Earth Science
Earth Science
Earth Science
Crust
➔ the outside layer of the earth
➔ made of solid rock, mostly basalt and granite
➔ Two Types of Crust
1. Oceanic crust – denser and thinner; mainly composed of basalt
2. Continental crust – less dense and thicker; mainly composed of granite
Mohorovičić discontinuity[2]
➔ usually referred to as the Moho
➔ the boundary between the Earth's crust and the mantle
Mantle
➔ lies below the crust
➔ up to 2900 km thick
➔ consists of hot, dense, iron and magnesium-rich solid rock
➔ The crust and the upper part of the mantle make up the lithosphere, which is broken
into plates, both large and small.
Gutenberg Discontinuity – the boundary between the mantle and the core.[3]
Core
➔ the centre of the earth
➔ Two Parts of the Core:
1. Liquid outer core – made of nickel, iron and molten rock
2. Solid inner core – Temperatures here can reach up to 50,000 Co.
Theory of Continental Drift[4]
• Proponent: Wegener – German meteorologist, geophysicist and polar researcher
In 1915, he published ‘The Origin of Continents and Oceans’, which outlined his theory
of Continental Drift, which was met with skepticism by many scientists. Although he had
a lot of evidence to support the theory, he could not explain how the plates moved simply.
• Wegener’s 5 Lines of Evidence of the Continental Drift Theory:
1. Jigsaw Fit
The similarity in outline of the coastlines of
eastern South America and West Africa had
been noted for some time. The best fit is
obtained if the coastlines are matched at a
depth of 1,000 metres below current sea level.
Any areas where there are gaps or overlaps
may be explained by :
• Coastal erosion since continental
separation
• Coastal deposition since continental
separation
• Rises in sea level (eustatic change) since
continental separation
• Changes in land level (isostatic change)
since continental separation
2. Tectonic Fit
Fragments of an old fold mountain
belt between 450 and 400 million
years ago are found on widely
separated continents today. Pieces
of the Caledonian fold mountain belt
are found in Greenland, Canada,
Ireland, England, Scotland and
Scandinavia. When these land
masses are re-assembled the
mountain belt forms a continuous
linear feature.
3. Geological Fit
When the geology of eastern South America
and West Africa was mapped it revealed that
ancient rock outcrops (cratons) over 2,000 million
years old were continuous from one continent to
the other.
4. Glacial Deposits
Today, glacial deposits
formed during the Permo-
Carboniferous glaciation
(about 300 million years ago)
are found in Antarctica,
Africa, South America, India
and Australia. If the
continents haven’t moved,
then this would suggest an ice
sheet extended from the south
pole to the equator at this time
- which is unlikely as the UK at
this time was also close to the
equator and has extensive coal and limestone deposits. If the continents of the
southern hemisphere are re-assembled near the south pole, then the Permo-
Carboniferous ice sheet assumes a much more reasonable size.
More evidence comes from glacial striations – scratches on the bedrock made by
blocks of rock embedded in the ice as the glacier moves. These show the direction of
the glacier, and suggest the ice flowed from a single central point.
5. Fossil Deposits
Fossils of the same species are found on different continents suggesting continental
drift occurred.
PLATE TECTONICS[6]
• Plate tectonics is the theory that the outer rigid layer of the earth (the lithosphere) is
divided into a couple of dozen "plates" that move around across the earth's surface relative
to each other, like slabs of ice on a lake.
• The drawing above is a cross section of the earth showing the components that lie within
plate tectonic theory. The cross section should really be curved to correspond to the earth's
curvature, but it has been straightened out here.
Note the continental craton (stable continent) in the middle of the drawing. Note the
line under the craton; that is the lower boundary of the plate. Everything above that line
is the plate. All similar lines in the cross section mark the bottom of the plates.
Technically, everything above that line is lithosphere, the rigid, brittle shell of the earth.
Everything below is asthenosphere, the hot, plastic interior of the earth.
