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Clerical:
Homework #1b is due Friday (1/21/11). Please complete this ASAP if you haven't already!
Please complete Homework #2 ASAP if you haven't already.
Homework #3 is "due" next Tuesday (1/25/11).
Quizzes 1-4 are posted.
The Exam #1 Study Guide is posted.
Themes of the Day:
- Basic Structure of the Earth
- Continental Drift to Seafloor Spreading: The Plate Tectonics Revolution
Structure of the Earth
- Core - composition: primarily Iron (Fe) - inner core is solid, outer core is liquid
- Mantle - silicate composition, primarily the mineral olivine - solid, but near melting point in places
- Crust - silicate composition, primarily feldspars - thin scum riding atop the mantle, solid
- Oceanic vs. Continental Crust
- Lithosphere vs. Asthenosphere
Continental Drift to Seafloor Spreading: The Plate Tectonics Revolution
- Alfred Wegener - German meteorologist (1880-1930)
- Continental Drift - Lines of Evidence
- Continental Drift - Development of a Hypothesis
- Wegener initially viewed continents plowing along on the surface of an Earth encircling layer of ancient oceanic crust - mountain ranges like
the Andes in South America represented deformation at the leading edge of the drifting continents
- Wegener's mechanism was physically impossible and his hypothesis was rejected and ridiculed as a result, however subsequent editions of his
hypothesis incorporated more realistic mechanisms
- Wegener froze to death in Greenland in 1930 on a meteorological expedition - still firmly believing in continental drift
- Arthur Holmes proposes mantle convection, early 1930's (incuding a rudimentary version of
seafloor spreading and subduction) as a driving force
for Continental Drift - largely ignored for the next 30 years - his 1945 textbook concluded with a chapter describing continental drift by convection
of the mantle, twenty years before the plate tectonics "revolution"
- Exploration of the Ocean Basins
- The Seafloor Spreading Hypothesis
- In the late 1950's Harry Hess (Princeton) proposes Seafloor Spreading Hypothesis - new crust produced at mid-ocean ridges (mantle upwelling) and consumed
at deep-sea trenches (mantle downwelling) - based on Mantle Convection
- Vine & Matthews and Morley independently link seafloor magnetic stripes with Seafloor Spreading Hypothesis (1963)
- Seafloor Magnetic Stripes (e.g., Mid-Atlantic Ridge S. of Iceland) discovered in 1950's
- New oceanic crust records Earth's magnetic field when it forms
- Spreading seafloor moves away from the ridge as newer crust is formed in a conveyor belt fashion
- Oceanic crust acts as a "tape recorder" of
Earth's magnetic polarity reversals
- Implications: oceanic crust spreads symmetrically, crust gets older as it moves away from the ridge, new crustal
material is constantly being added at the ridge - rates of plate motions can be determined based on well calibrated
polarity reversal time scale and mapped oceanic stripes
- Age of oceanic crust (eventually confirmed seafloor spreading hypothesis)
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