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The Dynamic Earth

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The Dynamic Earth

A Planet in Continual Flux

By Christopher Ros

The Dynamic Earth

A Planet in Continual Flux

By Christopher Ros

Introduction

The Earth is over 4 billion years old and our general perception of the Earth is as a solid, steady, stable sphere of rocks. This sphere appears to have been unchanged at least for our lifetime, but that couldn't be farther from the truth.

The Earth is actually constantly changing and adjusting itself making minor to major modifications to both its internal and external attributes. We can sometimes see these as major weather or natural disaster events, such as hurricanes, tornadoes, and other major storms and earthquakes, volcanic eruptions and weathering. If the Earth didn't constantly make these adjustments, its stability would continue to decrease with each passing day, year, decade, etc. and could result with a catastrophic event that would destroy the Earth.

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The Dynamic Earth

The Earth's Layers

The Earth's Layers

Detailed layers of the Earth with thickness of each

The inner core is a solid section of the Earth and is unattached to the mantle, being suspended by the molten outer core. This solidified state is the result of a very intense pressure-freezing process that occurs in most liquids when temperature decreases or pressure increases. The outer core of Earth is a scorching hot, electrically conductive liquid in which convection takes place. This inner layer in mutual combination with the rotational motion of the Earth creates a dynamo effect where a force ield of electrical currents is generated. This field is also known as Earth's magnetic field, which is responsible for the functioning of mechanical and biological compasses. This field also causes a subtle jerking motion in the Earth's daily rotation. In terms of the physical aspects of the outer core, the layer is dense, but not as dense as pure molten iron, evidencing the presence of multiple impurities having a lighter chemical makeup. According to scientists, about 10% of this layer is composed of sulfur and/or oxygen due to the fact that these two elements are abundant in the cosmos and dissolve readily in molten iron.

A Closer Look at the Layers

Another detailed view of a cross-section of the Earth's layers

Earth's Temperatures

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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The Dynamic Earth

Earth Systems

Below, you will find a brief introductory presentation into the Earth as a System. Please review this and pay particular attention to the cyclical nature of the Earth's "spheres" and how they interact within its closed system. 

Slide05.jpg (Earth As Terrarium)

Slide06.jpg (Open vs Closed System)

Slide07.jpg (The "sphere" cycle)

Slide09.jpg (The Atmosphere)

Slide10.jpg (The Hydrosphere)

Slide11.jpg (The Biosphere)

Slide12.jpg (The Geosphere)

Slide14.jpg (Ways the Earth is shaped)

 

 

 

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The Dynamic Earth

Plate Tectonics


Historical perspective

In geologic terms, a plate is a large, rigid slab of solid rock. The word tectonics comes from the Greek root "to build." Putting these two words together, we get the term plate tectonics, which refers to how the Earth's surface is built of plates. The theory of plate tectonics states that the Earth's outermost layer is fragmented into a dozen or more large and small plates that are moving relative to one another as they ride atop hotter, more mobile material. Before the advent of plate tectonics, however, some people already believed that the present-day continents were the fragmented pieces of preexisting larger landmasses ("supercontinents"). The diagrams below show the break-up of the supercontinent Pangaea (meaning "all lands" in Greek), which figured prominently in the theory of continental drift -- the forerunner to the theory of plate 
tectonics.

5globes.gif

According to the continental drift theory, the supercontinent Pangaea began to break up about 225-200 million years ago, eventually fragmenting into the continents as we know them today.

Plate tectonics is a relatively new scientific concept, introduced some 30 years ago, but it has revolutionized our understanding of the dynamic planet upon which we live. The theory has unified the study of the Earth by drawing together many branches of the earth sciences, from paleontology (the study of fossils) to seismology (the study of earthquakes). It has provided explanations to questions that scientists had speculated upon for centuries -- such as why earthquakes and volcanic eruptions occur in very specific areas around the world, and how and why great mountain ranges like the Alps and Himalayas formed.

