0% found this document useful (0 votes)
135 views

Upward - Mountains Downward - Ocean Basins and Depression Clarence Edward Dutton - American Seismologists and Geologist

The document provides information about the formation and composition of Earth over time. It discusses how Earth formed 4.5 billion years ago from a nebula and accretion. It describes the major components of Earth including the atmosphere, hydrosphere, geosphere, and how they formed. It also summarizes plate tectonic theory and how the continents have shifted positions over billions of years, forming different landmass configurations like Pangaea, Rodinia, and breaking into the current continents.

Uploaded by

Qe
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
135 views

Upward - Mountains Downward - Ocean Basins and Depression Clarence Edward Dutton - American Seismologists and Geologist

The document provides information about the formation and composition of Earth over time. It discusses how Earth formed 4.5 billion years ago from a nebula and accretion. It describes the major components of Earth including the atmosphere, hydrosphere, geosphere, and how they formed. It also summarizes plate tectonic theory and how the continents have shifted positions over billions of years, forming different landmass configurations like Pangaea, Rodinia, and breaking into the current continents.

Uploaded by

Qe
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 11

EARTH – 4.

5 billion years ago

- 1/3 of the age of the universe

Nebula theory – it was formed at the same time as the other members of the solar system by accretion
from the solar

Geological events – volcanic eruptions, collision of plate boundaries, creation and destruction of
mountain ranges and seabeds

Iron and Sulphur – sank inside

Silicates and water – floated near earth’s surface (lighter materials)

200 years – the earth’s and ocean formed after the planet’s form action

Major parts of the earth – atmosphere, hydrosphere, geosphere

70.8% - planet covered w/ water

29.2 – land

Hydrosphere – included all the water found in the ocean, sea lakes, glaciers, groundwater and even
water vapor in the air

1.4 billion km3 – total volume of water on earth

1,300 km3 – oceans

35million km3 or 2.5% - freshwater

70% - freshwater (ANTARTIC, ARCTIC)

CRYOSPHERE – part of the earth’s hydrosphere

- Crucial element , key indicator for climate change

3.7km - average depth of an ocean

Challenger deep in the mariana trench – deepest point in the earth’s ocean with a depth of 10,994km

Geosphere – layer of earth that we are most knowledgeable of

- Planet’s interior structure, rocks, minerals, landforms, and the process that shape its surface

Raisin theory – earth is like a grape that contracted in a raisin due to the cooling process that occurs on
earth after the big bang about 13.77 billion years ago

Upward – mountains

Downward – ocean basins and depression

Clarence Edward Dutton – American seismologists and geologist

- Proposed the term “isostasy” in 1889


theory of isostasy – equilibrium exists

tekton – carpenter or builder

1 – 15 cm per year – mountain ranges

Plate tectonic theory – developed fom earlier hypotheses and data collected

Theatrum orbis terrarium – first word atlas

- Developed and published by Abraham orlelius


- May 20, 1570
- Similarity between the coastlines of Africa, Europe, America

Alfred Wegener – Austrian climatologist

- Proposed the continental drift theory

Origins of continents and oceans

- 1915
- Expanded his theory and presented evidences

Pangaea – all earth

Rodinia – 1,1100 million years ago

Laurasia and Gondwanaland – the smaller continents

Rodinia – Pangaea – Laurasia – Gondwanaland

Panthalassa – a vast ocean surrounding the Pangaea

Earth has 58 crustal plates

 PRIMARY PLATES
a. African
b. Eurasian
c. Indo – Australian
d. North American
e. Pacific
f. South American w/ Nazca
 SECONDARY
a. Arabian
b. Caribbean
c. Cocos
d. Indian
e. Juan de fuca
f. Philippine sea
g. Scotia
 7 MAJOR CONTINENTS
a. Asia
b. Africa
c. North America
d. South America
e. Antartica
f. Europe
g. Australia

