The document discusses the theory of plate tectonics, which proposes that Earth's outer shell is broken into plates that move relative to each other. The theory provides a framework for understanding geological phenomena like mountain building, volcanoes, and earthquakes. It describes how Earth can be divided into layers based on chemical and physical properties, with a crust, mantle, and iron-rich core.
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Complete Lecture Notes On Rock Mechanics
The document discusses the theory of plate tectonics, which proposes that Earth's outer shell is broken into plates that move relative to each other. The theory provides a framework for understanding geological phenomena like mountain building, volcanoes, and earthquakes. It describes how Earth can be divided into layers based on chemical and physical properties, with a crust, mantle, and iron-rich core.
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Plate Tectonics
• Plate tectonics, theory dealing with the dynamics of Earth’s
outer shell—the lithosphere—that revolutionized Earth sciences by providing a uniform context for understanding mountain-building processes, volcanoes, and earthquakes as well as the evolution of Earth’s surface and reconstructing its past continents and oceans. • The concept of plate tectonics was formulated in the 1960s. According to the theory, Earth has a rigid outer layer, known as the lithosphere, which is typically about 100 km (60 miles) thick and overlies a plastic (moldable, partially molten) layer called the asthenosphere. • The lithosphere is broken up into seven very large continental- and ocean-sized plates, six or seven medium- sized regional plates, and several small ones.
• These plates move relative to each other, typically at rates
of 5 to 10 cm (2 to 4 inches) per year, and interact along their boundaries, where they converge, diverge, or slip past one another. • Such interactions are thought to be responsible for most of Earth’s seismic and volcanic activity, • The theory of plate tectonics is based on a broad synthesis of geologic and geophysical data. It is now almost universally accepted, and its adoption represents a true scientific revolution, • In essence, plate-tectonic theory is elegantly simple. Earth’s surface layer, 50 to 100 km (30 to 60 miles) thick, is rigid and is composed of a set of large and small plates.
• Together, these plates constitute the lithosphere, from the Greek
lithos, meaning “rock.” The lithosphere rests on and slides over an underlying partially molten (and thus weaker but generally denser) layer of plastic partially molten rock known as the asthenosphere, from the Greek asthenos, meaning “weak.” • As the lithospheric plates move across Earth’s surface, driven by forces as yet not fully understood, they interact along their boundaries, diverging, converging, or slipping past each other. Earth’s layers
• Knowledge of Earth’s interior is derived primarily from analysis of
the seismic waves that propagate through Earth as a result of earthquakes. Depending on the material they travel through, the waves may either speed up, slow down, bend, or even stop if they cannot penetrate the material they encounter. Collectively, these studies show that Earth can be internally divided into layers on the basis of either gradual or abrupt variations in chemical and physical properties. Chemically, Earth can be divided into three layers. A relatively thin crust, which typically varies from a few kilometres to 40 km (about 25 miles) in thickness, sits on top of the mantle. (In some places, Earth’s crust may be up to 70 km [40 miles] thick.) • The mantle is much thicker than the crust; it contains 83 percent of Earth’s volume and continues to a depth of 2,900 km (1,800 miles). Beneath the mantle is the core, which extends to the centre of Earth, some 6,370 km (nearly 4,000 miles) below the surface. Geologists maintain that the core is made up primarily of metallic iron accompanied by smaller amounts of nickel, cobalt, and lighter elements, such as carbon and sulfur.