Why is the Earth so restless? What causes the ground to shake violently, volcanoes to erupt with explosive force, and great mountain ranges to rise to incredible heights? Scientists, philosophers, and theologians have wrestled with questions such as these for centuries. Until the 1700s, most Europeans thought that a Biblical Flood played a major role in shaping the Earth's surface. This way of thinking was known as "catastrophism," and geology (the study of the Earth) was based on the belief that all earthly changes were sudden and caused by a series of catastrophes. However, by the mid-19th century, catastrophism gave way to "uniformitarianism," a new way of thinking centered around the "Uniformitarian Principle" proposed in 1785 by James Hutton, a Scottish geologist. This principle is commonly stated as follows: The present is the key to the past. Those holding this viewpoint assume that the geologic forces and processes -- gradual as well as catastrophic -- acting on the Earth today are the same as those that have acted in the geologic past.

tectonic plates Tectonic plates [115 k]



The belief that continents have not always been fixed in their present positions was suspected long before the 20th century; this notion was first suggested as early as 1596 by the Dutch map maker Abraham Ortelius in his work Thesaurus Geographicus. Ortelius suggested that the Americas were "torn away from Europe and Africa . . . by earthquakes and floods" and went on to say: "The vestiges of the rupture reveal themselves, if someone brings forward a map of the world and considers carefully the coasts of the three [continents]." Ortelius' idea surfaced again in the 19th century. However, it was not until 1912 that the idea of moving continents was seriously considered as a full-blown scientific theory -- called Continental Drift -- introduced in two articles published by a 32-year-old German meteorologist named Alfred Lothar Wegener. He contended that, around 200 million years ago, the supercontinent Pangaea began to split apart. Alexander Du Toit, Professor of Geology at Witwatersrand University and one of Wegener's staunchest supporters, proposed that Pangaea first broke into two large continental landmasses,Laurasia in the northern hemisphere and Gondwanaland in the southern hemisphere. Laurasia and Gondwanaland then continued to break apart into the various smaller continents that exist today.

avant.gif apres.gif

In 1858, geographer Antonio Snider-Pellegrini made these two maps showing his version of how the American and African continents may once have fit together, then later separated. Left: The formerly joined continents before (avant) their separation. Right: The continents after (aprés) the separation. (Reproductions of the original maps courtesy of University of California, Berkeley.)




Wegener's theory was based in part on what appeared to him to be the remarkable fit of the South American and African continents, first noted by Abraham Ortelius three centuries earlier. Wegener was also intrigued by the occurrences of unusual geologic structures and of plant and animal fossils found on the matching coastlines of South America and Africa, which are now widely separated by the Atlantic Ocean. He reasoned that it was physically impossible for most of these organisms to have swum or have been transported across the vast oceans. To him, the presence of identical fossil species along the coastal parts of Africa and South America was the most compelling evidence that the two continents were once joined.

In Wegener's mind, the drifting of continents after the break-up of Pangaea explained not only the matching fossil occurrences but also the evidence of dramatic climate changes on some continents. For example, the discovery of fossils of tropical plants (in the form of coal deposits) in Antarctica led to the conclusion that this frozen land previously must have been situated closer to the equator, in a more temperate climate where lush, swampy vegetation could grow. Other mismatches of geology and climate included distinctive fossil ferns (Glossopteris) discovered in now-polar regions, and the occurrence of glacial deposits in present-day arid Africa, such as the Vaal River valley of South Africa.

The theory of continental drift would become the spark that ignited a new way of viewing the Earth. But at the time Wegener introduced his theory, the scientific community firmly believed the continents and oceans to be permanent features on the Earth's surface. Not surprisingly, his proposal was not well received, even though it seemed to agree with the scientific information available at the time. A fatal weakness in Wegener's theory was that it could not satisfactorily answer the most fundamental question raised by his critics: What kind of forces could be strong enough to move such large masses of solid rock over such great distances? Wegener suggested that the continents simply plowed through the ocean floor, but Harold Jeffreys, a noted English geophysicist, argued correctly that it was physically impossible for a large mass of solid rock to plow through the ocean floor without breaking up.

rejoined continents Rejoined continents [48 k]


Undaunted by rejection, Wegener devoted the rest of his life to doggedly pursuing additional evidence to defend his theory. He froze to death in 1930 during an expedition crossing the Greenland ice cap, but the controversy he spawned raged on. However, after his death, new evidence from ocean floor exploration and other studies rekindled interest in Wegener's theory, ultimately leading to the development of the theory of plate tectonics.

Plate tectonics has proven to be as important to the earth sciences as the discovery of the structure of the atom was to physics and chemistry and the theory of evolution was to the life sciences. Even though the theory of plate tectonics is now widely accepted by the scientific community, aspects of the theory are still being debated today. Ironically, one of the chief outstanding questions is the one Wegener failed to resolve: What is the nature of the forces propelling the plates? Scientists also debate how plate tectonics may have operated (if at all) earlier in the Earth's history and whether similar processes operate, or have ever operated, on other planets in our solar system. 