Cratons – platforms are connected with basement rock

- Survive the cycles of merging and rifting

Oceanic - made of heavier basalt and gabbro rocks

- Younger than continental


- 200 y/o

TWO TYPES OF LITHOSPHERIC PLATES

a. Continental
- Solid ground water you stand
- Lighter than oceanic
- Lower density materials (granitic)
- Formed through volcanic eruption
- 4 billion years – basement rock (oldest foundation) – granite and volcanic rocks
- Does not subduct
- 10 – 70 km thick
b. Oceanic
- 7km thick
- Subduct

Asthenosphere – soft layer

Volcano – opens downward a reservoir of molten rocks called magma

1, 500 volcanoes

THREE STAGES OF A VOLCANO LIFE’S CYCLE

1. Invasion of magma
2. Building pressure
3. Eruption

95% - boundaries of tectonic plates

5% - mantel plumes and hotspots

John tuzo Wilson – Canadian geophysisct

- One of the founders of the theory of the plate tectonics


- Found the 3 linear chains of volcano

Hawaii emperor – seamount was the most famous : younger

William Jason morgan (1971)

- American geophysicist
- Developed wilson’s theory

Mantle plumes – areas or columns where heat or rocks rising

Hotspots – have experienced active volcanic activities for a long period of time

10 – 50 hotspots – Galapagos islands, Hawaii, Iceland, reunion, Yellowstone

Volcanism – processes and phenomena surficial discharge of molten rock

Convection – occurs when matter , such as magma , circulates w/in earth

Core – 4, 982 C

EARTHQUAKE

- A natural phenomenon that is characterized by a sudden , violent shifting of massive plates


- Form of wave energy that are transmitted through bedrock.

Hypocenter – the point within the earth along the geological faults where the earthquake is originated

Epicenter – the point on earth’s surface directly above the focus

Shallow focus – 0 – 70 km ; closer to the surface where rocks are stronger larger and more damaging

Deep focus – 70 – 700 km

Fault – crack across which the rocks have been offset first

- Micrometers to thousand of km

Magnitude – size of the earthquake

Aleutian arc – 650 km

PARTS OF FAULT

1. Fault plane – where the fault occurs ; sloping or vertical


2. Fault trace – line that may be visible or not
3. Hanging wall – block of crust above the fault
4. Footwall – block of crust below the fault
CLASSIFICATION

1. Normal fault – a fault in which the hanging wall moves down relative to the footwall of extensio
2. Reverse fault – also called thrust fault. A fault in which the hanging wall moves up relative to the
footwall as a result of compression
3. Strike – slip fault - a fault in which two blocks of crust slide past each other on the same plane

CLASSIFICATION OF SEISMIC WAVES

1. Surface waves – can only travel along the surface


a. Love waves – move transverse to the direction of the propagation but w/no vertical motion
b. Rayleigh waves – also called ground roll; cause rock particles to move upward
2. Body waves – waves that travel below the surface of earth
a. Primary waves – travel the fastest 4 – 8 km /s
b. Surface waves – can only travel through solid materials 2.5 – 4 km/s

TYPES OF EARTHQUAKE

1. Tectonic earthquake – most common type ; happens when the shifting of earth’s plates are
driven by the sudden release of energy w/in some limited region of rocks.
Elastic rebound theory - by the American geologist, harry fielding reid
- Occurs when strains in rock masses have accumulated to a point where the resulting stress
exceeded the strength of rocks

Asperities – the roughness or harshness along the faults

Fault barriers – the places where the rupture slows or stops

2. Volcanic earthquake
- Occurs in volcanic regions and can serve as an early warning of a volcanic eruptions
a. Volcano tectonic earthquakes – occur after a volcanic activity has taken place
b. Long period volcanic earthquake – occur after a volcanic eruption
c.
3. Collapse – caused by seismic waves produced from the explosion of rocks on the surface
- Small earthquakes located underground and in mines that are caused by the disintegration of the
roof of the mine or cavern or by massive landsliding
- Mine (rock) burst
-
4. Explosion earthquake – results from detonation of chemicals or nuclear devices
-occurs when enormous nuclear energy is released during underground nuclear explosions

