sea floor spreading aim: is the ocean getting bigger?
TRANSCRIPT
Sea floor Spreading
Aim: Is the ocean getting bigger?
1. SONAR (it’s an acronym)a. In the 1960s, SONAR
was used to map the ocean floor.
b. A ridge was found in the Atlantic Ocean – longest and tallest mountain chain on Earth. (mid- Atlantic Ridge)
c. Trenches were found along the coastlines –one is 6x deeper than the Grand Canyon (Mariano Trench @ -11 km)
A ridge runs all through the oceans
Mid-ocean Ridge and Marianna Trench
Trench
Ridge
2. Core Drillingsa. Rock samples
taken from the crust indicate that the continental crust is older than the ocean crust.
b. Also, ocean crust sampled near the ridge is younger than farther from the ridge.
Relative Age of
Ocean Floor
Red is younger
Yellow and Green are older
3. Magnetic Striping of Crust
a. A magnetometer detected the magnetite (a mineral made of iron) in the basalt (an ignesus rock) in the oceanic crust.
b. Earth’s magnetic field has reversed its polarity many times, called a magnetic-reversal when the north pole swaps polarity with south pole.
c. Pattern (isochron) on one side of mid-atlantic ridge is a mirror of other side.
4. Hydrothermal Ventsa. ROVs (remote
operated vehicles) saw steam and lava coming out of the ocean floor around the ridge.
b. Vents are underwater geisers
c. Interesting sea life found around the heated water of the vents
http://www.divediscover.whoi.edu/vents/index.html
http://oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/gallery/maps/maps.html
5. Theory of Sea-Floor Spreading
a. The process by which molten material adds new oceanic crust to the ocean floor.
b. The ocean floor is widening because new ocean floor is being made at the ridges, while old ocean floor is being destroyed when it is pushed back down in a trench.
c. Finally a possible explanation for the continents moving.http://education.sdsc.edu/optiputer/flash/seafloorspread.htm
Textbook pages 65- 79
Page 71 Questions # 1- 4 Page 77 Questions #1 – 5 Section Review pages 78-79
#1-14 AND #1-4
Exclude page 76 (Microplate Terraines)
Theory of Plate Tectonics
Continental Drift + Sea-floor Spreading = Theory of Plate
Tectonics
Do Now: Lava Lamp
Can you explain how the lava lamp is working:What is the heat doing?What is happening to the molecules of lava?What is happening to the lava’s density?
1. What are plates?a. The Earth’s
lithosphere is cracked into about 20 pieces, like a cracked egg shell.
b. The less dense plates float on the more dense magma of the asthenosphere.
2. What is driving sea-floor spreading?
a. CONVECTION: Heat transfer by movement of a fluid.
b. Convection Currents in the asthenosphere are the forces that move the plates of the lithosphere
c. This movement is the cause of continental drift
3. How does convection work?a. During convection
magma heated from the core rises, then cools and sinks again (like a lava lamp)
b. Heat is being transferred from the inner core to asthenosphere
c. Sometimes lava comes out of the crack at the mid-ocean ridge, pushing the plates apart.
d. This movement causes the plates above to move around.
e. Convection makes the plates move about 2 cm/year.
4. What happens when plates move around?
a. Geological features (landforms) are formed as some plates push apart, push together, or slide past one another.
b. The features are called tectonic, formed from the movement of lithospheric plates.
c. Plate boundaries are formed where 2 pieces of plate meet.
3 Types of plate boundaries
Divergent
Convergent
Transform
5. Divergent Boundaries
Boundary between two plates that are moving apart or rifting
Rifting causes Sea-floor Spreading
Ex. 1 : Mid Ocean Ridge – ocean crust diverging from ocean crust
Ex. 2: Iceland tallest mountain on the mid-Atlantic ridge
Ex. 3 : African Rift Valley2 continental plates are pulling apart
6. Convergent Boundaries
a. A place where two plates come together.
b. Collision between plates.
c. Three types of convergent boundaries:Continent-continent collisionContinent-oceanic crust collisionOcean-ocean collision
Convergent Type 1
a. Ocean plate collides with less dense continental plate
b. Subduction Zone: where the more dense plate slides under the less dense plate
c. Volcanos and trenches occur at subduction zones
Andes Mountains, South America
Convergent Type 2
a. Ocean plate collides with another ocean plate
b. The more dense plate slides under the less dense plate creating a subduction zone called a deep ocean trench and an island arc
Ex. 1: Mariana Trench
Bathyscape Triest - 1960
Ex. 2 -Aleutian Islands, Alaska
Convergent Type 3
a. A continental plate colliding with another continental plate
b. Have Collision Zones:a place where folded and thrust faulted
mountains form.
Ex. - Himalaya Mountains
7. Transform Boundary
a. Boundary between two plates that are sliding past each other in opposite directions
b. Stress builds up and earthquakes occur along faults (cracks)
The lithosphere cracks from the
stress (pressure) from the friction
of the plates grinding against
one another. Large faults (cracks) are
created.
Ex. 1: San Andreas Fault
Plate Tectonic Map
Summary:
The movement of the tectonic plates of Earth’s crust is caused by convection in the mantle.
The movement causes the plates to either:Converge (collide)Diverge (move apart)Transform (slide past)