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The Dynamic Earth

Review Questions

 Review questions in preparation for the first test

Part I: Multiple Choice

What are Earth’s layers from densest to least dense?

  1. lithosphere, asthenosphere, outer core, inner core
  2. lithosphere, asthenosphere, inner core, outer core
  3. outer coure, inner core, lithosphere, asthenosphere
  4. inner core, outer core, asthenosphere, lithosphere

 

The thin, rigid layer that forms the outermost part of the lithosphere is called the Earth’s

  1. inner core
  2. outer core
  3. crust
  4. mantle

 

Which of the following best describes a tectonic plate?

  1. a large slab of asthenosphere that moves over Earth’s surface
  2. a slab of crust and upper mantle that moves over earth’s surface
  3. a part of the asthenosphere in which convection takes place
  4. a large slab of crust where convection takes place

 

Many scientists rejected continental drift when it was first proposed because

  1. studies of the ocean floor revealed its younger age
  2. Wegener had no evidence to explain the existence of Pangeaea
  3. reversals in Earth’s magnetic field had not yet occurred
  4. Wegener could not explain how Earth’s continents moved

 

Which of these could best be used to model the Earth’s layers?

  1. a hard-boiled egg
  2. an eggshell
  3. a peach pit
  4. the skin of a peach

 

Which of these did Wegener use to support his theory of continental drift?

  1. similar rocks and similar fossils on different continents
  2. sea-floor spreading and similar rocks on different continents
  3. convection currents in the asthenosphere and sea-floor spreading
  4. fossils from ancient organisms and convection currents in the asthenosphere

 

 

Part II: Diagrams

 

The letters A through C appear on an image associated with this question.

Using the above diagram, answer the following questions.

Identify plate boundary A, and explain what happens at such boundaries. 



Identify plate boundary B, and explain what happens at such boundaries. 

 

Identify plate boundary C, and explain what happens at such boundaries. 

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Plate Boundary Activity

Plate Tectonics in a Nutshell

The theory of plate tectonics is a relatively new scientific concept. While its forerunner—the theory of continental drift—had its inception as early as the late 16th century, plate tectonics only emerged and matured as a widely accepted theory since the 1960s (see This Dynamic Earth booklet). In a nutshell, this theory states that the Earth’s outermost layer is fragmented into a dozen or more large and small solid slabs, called lithospheric plates or tectonic plates, that are moving relative to one another as they ride atop hotter, more mobile mantle material (called the asthenosphere). The average rates of motion of these restless plates—in the past as well as the present—range from less than 1 to more than 15 centimeters per year. With some notable exceptions, nearly all the world’s earthquake and volcanic activity occur along or near boundaries between plates.


cartoon of oceanic plate subducting under a continental plate

Using the Diagram to Discuss How Plate Tectonics Works

To learn more about how plate tectonics work, start at the diagram (available as a pdf) and explanation labeled (1). Although this diagram shows the interaction between continental and oceanic plates, the processes illustrated generally apply for the interaction between two oceanic plates.

 