Seismology – study of earthquakes

Robert mallet – irish civil engineer and scientist

- Studied earthquake motion by observing the effects of earthquakes and by measuring the velocity

Mercalli scale – Giuseppe Mercalli (1902) ; who experienced the eq estimate its intensity
Richter scale – Charles f. richter (1934) ; distance between the eq and seismograph

Circum – pacific belt – also called ROF

Foreshocks – small earthquakes that commonly precede a major earthquake

Tsunami - “big wave in the port”

- 100 km ; 5 minutes to an hour

Seiche – a large wave that moves up and down

Mountain ranges – succession of many closely spaced mountains covering a particular portion of earth

Pacific ring of fire / alpide belt

Circum – pacific seismic belt – a horseshoe shaped region in the pacific ocean

- Andes of south America, north American cordillera along pacific coast, Aleutian range , Kamchatka ,
japan, Taiwan, Philippines, papua new guinea, new Zealand

Alpide belt - a mountain range that is created by ongoing collision of plate tectonics

Orogeny -forces and events that lead to a large structural deformation of earth’s lithosphere

- “oros” – mountain , “genesis”- creation

Orogenesis – deformed rocks called orogens or orogenic belts are formed on the continental plate

Geomorphology – study of mountains

Gorge – a very steep valley between young mountains

STAGES OF MOUNTAIN RANGES

1. Accumulation of sediments
- Mountain belt are composed of igneous rocks and sediments
- Produced limestones , sandstones, holes that composes the continental
- Several km in the thickness
2. Orogenic period of rock deformation and crystal uplift
- Deformed by compressional forces from the collision of tectonic plates
a. Arc- continental – an island arc collides with the edge of a continental plate
b. Oceanic – continental – collision ocean and continental plates allows the accretion
c. Continental – continental – convergence occur where an ocean basin and continental plates
collide
3. Period of crustal uplift caused by isostatic rebound
- The final stage of orogenesis occurs at the end of the plate convergence
1. Himalayas – highest mountain range in the world
- Also the youngest in the world
- Jurassic era, 80 million years ago
- “Himalaya” came from the Sanskrit language means the “ house of snow or the snowy range”
- Between Tibet and Nepal with a peak of 8, 848m in the above sea level
- Stretches along a 1,500 mile curve
- 200 miles wide range
- 1, 100ft (305m) elevation
- Hinduism and Buddhism
2. Andes – longest mountain range in the world
- 4, 500 miles distance (west coast of south america from cape horn to panama)
- 20,000ft (6,096) peak
3 sections
a. Central andes – Chilean and peruvian mountains
b. Southern andes – argentina and chile\
c. Northern andes – Columbia, Ecuador and venezuela
- Mesozoic tertiary – orogenic belt
3. The Appalachians – oldest mountain range in north America
- Stretched southwestward for about 1,500 miles from Quebec in Canada to central meuburn
- Ordovocian period ; 480 million years ago
- More than 40 peaks reach over 6,000 ft
4. The alps – largest mountain system in Europe
- Southeastern France and northern Italy
- 8, 000 ft peak ; ice and snow covered ; 15, 782 ft above sea level
- Alpine orogeny ; 300 million years ago
- Alpinism, mountaineering is believed to have originated in the alps
- Caused by the collision between the Eurasian and African plates
5. Rocky mountains – major ranges in western north American
- Jagged snow capped peaks
- Mexico , British Columbia, north alberta in Canada, usa
- 6,035 km length of ths range
- 80 to 55 million years ago ; laramide orogeny
6. The great dividing range – a mountain range that forms a watershed
- Eastern highlands ; Australia’s most substantial
- 3rd longest based range
- Stretches a 3,500 km from dawan island to western Victoria

SEAFLOOR SPREADING – created at mid ocean ridges, spreading in both direction from ridge system

- Played a crucial role in providing a conceptual base


- Harry hess, American geologist, professor and military office (1960)
Boundary – border between tectonic plates

a. Convergent boundary – destructive plate


- Occurs where 2 plates are pushing toward each other
- 100km wide, more than a thousand km long ,several kms deep.

