaDashanga agada a formulation of Agada tantra dealt in 3 Rd year bams agada tanta
Dashanga agada a formulation of Agada tantra dealt in 3 Rd year bams agada tantaPraksha3
 
Bentham & Hooker's Classification. along with the merits and demerits of the ...
Bentham & Hooker's Classification. along with the merits and demerits of the ...Bentham & Hooker's Classification. along with the merits and demerits of the ...
Bentham & Hooker's Classification. along with the merits and demerits of the ...Nistarini College, Purulia (W.B) India
 
Natural Polymer Based Nanomaterials
Natural Polymer Based NanomaterialsNatural Polymer Based Nanomaterials
Natural Polymer Based NanomaterialsAArockiyaNisha
 
Discovery of an Accretion Streamer and a Slow Wide-angle Outflow around FUOri...
Discovery of an Accretion Streamer and a Slow Wide-angle Outflow around FUOri...Discovery of an Accretion Streamer and a Slow Wide-angle Outflow around FUOri...
Discovery of an Accretion Streamer and a Slow Wide-angle Outflow around FUOri...Sérgio Sacani
 
Hubble Asteroid Hunter III. Physical properties of newly found asteroids
Hubble Asteroid Hunter III. Physical properties of newly found asteroidsHubble Asteroid Hunter III. Physical properties of newly found asteroids
Hubble Asteroid Hunter III. Physical properties of newly found asteroidsSérgio Sacani
 
Disentangling the origin of chemical differences using GHOST
Disentangling the origin of chemical differences using GHOSTDisentangling the origin of chemical differences using GHOST
Disentangling the origin of chemical differences using GHOSTSérgio Sacani
 
Animal Communication- Auditory and Visual.pptx
Animal Communication- Auditory and Visual.pptxAnimal Communication- Auditory and Visual.pptx
Animal Communication- Auditory and Visual.pptxUmerFayaz5
 
SOLUBLE PATTERN RECOGNITION RECEPTORS.pptx
SOLUBLE PATTERN RECOGNITION RECEPTORS.pptxSOLUBLE PATTERN RECOGNITION RECEPTORS.pptx
SOLUBLE PATTERN RECOGNITION RECEPTORS.pptxkessiyaTpeter
 
BIOETHICS IN RECOMBINANT DNA TECHNOLOGY.
BIOETHICS IN RECOMBINANT DNA TECHNOLOGY.BIOETHICS IN RECOMBINANT DNA TECHNOLOGY.
BIOETHICS IN RECOMBINANT DNA TECHNOLOGY.PraveenaKalaiselvan1
 

Recently uploaded (20)

Orientation, design and principles of polyhouse
Orientation, design and principles of polyhouseOrientation, design and principles of polyhouse
Orientation, design and principles of polyhouse
 
zoogeography of pakistan.pptx fauna of Pakistan
zoogeography of pakistan.pptx fauna of Pakistanzoogeography of pakistan.pptx fauna of Pakistan
zoogeography of pakistan.pptx fauna of Pakistan
 
The Philosophy of Science
The Philosophy of ScienceThe Philosophy of Science
The Philosophy of Science
 
Traditional Agroforestry System in India- Shifting Cultivation, Taungya, Home...
Traditional Agroforestry System in India- Shifting Cultivation, Taungya, Home...Traditional Agroforestry System in India- Shifting Cultivation, Taungya, Home...
Traditional Agroforestry System in India- Shifting Cultivation, Taungya, Home...
 
Neurodevelopmental disorders according to the dsm 5 tr
Neurodevelopmental disorders according to the dsm 5 trNeurodevelopmental disorders according to the dsm 5 tr
Neurodevelopmental disorders according to the dsm 5 tr
 
Genomic DNA And Complementary DNA Libraries construction.
Genomic DNA And Complementary DNA Libraries construction.Genomic DNA And Complementary DNA Libraries construction.
Genomic DNA And Complementary DNA Libraries construction.
 
