22
8/26-8/27 Chapter 1, Pgs. 50- 55 Most of this is NOT in your book!

8/26-8/27 Chapter 1, Pgs. 50-55 Most of this is NOT in your book!

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: 8/26-8/27 Chapter 1, Pgs. 50-55 Most of this is NOT in your book!

8/26-8/27

Chapter 1, Pgs. 50-55

Most of this is NOT in your book!

Page 2: 8/26-8/27 Chapter 1, Pgs. 50-55 Most of this is NOT in your book!

May the force be

within the Earth!

Page 3: 8/26-8/27 Chapter 1, Pgs. 50-55 Most of this is NOT in your book!

Q: What is geology?

A: The study of the earth’s physical structure and history.

Page 4: 8/26-8/27 Chapter 1, Pgs. 50-55 Most of this is NOT in your book!

What does the inside of the earth look like?

1.Core: Consists of very hot metal, mainly iron mixed with some nickel. Inner

core is thought to be dense and solid. Outer core is

molten or liquid.

2. Mantle: A thick layer of rock. About 1800 miles thick.

Contains pockets of magma or melted rock.

Page 5: 8/26-8/27 Chapter 1, Pgs. 50-55 Most of this is NOT in your book!

3.Crust: Rocky surface layer. Like frosting on a cake. 5 to 22

miles thick. Natural forces interact with and affect the

earth’s crust, creating landforms.

Page 6: 8/26-8/27 Chapter 1, Pgs. 50-55 Most of this is NOT in your book!

Q: How much of the earth is water?

A: 70% of earth is covered with water.

Four Major Types of Landforms:

Mountains

Hills

Plateaus

Plains

Page 7: 8/26-8/27 Chapter 1, Pgs. 50-55 Most of this is NOT in your book!

Landforms are shaped by the internal forces that originate in the earth’s interior:

1.Volcanism

2. Earthquakes

Page 8: 8/26-8/27 Chapter 1, Pgs. 50-55 Most of this is NOT in your book!

Volcanism – movement of magma inside the earth, when molten rock (lava) inside the earth breaks through the earth’s crust it forms a volcano

Page 9: 8/26-8/27 Chapter 1, Pgs. 50-55 Most of this is NOT in your book!

Earthquake – movement of rock layers that bend or break the earth’s crust. Folds and faults occur.

Page 10: 8/26-8/27 Chapter 1, Pgs. 50-55 Most of this is NOT in your book!
Page 11: 8/26-8/27 Chapter 1, Pgs. 50-55 Most of this is NOT in your book!

Q: How do we explain these folds/faults?

A: The Plate Tectonics THEORY:

The earth’s outer shell (mantle and crust) is composed of large plates whose slow and steady

movement explains earthquakes and volcanic activity.

Page 12: 8/26-8/27 Chapter 1, Pgs. 50-55 Most of this is NOT in your book!

The Plate Tectonics Theory is based in two other theories…

Continental Drift Theory and the Seafloor Spreading Theory.

Continental Drift Theory: Theory proposed by Alfred Wegener in 1912, where he suggested the idea that over- - - - - - - - - - - >

Page 13: 8/26-8/27 Chapter 1, Pgs. 50-55 Most of this is NOT in your book!
Page 14: 8/26-8/27 Chapter 1, Pgs. 50-55 Most of this is NOT in your book!

Pacific Ocean – Ring of Fire• Humans encounter tectonic

forces most directly as earthquakes and volcanoes

• Volcanoes and earthquakes are particularly common around the edges of the Pacific Ocean

• Area is known as the Ring of Fire

Page 15: 8/26-8/27 Chapter 1, Pgs. 50-55 Most of this is NOT in your book!

Four Major Types of Plate Movement

Page 16: 8/26-8/27 Chapter 1, Pgs. 50-55 Most of this is NOT in your book!

1. Subduction: Oceanic plate goes under a continental plate.

Page 17: 8/26-8/27 Chapter 1, Pgs. 50-55 Most of this is NOT in your book!

2. Converging: Two continental plates meet each other creating mountains.

Page 18: 8/26-8/27 Chapter 1, Pgs. 50-55 Most of this is NOT in your book!

3. Faulting: Plates moving past each other creating earthquakes.

Page 19: 8/26-8/27 Chapter 1, Pgs. 50-55 Most of this is NOT in your book!

4. Seafloor Spreading: The ocean floor is not flat. Molten rock (magma) from the mantle rises up to the underwater ridges and breaks through a split at the top of the ridge - called a rift valley. Example: Mid-Atlantic Ridge

Page 20: 8/26-8/27 Chapter 1, Pgs. 50-55 Most of this is NOT in your book!

Sea-Floor Spreading

Page 21: 8/26-8/27 Chapter 1, Pgs. 50-55 Most of this is NOT in your book!