Subduction zones – regions where a portion of the tectonic plates are dividing beneath other plates

- Wadatti – Benioff zone


- 100km

3 types of convergent boundary

1. Oceanic – oceanic – when 2 plates meet and one oceanic plate ; pushed underneath
- Outer swell , bulge in descending plate commonly develops where the plate bends to dive down
the mantle
- Forearc ridge, traps sedimentary deposits and is underlain by faulted and highly deformed
sedimentary and metamorphic rock
- Back arc, located behind the volcanic arc, a broad region of variable character that may be
compressed or extended
2. Oceanic continental – where an oceanic plate pushes into and moves underneath a c plate
3. Continental – continental – when 2 continents meet head on
- Too light to slide down into a trench

b. Divergent boundary – a zone where 2 lithospheric plates where apart from each other
- Constructive boundary
- Long rift zones, normal faults and basaltic volcanism

Mid oceanic ridge - a characteristic of an oceanic spreading center that is responsibe for ss

Arctic basin – center of atlantic , Indian ocean, across the south pacific

Mid atlantic ridge – rate of 2.5 cm per year (25km)

c. Transform fault boundary – a zone between 2 plates that slides horizontally past each other
- Neither creates nor destroys a crust
- Conservative boundary

Fracture zones – occur on seafloor (san andreas)

Faults -land

Triple junction – where 3 plate boundaries meet

3 ways

a. Ridge -ridge – connects 2 segments of a divergent plate boundary (deadsea)


b. Ridge – trench – connects a ridge and a trench (queen charlotte island fault)
c. Trench – trench – couple trenches at 2 different convergent plate bounsaries
RIDGE, TRENCH, TRANSFORM

50 tectonic plates with about 100 triple junctions

RRR – all 3 plates are moving apart

FFF – all transform

TTT – 3 plates pushing together

GEOMORPHOLOGY – scientific study of landform and the process that shape them

Topography – the current terrain features of region and the graphic representation

Landforms – natural physical features on the surface of the earth

Nii-jima – new island dubbed ; born undersea volcano

- November 21, 2013


- 13. 8 acres ; 20 – 25 yards

1. AEOLIAN LANDFORMS – chemichal and mechanical


- Greek god of the wind, aelous
a. Dunes – mounds or small hills made up of sand ; dome shaped, crescent, star, linear, parabolic
- 1 – 10 m high
b. Loess – predominantly silt- sized sediment formed by the accumulation of wind blown dust
- Yellowish or brownish, “ cat steps” ; 100km thickness
c. Mushroom rock – rock pedestal ; glacial action/ earthquakes
2. EROSIONAL LANDFORMS – weathering activities
a. Mesas – table mountains , elevated areas of land w/ a flat top and sides that steep cliffs
- Cap rock ( resistant rock) surrounded
b. Buttes – flat topped hills ,steep sides ; semi -arid desert
- Smaller amount of area than mesa
- “hillock” or small hill (French)
c. Canyons – gorge , deep ravine between cliffs carved from the river,wind, glacier
3. MOUNTAINOUS LANDFORMS – rise higher than the rest of their surroundings
- Slopes ,summit areas and local reliefs
a. Volcanoes – controlled by geological processes ; vent, opening top
b. Hills – elevated portions of land formed by geological activities such as faulting
- Grass, grazing lands
- Smaller than mountains ; 300m high
c. Valleys – or dales, low lying areas of land located between hills or mountains.
- V shaped, flowing water
- U shaped, glaciers
- Vales, dells , mountain coves, hollow, hanging valleys
4. GLACIAL LANDFORMS – action of the glaciers
- Alpine, high mountains ; continental , cold polar regions
5. FLUVIAL LANDFORMS - underwent sedimentation, erosion, disposition
- Glaciofluvial , interacted with glaciers of ice caps

wave refraction – wave crests in the bodies of water realign themselves as a decreasing depths.