Scheme-of-Work-Science-Stage-4 cambridge science.docx
Scheme-of-Work-Science-Stage-4 cambridge science.docxScheme-of-Work-Science-Stage-4 cambridge science.docx
Scheme-of-Work-Science-Stage-4 cambridge science.docx
 
Recombinant DNA technology( Transgenic plant and animal)
Recombinant DNA technology( Transgenic plant and animal)Recombinant DNA technology( Transgenic plant and animal)
Recombinant DNA technology( Transgenic plant and animal)
 
Module 4: Mendelian Genetics and Punnett Square
Module 4:  Mendelian Genetics and Punnett SquareModule 4:  Mendelian Genetics and Punnett Square
Module 4: Mendelian Genetics and Punnett Square
 
Dashanga agada a formulation of Agada tantra dealt in 3 Rd year bams agada tanta
Dashanga agada a formulation of Agada tantra dealt in 3 Rd year bams agada tantaDashanga agada a formulation of Agada tantra dealt in 3 Rd year bams agada tanta
Dashanga agada a formulation of Agada tantra dealt in 3 Rd year bams agada tanta
 
Bentham & Hooker's Classification. along with the merits and demerits of the ...
Bentham & Hooker's Classification. along with the merits and demerits of the ...Bentham & Hooker's Classification. along with the merits and demerits of the ...
Bentham & Hooker's Classification. along with the merits and demerits of the ...
 
9953056974 Young Call Girls In Mahavir enclave Indian Quality Escort service
9953056974 Young Call Girls In Mahavir enclave Indian Quality Escort service9953056974 Young Call Girls In Mahavir enclave Indian Quality Escort service
9953056974 Young Call Girls In Mahavir enclave Indian Quality Escort service
 
Natural Polymer Based Nanomaterials
Natural Polymer Based NanomaterialsNatural Polymer Based Nanomaterials
Natural Polymer Based Nanomaterials
 
Engler and Prantl system of classification in plant taxonomy
Engler and Prantl system of classification in plant taxonomyEngler and Prantl system of classification in plant taxonomy
Engler and Prantl system of classification in plant taxonomy
 
Discovery of an Accretion Streamer and a Slow Wide-angle Outflow around FUOri...
Discovery of an Accretion Streamer and a Slow Wide-angle Outflow around FUOri...Discovery of an Accretion Streamer and a Slow Wide-angle Outflow around FUOri...
Discovery of an Accretion Streamer and a Slow Wide-angle Outflow around FUOri...
 
Hubble Asteroid Hunter III. Physical properties of newly found asteroids
Hubble Asteroid Hunter III. Physical properties of newly found asteroidsHubble Asteroid Hunter III. Physical properties of newly found asteroids
Hubble Asteroid Hunter III. Physical properties of newly found asteroids
 
Disentangling the origin of chemical differences using GHOST
Disentangling the origin of chemical differences using GHOSTDisentangling the origin of chemical differences using GHOST
Disentangling the origin of chemical differences using GHOST
 
Animal Communication- Auditory and Visual.pptx
Animal Communication- Auditory and Visual.pptxAnimal Communication- Auditory and Visual.pptx
Animal Communication- Auditory and Visual.pptx
 
SOLUBLE PATTERN RECOGNITION RECEPTORS.pptx
SOLUBLE PATTERN RECOGNITION RECEPTORS.pptxSOLUBLE PATTERN RECOGNITION RECEPTORS.pptx
SOLUBLE PATTERN RECOGNITION RECEPTORS.pptx
 
BIOETHICS IN RECOMBINANT DNA TECHNOLOGY.
BIOETHICS IN RECOMBINANT DNA TECHNOLOGY.BIOETHICS IN RECOMBINANT DNA TECHNOLOGY.
BIOETHICS IN RECOMBINANT DNA TECHNOLOGY.
 