  1. There are two basic types of LITHOSPHERE: continental and oceanic. CONTINENTAL lithosphere has a low density because it is made of relatively light-weight minerals. OCEANIC lithosphere is denser than continental lithosphere because it is composed of heavier minerals. A plate may be made up entirely of oceanic or continental lithosphere, but most are partly oceanic and partly continental.
  2. Beneath the lithospheric plates lies the ASTHENOSPHERE, a layer of the mantle composed of denser semi-solid rock. Because the plates are less dense than the asthenosphere beneath them, they are floating on top of the asthenosphere.
  3. Deep within the asthenosphere the pressure and temperature are so high that the rock can soften and partly melt. The softened but dense rock can flow very slowly (think of Silly Putty) over geologic time. Where temperature instabilities exist near the core/mantle boundary, slowly moving convection currents may form within the semi-solid asthenosphere.
  4. Once formed, convection currents bring hot material from deeper within the mantle up toward the surface.
  5. As they rise and approach the surface, convection currents diverge at the base of the lithosphere. The diverging currents exert a weak tension or “pull” on the solid plate above it. Tension and high heat flow weakens the floating, solid plate, causing it to break apart. The two sides of the now-split plate then move away from each other, forming a DIVERGENT PLATE BOUNDARY.
  6. The space between these diverging plates is filled with molten rocks (magma) from below. Contact with seawater cools the magma, which quickly solidifies, forming new oceanic lithosphere. This continuous process, operating over millions of years, builds a chain of submarine volcanoes and rift valleys called a MID-OCEAN RIDGE or an OCEANIC SPREADING RIDGE.
  7. As new molten rock continues to be extruded at the mid-ocean ridge and added to the oceanic plate (6), the older (earlier formed) part of the plate moves away from the ridge where it was originally created.
  8. As the oceanic plate moves farther and farther away from the active, hot spreading ridge, it gradually cools down. The colder the plate gets, the denser (“heavier”) it becomes. Eventually, the edge of the plate that is farthest from the spreading ridges cools so much that it becomes denser than the asthenosphere beneath it.
  9. As you know, denser materials sink, and that’s exactly what happens to the oceanic plate—it starts to sink into the asthenosphere! Where one plate sinks beneath another a subduction zone forms.
  10. The sinking lead edge of the oceanic plate actually “pulls” the rest of the plate behind it—evidence suggests this is the main driving force of subduction. Geologists are not sure how deep the oceanic plate sinks before it begins to melt and lose its identity as a rigid slab, but we do know that it remains solid far beyond depths of 100 km beneath the Earth’s surface.
  11. Subduction zones are one type of CONVERGENT PLATE BOUNDARY, the type of plate boundary that forms where two plates are moving toward one another. Notice that although the cool oceanic plate is sinking, the cool but less dense continental plate floats like a cork on top of the denser asthenosphere.
  12. When the subducting oceanic plate sinks deep below the Earth’s surface, the great temperature and pressure at depth cause the fluids to “sweat” from the sinking plate. The fluids sweated out percolate upward, helping to locally melt the overlying solid mantle above the subducting plate to form pockets of liquid rock (magma).
  13. The newly generated molten mantle (magma) is less dense than the surrounding rock, so it rises toward the surface. Most of the magma cools and solidifies as large bodies of plutonic (intrusive) rocks far below the Earth’s surface. These large bodies, when later exposed by erosion, commonly form cores of many great mountain ranges [such as the Sierra Nevada (California) or the Andes (South America)] that are created along the subduction zones where the plates converge.
  14. Some of the molten rock may reach the Earth’s surface to erupt as the pent-up gas pressure in the magma is suddenly released, forming volcanic (extrusive) rocks. Over time, lava and ash erupted each time magma reaches the surface will accumulate—layer upon layer—to construct volcanic mountain ranges and plateaus, such as the Cascade Range and the Columbia River Plateau (Pacific Northwest, U.S.A.).
convergent
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The Dynamic Earth

Plate Boundaries 101

Click on the link below to see the information in this section.
 
 

http://www.evernote.com/shard/s36/sh/60ebb83c-d6a3-4a25-ac8d-fbf6ee118bf4/c8321bef2adfefc41e09bd8024788211

 
 
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Earth Layers Review

Here, you will find a summary of some of the things you should know. 

EARTH LAYERS

  
This diagram shows a detailed picture of the Earth's interior. Crust is being created at the mid ocean ridges and being eaten at the subduction zones. The movement processes are driven by the convection currents created by the heat produced by natural radioactive processes deep within the Earth.

 