a. Delta – low lying triangular area located at the mouth of rivers where it meets an ocean, sea,
estuary ; contains rich soil that has been washed away
- Alluvium, sediment that has accumulated due to the interaction of delta and bodies of water
b. Peninsula – byland, piece of land that projects into a body of water and is connected w/ isthmus
c. Meander – bend in a sinuous watercourse of a river
- Concave, inner bank ; convex, outer
d. Sea cliffs – high rocky coasts that plunge down to the edge of the sea
6. PLAINS – flat and broad land areas have no great changes in elevation
- Abyssal plains, deepest part of the ocean ; covers 50%
7. PLATEAUS – table lands or flat topped mountains, portions of land elevated thousand of feet
above their surroundings ; cover about 45% of earth’s land
- Tibetan plateau – “roof of the world”
- Low – farming ; high – livestock grazing

EXAMPLES

1. APPALACIANS – MT. MITCHELL IN NORTHEN CAROLINA


2. ALPS – MONT BLANC , FRANCE
3. ROCKY – MT. ELBERT, 4,401M
4. GREAT – AUSTRALIA
5. CONVERGENT – ANDES MOUNTAIN RANGE
6. DIVERGENT – MID ATLANTIC RIDGE
7. TRANSFORM – SAN ANDREAS FAULT IN CALIFORNIA
8. DUNES – SAND DUNE IN SOSSUSVLEI NAMIBIA
9. LOESS – REGION IN CHINA
10. MUSHROOM ROCK – KANSAS, USA
11. MESAS – GRAND MESA IN WESTERN COLORADO
12. BUTTES – ELEPHANT BUTTE
13. CANYON – GRAND CANYON IN NORTH ARIZONA
14. HILLS – BOHOL
15. GLACIAL – ALESTCH GLACIER
16. DELTA – GANGES DELTA
17. PENINSULA – ISTRIA PENINSULA IN CROTIA
18. MEANDER – IN RIO NEGRO ARGENTINA
19. SEACLIFFS – MOHER, IRELAND
20. PLATEAU – TIBETAN

RHEOLOGY – the study of the flow of matter primarily in the liquid state under conditions at which they
respond with plastic flow
1. Lithosphere – the outer solid part of the planet including earth’s crust as well as the underlying
cool, dense , and rigid upper part of the upper mantle. ; extends about 70 -100 km
2. Asthenosphere – a highly viscous, hotter, and ductile region of the upper mantle
3. Crust – the outermost layer of the earth, thinnest layer. 5-10km thick
- The crust thickens up to 35km and reaches depths up to 60km under some mountain ranges
Elements of crush (weight) – 98.5% total
- Oxygen (46.6%)
- Silicon (27.7%)
- Aluminum (8.1%)
- Iron (5%)
- Calcium (3.6%)
- Sodium (2.8%)
- Potassium (2.6%)
- Magnesium (2.1%)
- Average temperature is 870C
- Mohorovicic discontinuity (MOHO) , separates the crust from the mantle ( Andrija ) , depth of 8km
beneath the ocean basins and 32km beneath the continental crust
4. Mantle – largest layer of the earth
- Composed of iron, calcium, aluminum, magnesium, silicon, and oxygen
- About 80% of the planet’s mass is concentrated on the mantle
- Average temperature is 3, 700 C
- Geothrmal gradient, increase of temperature
a. Upper mantle - highly viscous layer that lies between crust and the lower mantle
- 660km and consists of peridotite and dunite
b. Lower mantle – 2,200km
- Rocks are hot and soft
5. Core – the innermost layer , which is separated into the liquid outer core and the solid inner c
- Iron- nickel alloy
a. Outer core – 4% of the mantle crust mass ; ball of very hot metals ; iron, some nickel, 10% of
Sulphur and oxygen
b. Inner core – deepest region ; 5,000 – 6,000C ; even hgher at the sun’s temperature
- 1250km thickness ; 70% as wide as the moon ; 0.2 longitude per year faster than earth above

Dynamo effect – circulating current

Magnetic field is detected using a compass

South geomagnetic pole- where it exits

North – enter

12, 756km – planet’s equational diameter

Magnetic reversal has occurred 171 times in the last 71m years

1,100km pole moved ; 10 – 40 km much faster

You might also like