Plate tectonics

  • 1. Plate Tectonics: Earth's Plates and Continental Drift Motion is our Motto Geography Notes September 5 -10
  • 2. • Some questions we will answer today: – How is the earth always changing? – What forces inside the earth create and change landforms on the surface? – What is the theory of plate tectonics and how does it work? – What two theories help make up the theory of plate tectonics? – What is continental drift and sea floor spreading? – What happens when the plates crash together, pull apart, and slide against each other?
  • 3. The Earth’s Layers • The Earth is made of many different and distinct layers. The deeper layers are composed of heavier materials; they are hotter, denser and under much greater pressure than the outer layers. • Natural forces interact with and affect the earth’s crust, creating the landforms, or natural features, found on the surface of the earth.
  • 4. Before we start to look at the forces that contribute to landforms,lets look at the different layers of the earth that play a vital role in the formation of our continents, mountains, volcanoes, etc.
  • 5. crust - the rigid, rocky outer surface of the Earth, composed mostly of basalt and granite. The crust is thinner under the oceans. mantle - a rocky layer located under the crust - it is composed of silicon, oxygen, magnesium, iron, aluminum, and calcium. Convection (heat) currents carry heat from the hot inner mantle to the cooler outer mantle. outer core - the molten iron-nickel layer that surrounds the inner core. inner core - the solid iron-nickel center of the Earth that is very hot and under great pressure. Crust Mantle Outer Core Inner Core
  • 7. Land and Water • Photographs of the earth taken from space show clearly that it is a truly a ”watery planet.” • More than 70 percent of the earth’s surface is covered by water, mainly the salt water of oceans and seas.
  • 8. • The large landmasses in the oceans are called continents. List the continents in your notes. Landforms are commonly classified according to differences in relief. The relief is the difference in elevation between the highest and lowest points. Another important characteristic is whether they rise gradually or steeply. •The major types of landforms are mountains, hills, plateaus, and plains. Land
  • 9. • Together, lets look at your Land and Water Features handout. • Please join me in filling out the correct answers. Use a map pencil to color the different types of land and water features.
  • 10. • Most people know that Earth is moving around the Sun and that it is constantly spinning. • But did YOU know that the continents and oceans are moving across the surface of the planet? • Volcanoes and earthquakes as well as mountain ranges and islands all are results of this movement. • Why is this?
  • 12. • Most of these changes in the earth’s surface takes place so slowly that they are not immediately noticeable to the human eye. • The idea that the earth’s landmasses have broken apart, rejoined, and moved to other parts of the globe forms part of the – plate tectonic theory.
  • 13. Plate Tectonic Theory About forty years ago, scientists exploring the seafloor found that it is full of tall mountains and deep trenches, a single seafloor mountain chain circles Earth and contains some of Earth’s tallest mountains. Along this mountain chain is a deep crack in the top layers of earth. Here the seafloor is pulling apart and the two parts are moving in opposite directions, carrying along the continents and oceans that rest on top of them. These pieces of Earth’s top layer are called tectonic plates. They are moving very slowly, but constantly. (Most plates are moving about as fast as your fingernails are growing -- not very fast!) Currently Earth’s surface layers are divided into nine very large plates and several smaller ones.
  • 14. According to the theory of plate tectonics, the earth’s outer shell is not one solid piece of rock. Instead the earth’s crust is broken into a number of moving plates. The plates vary in size and thickness.
  • 15. • The North American Plate stretches from the mid-Atlantic Ocean to the northern top of Japan. The Cocos Plate covers a small area in the Pacific Ocean just west of Central America. • These plates are not anchored in place but slide over a hot and bendable layer of the mantle.
  • 16. – How is the earth always changing? – What is the theory of plate tectonics and how does it work?
  • 17. To really understand how the earth became to look as it does today, and the theory of plate tectonics, you also need to become familiar with two other ideas: Continental Drift and Seafloor Spreading.
  • 18. Less than 100 years ago, many scientists thought the continents always had been the same shape and in the same place. A few scientists noted that the eastern coastline of South America and the western coastline of Africa looked as if they could fit together. Some also noted that, with a little imagination, all the continents could be joined together like giant puzzle pieces to create one large continent surrounded by one huge ocean. • In your study groups for today, take your continent cut outs and shape them into one large land mass.
  • 19. So, if my contintents fit together, why does the earth look like it does today?