Within the asthenosphere are convection cells, slowly turning over hot, plastic rock.
The convection cells bring heat from the earth's interior out to the surface, but slowly.
Movement is about 10 centimeters a year. When the convection cells reach the base of
the lithosphere they release heat to the surface at the divergent plate boundary to
escape to space. The cooled plastic rock then turns sideways and moves parallel to
the earth's surface before descending back into the earth at subduction zones to
become reheated. It is this turning over of the convection cells the drives the plate
movements.
PLATES
➔ combinations of two units, continents and ocean basins
➔ may be an ocean basin alone, or a continent alone, or a combination of ocean basin +
continent (common).
PLATE BOUNDARIES
➔ those zones where the plates contact and interact
➔ Three Kinds of Plate Boundaries:
1. Convergent Boundary
Types :
➢ Oceanic-Continental
- oceanic plates sink under continental plates
- subduction zone, volcanic arcs
- Example: Juan de Fuca Plate and North American Plate
➢ Oceanic-Oceanic
- older plates are colder and have tendency to sink
- subduction zone, island arcs
- Example: Philippine Sea Plate and Eurasian Plate
➢ Continental-Continental
- mountain belts
- Example: Indian Plate and Eurasian Plate
2. Divergent Boundary
➢ Mid-Oceanic Ridges
- Example: Mid-Atlantic Ridge
➢ Rift Valleys
- Example: East African Rift
3. Transform Boundary
- places where plates slide past each other
- conservative boundary
Driving Mechanisms
• Convection current
• Slab Pull and Ridge Push
Hotspots - relatively small, long-lasting, and exceptionally hot regions
-Thermal plumes sustain volcanism
- Example: Hawaiian Island-Emperor Seamount Chain
PLATE COLLISIONS
The essence of plate tectonic theory is that the plates (ocean basins plus or minus
continents) slide around over the earth surface, interacting as they do at the plate boundaries. Thus,
any time there is a divergent plate boundary where two plates are separating, there must be a
convergent plate boundary (subduction zone) where the earth comes together again. And
convergent boundaries always, eventually, lead to collisions between continents, or continents and
terranes (island arcs plus or minus microcontinents).
It is common for a divergent plate boundary to come into existence and create a new ocean
basin, and then for that ocean basin to close again along a convergent plate boundary until two
continents collide. This opening and closing of ocean basins is the Wilson Cycle, and is the
simplest model we have of how the earth operates historically.
Philippine Setting
“The Philippine Archipelago is at the junction of
major plates.”
Tectonic Features of the Philippines
➢ Philippine Mobile Belt
- a complex portion of the tectonic boundary
between the Eurasian Plate and the Philippine Sea
Plate, comprising most of the country of the
Philippines. It includes two subduction zones, the
Manila Trench to the west and the Philippine Trench
to the east, as well as the Philippine Fault System.
➢ Crystal Habit – shapes and aggregates that a certain mineral is likely to form
- a single mineral can have different habits
- some habits are distinct in certain minerals
➢ Cleavage – tendency of a mineral to break in particular directions due to zones of weakness
in the crystal structure.
- Fractures or irregular breakages occur when bond strengths in a crystal structure
is equal in all directions
o Conchoidal fractures – curved breakages
➢ Specific Gravity
▪ Normal rock – 2.5 g/cm3
➢ Other Properties
• Magnetism
• Fluorescence
• Reaction to chemicals - e.g. effervescence
• Taste
• Odor - e.g. sulfur
Silicates
- largest group of minerals
- Silicon + Oxygen
- building block:
MINERAL Silica (Si-O) tetrahedron (SiO4 )-4
VOLCANISM
Volcano – mountainous accumulation of materials resulting from successive eruptions of lava from
a central vent
Distribution of Volcanoes
• Pacific Ring of Fire
• Spreading Centers
• Hotspots
Types of Volcanoes
1. Shield – slopes are gentle (15° or less)
- shapes resemble a Roman shield lying on the ground
- made up of successive lava flows
- large
- basaltic type of lava
Special Types
➢ Domes – roughly circular mound-shaped protrusion resulting from the slow extrusion of
viscous lava from a volcano
e.g. Mt. St. Helens
➢ Maars – volcanic crater that forms when magma gets in contact with groundwater to produce
a steam explosion
e.g. Seven Lakes of San Pablo Laguna
➢ Calderas – when an erupting volcano empties a shallow-level magma chamber, the edifice of
the volcano may collapse into the voided reservoir, thus forming a steep, bowl-shaped
depression called caldera.
