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Lecture 5: CONTINENTAL DRIFT & SEA-FLOOR
SPREADING
Plate Tectonics -- brief introduction
- Scientific "revolutions": Plate Tectonics as
an example
- 1. "Normal Science": At the start, a collection
of theories and observations that are accepted
- Geology 100 years ago: Theories were developed to explain
the earth's features
- The idea that the continents move was not really considered-
not really "needed"
-
- 2. "Crisis": These theories are unable to explain
new observations
- Unexpected geological discoveries in the 20th century
-
- 3. "Revolution": New paradigm adopted, old theories
eventually given up
- New paradigm- plate tectonics- explains many, many aspects
of the earth
In the end, a scientific revolution greatly advances science
by developing a new, more accurate model with which to understand
nature.
Continental Drift
- Basic concept (Alfred Wegener)
Single supercontinent, "Pangea" ~250 m.y. ago
Slow "drifting" to present position
Evidence
Fit of continents
Distribution of rocks and mountains
Paleo-climates
Fossils
Acceptance?
Sea-Floor Spreading (Harry Hess, l962)
- New oceanic crust is created at mid-ocean ridges and "spreads"
away
Old oceanic crust is destroyed by sinking into mantle at trenches
Convection currents in mantle drives the process
-
- End of brief notes.
-
Detailed notes start here:
Scientific "revolutions": Plate Tectonics as an
example
- 1. "Normal Science": At the start, a collection
of theories and observations that are accepted; new data are
fit into those theories by expanding the theories incrementally
- Geology 100 years ago: Theories were developed to answer
questions such as:
- Why are ocean fossils found near the top of Mt. Everest and
in many mountain ranges?
- Why are mountain chains found where they are?
- Why are volcanoes found only in certain zones of the world?
- The idea that the continents move was not really considered-
not really "needed"
-
- 2. "Crisis": These theories are unable to explain
new observations
- Unexpected geological discoveries in the 20th century
- New data, much of it from the oceans
- Many attempts made to fit these data into existing theories,
i.e., to continue doing "normal science"
-
- 3. "Revolution": New paradigm adopted, old theories
eventually given up
- New paradigm- plate tectonics- explains many, many aspects
of the earth
- Completely new way of looking at the earth- hard for many
to accept
- Old theories given up- but not without careful weighing of
the competing theories
- Healthy skepticism is the rule in science
- Eventually, the evidence FOR plate tectonics became overwhelming
-
- Note: Technology had advanced enough to put a person
on the moon by 1968, and yet the most basic principle describing
how the earth works was just gaining acceptance! This is partly
because much of the evidence was hidden in the ocean depths,
which were not explored until the mid-1900's.
-
- For more information on scientific revolutions, see:
- The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, by Thomas
S. Kuhn
- The Road to Jaramillo, by William Glen
Continental drift, sea-floor spreading and plate tectonics
In the1960s, a revolutionary concept was proposed by marine
geologists at Columbia University - the theory of plate tectonics.
Prior to that theory, many geological phenomena were simply
not explained -Why do earthquakes and volcanoes occur where they
do? How are mountain ranges formed? Why do the continents on either
side of the Atlantic appear to fit together? Why are there mid-ocean
ridges and marginal trenches on the sea-floor? Plate tectonics
is able to explain these, and many other features of our planet.
Plate tectonics proposes the following:
- Earth's lithosphere (the rigid, outer layer, roughly 100
km thick) is made up of a series of slabs (or plates) that move
about.
- Plates can separate from one another, grind together, slide
by one another, or one plate can slide down under another.
- These relative motions result in earthquakes, volcanoes,
and mountains at plate boundaries.
Plate tectonics was developed from two previous notions about
global processes:
- "Continental drift" -- continents migrate
(drift) over the surface of Earth
- "Sea-floor spreading" -- oceanic crust forms
at mid-ocean ridges, spreads laterally, and then descends back
into to the mantle at marginal trenches.
To understand and appreciate the significance of plate tectonics,
we begin with those concepts which led to its development.
Continental Drift: Alfred Wegener (German meteorologist)
developed the concept of continental drift in the early 20th Century
(although the idea had been around for centuries before-hand)
Tasa, Plate Tectonics CD-ROM, Chap. 2, Advance
through all frames
Continents were assembled in a single landmass ("Pangea")
about 250 m.y. ago.