  • 20. Continental Drift Theory • When the tectonic plates under the continents and oceans move, they carry the continents and oceans with them. • In the early 1900s a German explorer and scientist proposed the continental drift theory. He proposed that there was once a ingle “supercontinent” called Pangaea.
  • 21.
  • 22. • Wegner’s theory was that about 180 million years ago, Pangaea began to break up into separate continents. To back this theory up, he perserved remains and evidence from ancient animals and plants from South America, Africa, India, and Australia that were almost identical.
  • 23. Seafloor Spreading • The other theory theory supporting plate tectonics emerged from the study of the ocean floor. • Scientists were suprised to find that rocks taken from the ocean floor were much younger than those found on the continents. The youngest rocks were those nearest the underwater ridge system which is a series of mountains that extend around the world, stretching more than 64 thousand kilometers (40 thousand miles).
  • 24. • The theory of seafloor spreading suggests that molten rock (think of a melted chocolate bar that has been left in your pocket for too long)... This hot substance (lava) from the mantle rises under the underwater ridge and breaks through a split at the top of the ridge (the crust... Remember, the plate). The split is called a rift valley. The rock then spreads out in both directions from the ridge as if it were on two huge conveyor belts. As the seafloor moves away from the ridge, it carries older rocks away. Seafloor spreading, along with the continental drift theory, became part of the theory of plate tectonics.
  • 25. Plate motions also can be looked at into the future, and we can have a stab at what the geography of the planet will be like. Perhaps in 250 million years time there will be a new supercontinent.
  • 26. – What two theories help make up the theory of plate tectonics? – What is continental drift and sea floor spreading?
  • 27. • When a geologist or a geographer looks at a piece of land they often ask, ”What forces shaped the mountains, plains, and other landforms that are here?” So....
  • 28. • What is their answer?
  • 29. Plate Tectonics But this doesn’t actually tell me how the mountains or volcanoes were formed or how earthquakes happen, does it?
  • 30. YES! • As mentioned earlier, those tectonic plates are always moving. They are always moving: – pulling away from each other – crashing head-on – or sliding past each other. Depending on which way these plates are moving will decide what is happening on the earth you and I are standing on.
  • 31. They’re Pulling Apart! • When plates pull away from one another they form a diverging plate boundary, or spreading zone. Thingvellir, the spreading zone in Iceland between the North American (left side) and Eurasian (right side) tectonic plates. January 2003.
  • 32. The Crash! • What happens when plates crash into each other depends on the types of plates involved. – Because continental crust is lighter than oceanic crust, continental plates ”float” higher. – Therefore, when an oceanic plate meets a continetnal plate, it slides under the lighter plate and down into the mantle. The slab of oceanic rock melts when the endges get to a depth which is hot enough. A temperature hot enough to melt si about a thousand degrees!) This process is called subduction. Molten material produced in a subduction zone can rise to the earth’s surface and cause volcanic building, mountains, and islands.
  • 33.
  • 34. When they Crash • When two plates of the same type meet, the result is a process called converging. – Depending on what type of plates these are, depends on what occurs.
  • 35. • When both are oceanic plates, one slides under the other. Often an island group forms at this boundary. Converging... They crash! And they’re both ocean plates!
  • 36. Converging...They Crash! And they’re both Continental Plates • When both are continental plates, the plates push against each other, creating mountain ranges.
  • 37. They Crash and are both continental plates! • Earth’s highest mountain range, the Himalayas, was formed millions of years ago when the Indo-Australian Plate crashed into the Eurasian Plate. Even today, the Indo-Australian Plate continues to push against the Eurasian Plate at a rate of about 5 cm a year!
  • 38. They meet and slide past each other! • Sometimes, instead of pulling away from each other or colliding with eac hother, plates slip or grind past each other along faults. This process is known as faulting.
  • 39. • These areas are likely to have a rift valley, earthquake, and volcanic action. For example: Here, the San Andreas Fault lies on the boundary between two tectonic plates, the north American Plate and the Pacific Plate. The two plates are sliding past each other at a rate of 5 to 6 centimeters each year. This fault frequently plagues California wit hearthquakes.
  • 40. – What forces inside the earth create and change landforms on the surface? – What happens when the plates crash together, pull apart, and slide against each other?
  • 41. • All graphics were taken from Google Images, enchanted learning, boom zone, and other educational sites. • All written information was taken from Prentice Hall, World Geography, PBS.org, and other educational websites. • A good website for a deeper understanding is www.observe.arc.nasa.gov/