e.g. Yellowstone, Taal Caldera
Eruption Styles
A. Effusive Eruption
1. Hawaiian – calm, curtain of fire, fluid basaltic lava, fire fountains
B. Explosive Eruption
2. Strombolian – short-lived, multiple times, fireworks-like
3. Pelean – pyroclastic materials in high volume
4. Phreatic – water without contact to magmatic material
- steam explosion
5. Phreatomagmatic – direct interaction of magma and water
- lava and steam
- usually in underwater volcanoes
6. Vulcanian – large plume height
- velocity of the materials is high pushing them upward
- booming blast
7. Plinian – stronger than vulcanian
- Plume height exceeds 45 km
Philippine Volcanoes
- 23 active, 27 potentially active, and >400 inactive
- 7 active volcanoes are being monitored by PHIVOLCS
➢ Potentially Active Volcanoes – geologically young (erupted <10, 000years and for calderas
and large systems, <25, 000 years)
- Young-looking geomorphology
- Suspected seismic activity
- Documented local ground deformation
➢ Decade Volcano – 16 volcanoes in the world which have been designated for particular study
- These volcanoes pose various hazards, are located near populated areas, and show
recent activity.
- Taal Volcano is a decade volcano.
Volcanic Hazards
1. Lava Flow
Types of Lava
▪ Aa – stony rough lava
▪ Pahoehoe – smooth, billowy, undulating, or ropy surface
▪ Pillow – formed when lava emerges from underwater
- fluffy and pillowy
2. Pyroclastic Flow
3. Tephra Fall/Ash fall
- collapse of roofs
- crop damage
- eye irritant
- danger to aviation
- global cooling
4. Volcanic Gases – CO2 and SO2
5. Lahar- burial and erosion
- rate of movement is fast
6. Tsunami – generated during volcanic eruption
- release of energy offshore causing displacement of water
7. Debris Avalanches/Landslides
EARTHQUAKE
Earthquake is a term used to describe both a sudden slip on a fault, and the resulting ground shaking
and radiated seismic energy caused by the slip, or by volcanic or magmatic activity, or other sudden
stress changes in the earth (7)
Types of Earthquake
➢ Tectonic Earthquake - produced by sudden movement along faults or plate boundaries
➢ Volcanic Earthquake - produced by movement of magma or magmatic fluids OR rock-
fracturing beneath volcanoes
➢ Volcanic-tectonic (VT) - type of volcanic earthquake associated with failure or breakage of
rock material along faults & fractures beneath active volcanoes.
- Normally triggered by excess heat & pressure OR adjustment of the crust around a
magmatic body.
Seismic Waves
➢ P-waves - “Primary waves” “Push-pull”
-> may be transmitted through gases, liquids, or
solids
➢ S-waves - “secondary waves” “shear waves”
-> cannot travel through fluids (gases and liquids)
➢ Surface (seismic) waves - travel across the Earth's
surface propagate more slowly than seismic body waves
(P and S)
▪ Love wave
▪ Rayleigh wave
IGNEOUS ROCKS
o Magma – molten rock most often generated by melting of rocks in Earth’s mantle,
although some melted crustal rock generates some magma. Once formed a magma
body rises toward the surface.
o Lava – magma that reached the surface
• From Magma to Crystalline Rock
o Crystallization – the process in which the once-mobile ions in the magma begin to
arrange themselves into orderly patterns as the magma cools down.
o The rate of cooling strongly influences the crystal size. Slow cooling results in the
formation of fewer, larger crystals, while rapid cooling results in the formation of a
solid mass of small, intergrown crystals.
o Crystallization is also influenced by the magma’s composition and the amount of
dissolved gases.