Inner core:  depth of 5,150-6,370 kilometres
The inner core is made of solid iron and nickel and is unattached to the mantle, suspended in the molten outer core. It is believed to have solidified as a result of pressure-freezing which occurs to most liquids under extreme pressure.
Outer core:  depth of 2,890-5,150 kilometres
The outer core is a hot, electrically conducting liquid (mainly Iron and Nickel). This conductive layer combines with Earth's rotation to create a dynamo effect that maintains a system of electrical currents creating the Earth's magnetic field. It is also responsible for the subtle jerking of Earth's rotation. This layer is not as dense as pure molten iron, which indicates the presence of lighter elements. Scientists suspect that about 10% of the layer is composed of sulphur and oxygen because these elements are abundant in the cosmos and dissolve readily in molten iron.
D" layer:  depth of 2,700-2,890 kilometres
This layer is 200 to 300 kilometres thick. Although it is often identified as part of the lower mantle, seismic evidence suggests the D" layer might differ chemically from the lower mantle lying above it. Scientists think that the material either dissolved in the core, or was able to sink through the mantle but not into the core because of its density.
Lower mantle:  depth of 650-2,890 kilometres
The lower mantle is probably composed mainly of silicon, magnesium, and oxygen. It probably also contains some iron, calcium, and aluminium. Scientists make these deductions by assuming the Earth has a similar abundance and proportion of cosmic elements as found in the Sun and primitive meteorites.
Transition region:  depth of 400-650 kilometres
The transition region or mesosphere (for middle mantle), sometimes called the fertile layer and is the source of basaltic magmas.  It also contains calcium, aluminium, and garnet, which is a complex aluminium-bearing silicate mineral. This layer is dense when cold because of the garnet. It is buoyant when hot because these minerals melt easily to form basalt which can then rise through the upper layers as magma.
Upper mantle:  depth of 10-400 kilometres
Solid fragments of the upper mantle have been found in eroded mountain belts and volcanic eruptions. Olivine (Mg,Fe)2SiO4 and pyroxene (Mg,Fe)SiO3 have been found. These and other minerals are crystalline at high temperatures. Part of the upper mantle called the asthenosphere might be partially molten.
Oceanic crust:  depth of 0-10 kilometres
The majority of the Earth's crust was made through volcanic activity. The oceanic ridge system, a 40,000 kilometre network of volcanoes, generates new oceanic crust at the rate of 17 km3 per year, covering the ocean floor with an igneous rock called basalt. Hawaii and Iceland are two examples of the accumulation of basalt islands.
Continental crust:  depth of 0-75 kilometres
This is the outer part of the Earth composed essentially of crystalline rocks. These are low-density buoyant minerals dominated mostly by quartz (SiO2) and feldspars (metal-poor silicates). The crust is the surface of the Earth. Because cold rocks deform slowly, we refer to this rigid outer shell as the lithosphere (the rocky or strong layer).
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Earth as a System Review

Earths Surface - Views of Earth Today

Systems Vocabulary


The Four Connected parts of the Earth system

I. The Atmosphere

The atmosphere contains a mixture of gases that surrounds and protects the Earth. The most common gases are nitrogen (78%) and oxygen (21%). You also find carbon dioxide, water vapor and others in very small amounts.

II. The Hydrosphere

All of the water on Earth covers nearly 3/4 of the Earth’s surface. Approximately 3% of this is freshwater - the rest is frozen.

Remember how we discussed water on the planet and mentioned that of the 75% that is water, 97%  of that 75% is frozen. If it is frozen as an iceberg (massive floating ice) and it melts, then the Earth's water levels don't change. If the ice on land melts (a glacier), then this water adds to our sea level and it rises.

We discussed in class that there are five oceans:

III. The Biosphere

The Biosphere includes all life on Earth in the land, sea and air. The biosphere interacts with other parts of the Earth system and is a vital part of it. Two examples are the fact that our trees are like our “lungs” and that decaying trees provide nutrients for other living things.

IV. The Geosphere

The Geosphere includes all the features of the Earth’s surface - the Continents, islands, sea floor, and everything below the surface. The geosphere is made up of four main layers - crust, mantle, outer core, inner core.

Here is an image to illustrate how Earth's four spheres interact with each other.

Ways the Earth is Shaped

Each of the different spheres impact each other even though they may act independently. Here are some examples of how the spheres can impact each other and themselves. 

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Hot Spots Explained

Hot Spots

A hot spot is an area of persistent volcanic activity. Hot spots originate at unusually hot areas of the mantle-core boundary. Overlying mantle melts forming plumes of magma that rise and penetrate the crust forming volcanoes.

Hawaii, Iceland, and Yellowstone are examples of hot spots. Hot spots are generally characterized by large outpourings of basaltic lava for relatively long periods of time.

Hot Spots found on the globe

Hot Spots active in the last 10 million years (from Abbott, 1996.) The 11 hot spots beneath Antarctica are not shown.

The trace of a hot spot appears as a chain, such as an island chain. As the overlying plate moves one volcano off the hot spot, another is formed. The Hawaiian Island Chain is an example. The island of Hawaii has been formed in the last 1 million years. The other Hawaiian islands to the Northwest are progressively older. Kauai was over the hotspot approximately 5 million years ago. A new Hawaiian Island is being formed off the southeastern coast of Hawaii.

How Hot Spots work

The hot spot that is currently under the island of Hawaii has created a chain of islands and seamounts that extend from Hawaii to the Aleutian trench (from Tarbuck and Lutgens,1987.)

Hot Spots record changes in plate motions because they are believed to be relatively stationary. These spots do not move and thus remain in fixed locations for tens of millions of years. The Hawaiian Island-Emperor Seamount chain bend that occurred about 40 million years ago. This is when the motion of the Pacific plate changed from nearly due north to northwesterly.