With time they have slowly moved to their present positions.
The idea was well thought out and based on the following data:
Evidence for Continental Drift
1. Fit of the continents across the Atlantic Ocean
Tasa Plate Tectonics Chap. 3, Frames 1, 2, 3, 4, 5.
Atlantic coastlines fit together like a jig-saw puzzle. But
if the pieces fit, the "pattern" must match also. Wegener
explored whether geologic features also matched-up in his reconstruction.
Tasa -- PT Chapter 5 (Rocks...) Frames 1 & 2
2. Distribution of mountains and rock sequences
Tasa Plate Tectonics Chapter 5 (Rocks...) Frames 3 to end
Appalachian Mts. and similar ranges in Scotland and Norway
connect up when continents are reconstructed. Distinctive types
of rocks and patterns of folds on Africa and S. America match
up well for a reconstructed Pangea.
3. Distribution of sedimentary rocks reflecting paleoclimate
Tasa Plate TectonicsChap. 6 (Paleoclimates) Frames 1 to
end
Rocks deposited at the Earth's surface (sedimentary rocks)
reflect the climate (and hence latitude) where they form. For
example, ancient coral reefs and coal swamps form in warm, humid,
low latitudes. Glacial deposits should form at cold, high latitudes.
Wegener found evidence for glaciated regions widely scattered
in the Southern Hemisphere, and for coal deposits. His reassembled
continents explains the paleoclimatic record in those sedimentary
rocks.
4. Distribution of fossils:
Tasa Plate Tectonics Chapter 4
A number of identical fossil organisms are found on widely
separated continents.
- o Cynognathus - land reptile (couldn't swim at all)
in S. Amer. & Africa
o Mesosaurus - fresh water reptile (couldn't swim far
and not in salt water) in S. Amer. & southern Africa
o Lystrosaurus - fat land reptile (would sink faster than
a lead ship) in Africa, India, Antarctica
o Glossopteris - fern with heavy seeds (couldn't be blown
across the ocean)
The distribution of those organisms only makes sense for a
reconstructed Pangea
Wegener believed that the evidence for continental drift was
overwhelming. But the idea was not accepted at the time. It was
ridiculed. The reasons were:
- Wegener didn't have a reasonable mechanism for movement of
the continents.
He suggested that attractive forces of the moon caused continents
to crash through the oceans (like a ship breaking through ice).
Therefore, ocean crust should be deformed, but it isn't.
- Wegener's geological evidence was derived mostly from observations
located in the Southern Hemisphere.
North American geologists were unfamiliar with the observations
so they discounted them. Prejudice based on ignorance (scientists
are human).
Therefore most scientists rejected the idea of continental
drift at the time. But that idea was resurrected when detailed
information about the sea floor was gathered and analyzed in the
1950's and l960's. This work lead to the concept of sea-floor
spreading.
Sea-Floor Spreading was proposed
by Harry Hess (Princeton geologist) in 1962 based on his observations
of sea-floor topography. The basic components of the concept are:
New ocean crust is created at mid-oceanic ridges, moves laterally
("spreads") away from ridges with the motion like that
of a conveyer belt, and is destroyed at trenches, where it sinks
into the mantle and melts. Hess suggested that convection currents
in the mantle were the driving force of sea-floor spreading.
During the l960's, a number of research projects were done
to test this new hypothesis. Many of these dealt with properties
of the sea floor. As we shall see, these studies confirmed the
concept of sea-floor spreading.
Study and Review Questions
- Why was the theory of plate tectonics such a "revolutionary"
concept in the earth sciences?
- Briefly describe the basic idea of plate tectonics.
- In a sentence, describe Alfred Wegener's concept of continental
drift. What did he name the super-continent?
- Identify and describe briefly the four lines of geologic
evidence that Wegener used in support of his ideas.
- Although the evidence for continental drift was compelling,
Wegener's theory was not generally accepted by other scientists.
Why not?
- Based largely on the topography of the ocean floor, Harry
Hess proposed the idea of sea-floor spreading in 1962. In a sentence
or two, describe Hess's ideas of how and where new oceanic is
created and how and where old oceanic crust is destroyed.
- What are the three phases of scientific revolutions?
- How do scientists normally respond to new evidence that seems
to threaten existing theories and how does this response change
in a scientific revolution?
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