• Igneous Compositions
o Silicon and oxygen are the most abundant constituents of igneous rocks.
o Dark silicates – rich in iron and/or magnesium and relatively low in silica (SiO2)
o Light silicates – contain greater amounts of potassium, sodium, and calcium and
richer in SiO2
Classification Composition Notes
Granitic (felsic) - Composed of entirely light- - Major
colored silicates (quartz and constituents of
potassium feldspar) the continental
- Contains about 10% of dark crust
silicates (usually biotite mica
and amphibole)
Basaltic (mafic) - Contain at least 45% of dark - Make up the
silicate materials and ocean floor
calcium-rich plagioclase and many of
feldspar the volcanic
- No quartz islands located
- Typically darker and denser within the
than granitic rocks ocean basins
Andesitic - Contain at least 25% dark - Associated
(intermediate) silicate minerals (mainly with volcanic
amphibole, pyroxene, and activity that is
biotite) and plagioclase typically
feldspar confined to the
seaward
margins of the
continents and
on volcanic
island arcs
Ultramafic - Contains mostly olivine and - Rare at the
(ex.: peridotite) pyroxene Earth’s surface
• Igneous Textures
Lithification of Sediment
- Lithification – the processed by which sediments are
transformed into solid sedimentary rocks
METAMORPHIC ROCKS
• Process of Metamorphism
1. Pre-existing rock is subjected to a physical or chemical environment significantly different
from that in which is initially formed.
2. In response to these new conditions, the rock gradually changes until a state of
equilibrium with the new environment is reached.
Agents of Metamorphism
1. Heat
2. Confining pressure
3. Differential stress
4. Chemically active fluids
Erosion[9] – the physical removal of material by mobile agents such as water, wind, or ice
(a) Water erosion
➔ Raindrops may strike the land at velocities approaching 35 km per hour, splashing up soil
particles as high as one meter and land more than a meter away from the point of the
raindrop impact.
➔ Water flowing across the surface carries away the dislodged soil particles.
(b) Wind erosion
➔ When dry conditions prevail, strong winds can remove large quantities of soil from
unprotected fields.
(c) Rates of erosion
➔ Natural rates of erosion vary greatly from one place to another and depend on the soil
characteristics as well as factors such as climate, slope, and type of vegetation.
➔ In the past, soil erosion occurred at slower rates than today because most of the land
surface is protected by plants.
➔ Human activities such as farming, logging, and construction, remove or disrupt natural
vegetation, thus increasing the chances for soil to be eroded.
EARTH’S HISTORY[10]
BIRTH OF A PLANET
EARTH’S TIMELINE[11]
ATMOSPHERE[12]
WEATHER VS CLIMATE
o Weather – state of the atmosphere at a given time and place; constantly changes (from
hour to hour, other times from day to day)
o Climate – “average weather;” sum of all statistical weather information that helps
describe a place or region
Note: Climate data CANNOT predict the weather. “Climate is what you expect, but
weather is what you get.”
o Elements of Weather & Climate
1. Air temperature
2. Humidity
3. Cloudiness
4. Precipitation
5. Air pressure
6. Wind speed and direction
o
Layer Thickness/Height Temperature Notes
Changes
Troposphere Varies with latitude Temperature - The lowermost layer in which
( the region where and season; about decreases as we live
air “turns over”) 12 km (7.4 miles) on altitude - Water vapor is highly
average increases. concentrated in the lower
troposphere.
- All important weather
phenomena occurs in this
layer.
