booklet 3 - tectonics

Cards (16)

  • continental crust: thickness - 30 - 70 km
    age - over 1500 million years
    density - 2.6 (lighter)
    composition - granite: silicon, aluminium, oxygen
  • oceanic crust: thickness - 6-10 km
    age - less than 200 million years
    density - 3.0 (heavier)
    composition - basalt: silicon, magnesium, oxygen
  • solid core: iron + nickel, is solid despite temps of 3700 degrees due to the intense pressure
  • outer core
    under slightly less pressure than solid core
  • mantle: zones of molten silicates + other minerals, molten so moves due to convection currents, 2900 km thick
    - asthenosphere
    - lithosphere
  • asthenosphere: - upper part of mantle
    - approx 80km deep
    - rocks kept in semi molten state
    - where plates float and move
    --- hotter + flows
  • lithosphere: crust and rigid upper section of mantle
    - approx 80-90km thick
    - divided into 7 very larger plates + many smaller ones
    --- cooler and more brittle
  • plate margins: edges of plates where 2 plates either slide over eachother, move apart or collide
  • convection currents: heat currents in magma that move the crust slowly
  • the crust
    two types - oceanic + continental
  • importance of core as an energy source: - cores internal heat = main course of earths activity
    - heat may be primeval (retained by balls of gas + dust from which earth evolved)
    - greatest source of heat energy within earth derives from radioactivity - natural radio decay
  • Wegener's theory: belief that the plates move
    - idea of one super continent - Pangaea
    - fossils for animals where found far apart
    - rock structures were the same in diff continents
    - jigsaw fit
  • plate movement: scientists believed that not just convection currents caused plates to move
  • ridge push theory: Hot magma is forced up from the asthenosphere, solidifies to form new oceanic crust, pushing oceanic plates apart at mid-ocean ridges, causing sea floor spreading.
  • slab pull theory: at subduction zones, where one plate is pulled down into the mantle.
    - emerged as more dominant theory for explaining movement
  • evidence for sea floor spreading - palaeomagnetism: - Harry Hess found youngest rocks were in the middle (Iceland) and oldest nearest USA and Caribbean
    - rate of spreading is estimate 5cm a year - confirmed by palaeomagnetism
    - every 400,000 years, earths magnetic field switches polarity - magnetic north and south swap