Geology Chapter 3: Plate Tectonics
continental shelves
Areas where continental surfaces extend under the shallow ocean water around the continents
Paleomagnetism
The study of the alignment of magnetic minerals in rock,specifically as it relates to the reversal of Earth's magnetic poles; also the magnetic properties that rock requires during formation
mountains and oceans
what forms islands such as Hawaii
ridge push
when the force of gravity moves a plate downward and away from a ridge
convergent boundaries
where are oceanic trenches, island arcs, and Earths largest mountain belts formed
Rate of spreading equation
width of stripe / time duration
Gondwana
Supercontinent that existed before Pangea, more than 500 million years ago.
convergent boundary
-A tectonic plate boundary where two plates collide, come together, or crash into each other (a typical result is that one plate slides under the other) -can involve two oceanic plates, oceanic and continental, or two continental
ocean continent convergence boundary
-along this boundary the denser oceanic plate subducts beneath the more buoyant continental plate -volcanoes form on the surface of the overriding continental plate in the same way the volcanoes form in an ocean ocean convergence boundary
fracture zone
-an area of irregular, seismically inactive topography, marking the position of once active transform faults -opposite sides of the zone have different elevations because they formed by seafloor spreading at different times
when oceanic plates converge
1. convergence 2. oceanic trench and accretionary prism form 3. as plate subducts, temperature increases which causes melting 4. some magma erupts and with continued activity it can construct a curving belt of islands in an island arc
Earth's Magentic Field
1. inner core transfers hear and less dense material to the liquid outer core which causes liquid in the outer core to rise, forming convection currents 2. movement of the molten iron is affected by forces associated with Earths rotation, the resulting movement of liquid iron and electrical currents generates the magnetic field 3. currently flows from south to north causing magnetic ends of a compass needle point toward the north (this is called normal polarity)
Alfred Wegener
A German scientist who proposed the theory of continental drift in the 1900s
triple junction
A point where three lithosphere plate boundaries intersect (ex: Mendocino _____ ______ is the )
Seamounts
An underwater mountain rising from the ocean floor and having a peaked or flat-topped summit below the surface of the sea.
Mesosaurus
Animal whose fossil, a small reptile who was freshwater and could not have swam across the ocean, was found both on the continents of Africa and South America
driving force, resisting force
for plates to move, an object must be subjected to a _______ ______. This must exceed the _______ _______
negative magnetic anomaly
Less than average strength of Earth's magnetic field.
Hess and Dietz
Sea floor spreading hypothesis
geomagnetic polarity timescale
The Earth's magnetism has changed polarity at irregular intervals of several million years or less. The ages of each polarity reversal form a sequence of dates which defines the ________ _____ ________ which then serves as a reference to compare against other sequences of rocks
transform boundary
The boundary between tectonic plates that are sliding past each other horizontally
divergent boundary
The boundary between two tectonic plates that are moving away from each other (in most cases, magma fills the space between the plates)
tectonic activity
The movement of plates within the earth's crust against each other, contributing to volcanic eruptions and massive earthquakes.
Subduction, subduction zone
The process of one plate going under another is _______... the zone around the downward moving plate is the _______ _______ (many large earthquakes happen here)
oceanic trench, accretionary prism
_____ ______ forms as the subducting plate bends down... sediment and slices of oceanic crust collect in the trench, forming a wedge called a _______ _______
Iceland
______ is a large volcanic island
continental crust
_______ ______ is not strong enough to survive the forces needed to move a large mass across such a great distance while pushing aside oceanic crust
island and seamount chains
_________ and _________ ________ have two key things in common 1. they were formed by volcanism 2. they are near sites that geologists interpret to be above unusually high-temperature regions in the deep crust and upper mantle (geologists refer to these regions as hot spots)
earthquakes
_________ are not distributed uniformly across the planet. Most are concentrated in discrete belts, such as one that runs along the western coasts of North and South America
island arcs
a curved chain of volcanic islands located at a tectonic plate margin, typically with a deep ocean trench on the convex side.