- Its outer boundary is called
the tropopause.
Stratosphere About 38 km (22 Temperature - Ozone is concentrated in this
miles) remains layer.
constant to a - The boundary between the
height about 8 stratopause and the
km (4.6 miles) mesosphere is the
from the stratopause.
tropopause,
then
increases
until the
stratopause.
Mesosphere About 30 km (20 Temperature - The coldest temperatures
miles) decreases as anywhere in the atmosphere
height occur at this layer.
increases. - The boundary between the
mesosphere and
thermosphere is the
mesopause.
Thermosphere No well-defined Temperature - Contains only a tiny fraction
upper limit increases as of the atmosphere’s mass
height
increases,
due to
absorption of
solar radiation
by oxygen and
nitrogen
atoms.
EARTH-SUN RELATIONSHIPS
o Earth’s Motions
a. Rotation – spinning of the Earth about its axis. The Earth rotates once every 24
hours.
➔ Circle of illumination – the line separating the dark half of Earth from the
lighted half
b. Revolution – Earth’s movement in a slightly elliptical orbit around the Sun
➔ Perihelion – Earth is closer than at any other time from the Sun, at a distance
of about 147.3 million km, which occurs on about January 3 every year
➔ Aphelion – Earth is farther away at any other time from the Sun, at a distance of
about 152 million km, which occurs on July 4 every year
Note: The distance from the sun only plays a minor role in producing seasonal
temperature variations.
o What causes the Seasons?
1. Length of daylight
➔ When the Sun is directly overhead, the rays strike the atmosphere at 90-degree
angle and travel the shortest possible route to the surface. When the sun is
situated at angles less than 90 degrees, the rays will travel through more
distance, thus increasing the chances that the sunlight will be dispersed bu the
atmosphere. That is why we cannot look at the Sun at noon, but we can enjoy
the sunset.
o Earth’s Orientation
❖ inclination of the axis – Earth is tilted 23 ½ degrees from the perpendicular to
the plane of its orbit around the Sun.
[1] The Earth's Structure. (n.d.). Retrieved September 08, 2020, from https://www.gsi.ie/en-
ie/education/our-planet-earth/Pages/The-Earth-structure.aspx
[2]King, H. M. (n.d.). Mohorovičić Discontinuity - The Moho. Retrieved September 08, 2020, from
https://geology.com/articles/mohorovicic-discontinuity.shtml
Heuberger, B. (2018, March 13). What Is the Gutenberg Discontinuity? Retrieved September 08,
[3]
https://www.geolsoc.org.uk/Plate-Tectonics/Chap1-Pioneers-of-Plate-Tectonics/Alfred-Wegener
https://earthquake.usgs.gov/learn/glossary/?term=sea-floor-spreading
Fichter, L. S., & Baedke, S. J. (2000, September 13). Plate Tectonic Theory: Plate Boundaries and
[6]
Tarbuck, E. J., & Lutgens, F. K. (2015). Rocks: Materials of the Solid Earth. In Earth Science (14th
[7]
Tarbuck, E. J., & Lutgens, F. K. (2015). Weathering, Soil, and Mass Testing. In Earth Science (14th
[8]
Tarbuck, E. J., & Lutgens, F. K. (2015). Weathering, Soil, and Mass Testing. In Earth Science (14th
[9]
[10] Tarbuck, E. J., & Lutgens, F. K. (2015). Earth’s Evolution Through Geologic Time. In Earth Science
[11] Tarbuck, E. J., & Lutgens, F. K. (2015). Earth’s Evolution Through Geologic Time. In Earth Science
[12]Tarbuck,
E. J., & Lutgens, F. K. (2015). The Atmosphere: Composition, Structure, and
Temperature. In Earth Science (14th ed., pp. 485-496).
Tarbuck, E. J., & Lutgens, F. K. (2015). The Atmosphere: Composition, Structure, and
[13]