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Explaining the patterns with a model Geologists had no good way to explain these patterns until the middle of the 20 th century. Then Harry Hess promoted the idea of sea-floor spreading.

Explaining the patterns with a model Geologists had no good way to explain these patterns until the middle of the 20 th century. Then Harry Hess promoted

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Page 1: Explaining the patterns with a model Geologists had no good way to explain these patterns until the middle of the 20 th century. Then Harry Hess promoted

Explaining the patterns with a model

Geologists had no good way to explain these patterns until the middle of the 20th century.

Then Harry Hess promoted the idea of sea-floor spreading.

Page 2: Explaining the patterns with a model Geologists had no good way to explain these patterns until the middle of the 20 th century. Then Harry Hess promoted

Let’s do a little reading

• Read the Sea Floor Spreading handout.

• What patterns that we have seen so far can be explained using this model? Remember, you are just operating from what you read, not your prior knowledge.

Page 3: Explaining the patterns with a model Geologists had no good way to explain these patterns until the middle of the 20 th century. Then Harry Hess promoted

Let’s figure out how plates interact• Put your hands (plates) horizontally out in

front of you, with your thumbs touching.• Pull your hands apart sideways. What

should call call it when plates move this way?• On Earth, would there just be a giant hole

between the plates?• Now push your hands together. What do the

plates do?• What should we call this motion?• Last one – hold one hand still and slide the

other one directly away from you.• What should we call this motion?

Page 4: Explaining the patterns with a model Geologists had no good way to explain these patterns until the middle of the 20 th century. Then Harry Hess promoted

So these were our three kinds of motion:

• Divergent plate boundary – plates pull apart & something fills in the gap.

• Convergent plate boundary – plates move toward each other and one plate overrides another

• Transform boundary – two plates slide past each other horizontally.

• Dance!

Page 5: Explaining the patterns with a model Geologists had no good way to explain these patterns until the middle of the 20 th century. Then Harry Hess promoted

Let’s read a bit

• Read p. 201, Divergent Boundaries ONLY• Now think about all the patterns we have seen so

far. Does the divergent boundary model help us explain any of them?

Page 6: Explaining the patterns with a model Geologists had no good way to explain these patterns until the middle of the 20 th century. Then Harry Hess promoted

Time to reason

• We’ll use the Give One, Get One protocol• Make this chart:

My ideas…

My p

art

ner’

s id

eas…

Mercury Venus Earth

Page 7: Explaining the patterns with a model Geologists had no good way to explain these patterns until the middle of the 20 th century. Then Harry Hess promoted

Now for some ideas

In the row of your chart for your ideas, write 3 answers to this question:

What evidence have we seen that supports the idea that divergent boundaries exist?

Page 8: Explaining the patterns with a model Geologists had no good way to explain these patterns until the middle of the 20 th century. Then Harry Hess promoted

Now go collect some other ideas

• In a minute you will go find your first partner.• Listen while your partner tells you their idea.• Paraphrase the idea back to them.• Write it down.• Tell your partner your idea while they listen.• Listen to the paraphrase. Then they write

down your idea.• Wait until you are told to find your next

partner.

Page 9: Explaining the patterns with a model Geologists had no good way to explain these patterns until the middle of the 20 th century. Then Harry Hess promoted

Let’s pool our thinking

• On a share sheet, we’ll record all the evidence we have seen so far that divergent boundaries exist.

Page 10: Explaining the patterns with a model Geologists had no good way to explain these patterns until the middle of the 20 th century. Then Harry Hess promoted

Another reading interlude.

• Read the paragraphs about Transform boundaries on p. 201.

• What data patterns can we explain using the transform boundary model?

Page 11: Explaining the patterns with a model Geologists had no good way to explain these patterns until the middle of the 20 th century. Then Harry Hess promoted

Recycling idea

• Let’s go back to Harry Hess & his model of spreading and notice this statement:

• “Harry Hess did not believe that the Earth was getting any larger so, just as new seafloor is created at the mid-ocean ridges, older seafloor must be returned to the Earth’s interior somewhere.”

Page 12: Explaining the patterns with a model Geologists had no good way to explain these patterns until the middle of the 20 th century. Then Harry Hess promoted

How is the recycling happening?

• Think about our original data patterns.

• Now let’s read about Convergent Boundaries.

• Which of our data patterns can we explain using the convergent boundary model?

Page 13: Explaining the patterns with a model Geologists had no good way to explain these patterns until the middle of the 20 th century. Then Harry Hess promoted
Page 14: Explaining the patterns with a model Geologists had no good way to explain these patterns until the middle of the 20 th century. Then Harry Hess promoted

The colors on this map are a bit different:•Yellow is closest to the surface•Blue and red are the deepest

Imagine we had a giant knife and we cut through Sumatra along the line from A to A’.

This is a picture that would show where earthquakes happened in that side view.

Page 15: Explaining the patterns with a model Geologists had no good way to explain these patterns until the middle of the 20 th century. Then Harry Hess promoted

Applying the model• Now we can ask if there is plate tectonics

anywhere else in the Solar System.• We already looked at Mars and the Moon, and

they are very different from the Earth.• Now let’s look at Venus• Find your handout on Thinking About Patterns in

the Planets• We have mostly topographic data from Venus, so

we will use the same chart we used to look at topography on the Earth

Page 16: Explaining the patterns with a model Geologists had no good way to explain these patterns until the middle of the 20 th century. Then Harry Hess promoted

Your job is to construct with your partner an argument for whether Venus does or does or does not have PT.The structure of an argument is:CLAIM, EXPLANATION, EVIDENCE.

Page 17: Explaining the patterns with a model Geologists had no good way to explain these patterns until the middle of the 20 th century. Then Harry Hess promoted