Glossopteris
a genus of fossilized woody plants/ferns found as fossils that have been dated to roughly 300 to 200 million years. The fossils currently exist on five continents. The distribution of this plant was among the first evidence for continental drift.
slab pull
a mechanism that contributes to plate motion in which cool, dense oceanic crust sinks into the mantle and "pulls" the trailing lithosphere along
positive magnetic anomaly
a reading of magnetic field strength that is higher than the regional average
mantle convection
a recurring current in the mantle that occurs when hotter, less dense material rises, cools, and then sinks again. This current is believed to be one of the driving forces behind tectonic plate movement.
magnetic time scale
a scale that shows the ages of magnetic reversals and is based on the polarity of lava flows of various ages
abyssal plains
a smooth, nearly flat region of the deep ocean floor
older
age determinations from fossils in the sediment and from underlying volcanic rocks show that oceanic crust gets systematically ______ away from mid-ocean ridges
age and distance
ages of volcanic rocks in the islands and seamount chain increase systematically to the northwest. When we plot the ages of these rocks as a function of distance from Kilauea (the active volcano on the Big island), there is a clear relationship between _____ and _____
hot spot
an area where hot mantle rises and melts, forming magma that ascends into the overlying plate. If the plate above the ____ ____ is moving relative to the hot spot, volcanism constructs a chain of volcanoes
active tectonics
areas of yellow and orange on the map show areas of ______ ________
seamounts
as an area on the plate moves beyond the hot spot, it cools subsides, and erodes, so volcanoes that start out as islands may sink beneath the sea to become __________
transform faults
at transform boundaries, plates slip horizontally past each other along _______ ________. These are associated with mid ocean ridges
mid ocean ridges
broad symmetrical ridges that cross ocean basins are called
oceanic fracture zone
continuing outward from most transform faults is an ______ _____ _____, which is a step in the elevation of the seafloor
mid-ocean ridge
divergent plate boundaries where new oceanic lithosphere forms as two oceanic plates move apart... these boundaries are also known as spreading centers
continents and mid ocean ridges
earthquakes are more common along the edges of _________ and _____ ______ ________
Lithosphere
earths strong upper layer...broken into a dozen or so fairly rigid pieces called tectonic plates
plate boundaries
generally, most tectonic activity occurs near ______ _______ (earthquakes are the best example of this)
3-5 km
how deep is most of the ocean floor?
cluster
if a plate is not moving or is moving very slowly, the hot spot forms a ________ of volcanic islands and seamounts instead of a linear chain (ex: Galapagos islands)
change
nearly all plate boundaries contain curves or abrupt bends, so most boundaries _______ type as they cross Earths surface
earthquakes
ocean trenches and associated island arcs have numerous _________
1-15
plates move about ___ to ___ cm per year (about as fast as fingernails grow)
Pacific Ring of Fire
region around the Pacific Ocean where most of the volcanoes and earthquakes on Earth occur regularly
Glaciers
scientists have been confused to find evidence of ancient _______ in places near the equator
continental rifting
splitting of a continent at a divergent plate boundary 1.magma rises through crust 2.stretching of the crust (basins may form resulting in lakes) 3. if this continues, the continent will split into two pieces and a narrow ocean basin forms as seafloor spreading takes place 4. with continuing seafloor spreading the ocean basin can become a full ocean such as the Atlantic
outer core
the layer of earth that behaves as a dynamo (electrical generator) producing the magnetic field, is the _______ ______
boundaries
the location of earthquakes is a better guide to plate _______ than the location of volcanoes
plate tectonics
the process of _____ ______ circulates material back and forth between the asthenosphere and the lithosphere... this process is the major way that Earth transports heat to the surface
zigzag pattern of mid ocean ridges
the spreading direction must be parallel to the transform faults and perpendicular to the spreading segments, so this pattern is required to allow a plate boundary to be curved
continent-continent convergent boundary
this type of boundary is commonly called a continental collision, and it produces huge mountain ranges (ex: Himalaya and and Tibetan plateau of Southern Asia)