Continental drift theory proposed that continents moved over geologic time. Wegener provided evidence like matching coastlines, but lacked an explanation. Later, sonar mapping revealed sea floor spreading, with new crust generated at mid-ocean ridges. This led to plate tectonics theory, where the lithosphere is broken into plates that move due to convection currents in the asthenosphere. Plates interact at boundaries, with subduction at convergent boundaries, new crust formed at divergent boundaries, and horizontal sliding at transform boundaries.
Continental drift theory proposed that continents moved over geologic time. Wegener provided evidence like matching coastlines, but lacked an explanation. Later, sonar mapping revealed sea floor spreading, with new crust generated at mid-ocean ridges. This led to plate tectonics theory, where the lithosphere is broken into plates that move due to convection currents in the asthenosphere. Plates interact at boundaries, with subduction at convergent boundaries, new crust formed at divergent boundaries, and horizontal sliding at transform boundaries.
Continental drift theory proposed that continents moved over geologic time. Wegener provided evidence like matching coastlines, but lacked an explanation. Later, sonar mapping revealed sea floor spreading, with new crust generated at mid-ocean ridges. This led to plate tectonics theory, where the lithosphere is broken into plates that move due to convection currents in the asthenosphere. Plates interact at boundaries, with subduction at convergent boundaries, new crust formed at divergent boundaries, and horizontal sliding at transform boundaries.
Continental drift theory proposed that continents moved over geologic time. Wegener provided evidence like matching coastlines, but lacked an explanation. Later, sonar mapping revealed sea floor spreading, with new crust generated at mid-ocean ridges. This led to plate tectonics theory, where the lithosphere is broken into plates that move due to convection currents in the asthenosphere. Plates interact at boundaries, with subduction at convergent boundaries, new crust formed at divergent boundaries, and horizontal sliding at transform boundaries.
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Continental vs Plate Tectonics Theory
(Featuring: Inductive Method)
PREPARED BY: Shiela Mae Degras Joy Ann Doce CONTINENTAL DRIFT THEORY • First proposed by Alfred Wegener in 1912: -250 million years ago, all the continents were combined into one super-continent called “pangaea”. -The continents gradually drifted apart to where they are today. • Wegner didn’t make up this theory out of the blue - like all scientist, he based it on evidence. CONTINENTAL DRIFT THEORY • Wegener’s theory was rejected by scientists because he could not explain what force pushes or pulls continents. Wegener searched and found three main pieces of evidence Geologic Evidence
Fit of Continents Across the Atlantic
Mountain ranges in South America line up exactly with those in Africa! Fossil Evidence
Plant and animal fossils found on the coastlines of different
continent. Climate Change Evidence EVIDENCE BUT NO METHOD • While Wegner presented compelling evidence, there was no explanation for HOW the continents drifted.
• The question remained: “ If the
continents drift, what is making them move? SEA FLOOR DISCOVERIES • WW II: Military Spending
• U.S Navy mapped seafloor with sonar in order
to help ships and submarines navigate.
• They expected to find that the ocean floor was
a vast, flat plain. What they found was shocking. SEA FLOOR DISCOVERIES • Instead of miles and miles of flat surface, they found that the ocean floor had: - oceanic ridges - submerged mountain ranges - fracture zones - cracks perpedicular to ridge - tenches - narrow, deep gashes - seamounts - drowned undersea islands • This suggested that the sea floor was not simply “covered up” continental crust, but was made of different materials and at a different time. SEA FLOOR DISCOVERIES • What scientists discovered was that the sea floor was being constantly “recycled”. The youngest rocks were created from magma rising to the surface, hardening and pushing aside the older rock. • Scientist called this process “sea floor spreading” PLATE TECTONICS THEORY The theory that the Earth’s outermost layer is fragmented into a dozen or more large and small plates that move relative to one another as they ride on top of hotter, more mobile material. What Are Tectonic Plates? • A plate is a large, rigid slab of solid rock. -Plates are formed from the lithosphere: the crust and the upper part of the mantle. • The plates “float” on the slowly flowing asthenosphere: the lower part o the mantle. • The plates include both the land and ocean floor. • The Mohoriovicic discontinuity or Moho is the boundary between the crust and the mantle. What Drives Tectonic Plates? • The slow movement of hot, softened mantle lies below rigid plates. • The hot, softened rock in the mantle moves in a circular manner in a convection flow - the heated, molten rock rises to the surface, spreads, and begins to cool, and then sinks back down to be reheated and rises again. EARTH’S PLATE Movement of the Plates Over Time Progression of Indian Land Mass Plate Boundaries Different Types of Boundaries DIFFERENT TYPES OF BOUNDARIES • Convergent boundaries come together - Places where crust is destroyed as one plate dives under another. • Divergent boundaries spread apart -Places where new crust is generated as the plates pull away from each other. - New crust is created from magma pushing up from the mantle. • Transform boundaries slides again to each other - Places where crust is neither produced nor destroyed as the plates slide horizontally past each other. OCEANIC-CONTINENTAL COVERGENCE • The oceanic plate subducts under the continental plate because it has lower density. OCEANIC-OCEANIC COVERGENCE • When two oceanic plates converge, one is usually subducted under the other. • An older oceanic plate is colder, therfore more dense and less buoyant, and will subduct under a younger, hotter, less dense, and more buoyant oceanic plate. • The subduction in oceanic-oceanic plate convergence can result in the formation of volcanoes. CONTINENTAL-CONTINENTAL COVERGENCE • When two continens meet head-on, neither is subducted because the continental rocks are relatively light and, like two colliding icebergs, resist downward mountain. • Instead, the crust tends to buckle and be pushed upward or siddeways. DIVERGENCE • Divergent boundaries occur along spreading centers where the plates are moving apart and new crust is created by magma pushing up fromt the mantle. TRANSFORM • The zone between two plates that slide past one another is called a transform- fault boundary, or transform boundary. • These large faults connect two spreading centers or connect trenches. • Most transform faults are found on the ocean floor.