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Plate Tectonics: A Comprehensive Guide to Earth's Dynamic Processes, Slides of Earth Sciences

Plate tectonics is caused by heat flow within the Earth's interior as well as density differences between the Earth's crust and mantle.

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PLATE TECTONICS
Plate tectonics is the process that drives the recycling of Earth’s oceanic crust and the drift of continents on its
surface. Plate tectonics is caused by heat flow within the Earth’s interior as well as density differences between the
Earth’s crust and mantle. Many major geological processes like volcanoes, earthquakes, mountain formation, and the
arrangement of tectonic plates (Figure 1) are all results of plate tectonics. Many of these processes occur constantly,
but at such a slow rate they appear static from a human perspective. On a geologic time scale of about 200+ million
years; however, plate tectonics can disassemble and then reassemble the world’s continents whilst recycling all of the
oceanic crust between. This rearrangement is known as the Wilson cycle and its steps will form the basis for our
understanding plate tectonics. The main steps are as follows: heat convection, rifting, sea floor spreading, subduction,
and continental collision.
HEAT CONVECTION
Let us start with a simple idea: Earth’s interior is hot and space
is cold. This thermal gradient drives the slow dispersion of heat
from our planet. Some of the internal energy finds its origin in
Earth’s formation approximately 4.6 billion years ago. The rest
of this energy arises from radioactive decay of uranium, thorium
and potassium within the mantle. In the metallic, liquid outer
core heat can disperse easily due to rapid convection and
conduction, but the mantle drastically hinders this cooling. The
mantle is composed of solid, less conductive silicate rock.
Although it’s solid, mantle material can rise upward very slowly (a
few centimeters per year) in convection cells (Figure 2). This
“fluid” behavior allows heat to eventually reach the
asthenosphere (upper mantle). With the thermal energy is near the crust, the next step in plate tectonics can begin.
RIFTING
Typically, the heat of the asthenosphere slowly conducts through the solid crust and radiates into space, but in some
special locations, known as hot spots, heat is concentrated enough to melt and break through the crust. Hot spots
that occur in continental crust are key to our second step, rifting. Rifting occurs where continental crust thins and
Figure 2
Figure 1
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PLATE TECTONICS

Plate tectonics is the process that drives the recycling of Earth’s oceanic crust and the drift of continents on its surface. Plate tectonics is caused by heat flow within the Earth’s interior as well as density differences between the Earth’s crust and mantle. Many major geological processes like volcanoes, earthquakes, mountain formation, and the arrangement of tectonic plates ( Figure 1 ) are all results of plate tectonics. Many of these processes occur constantly, but at such a slow rate they appear static from a human perspective. On a geologic time scale of about 200+ million years; however, plate tectonics can disassemble and then reassemble the world’s continents whilst recycling all of the oceanic crust between. This rearrangement is known as the Wilson cycle and its steps will form the basis for our understanding plate tectonics. The main steps are as follows: heat convection, rifting, sea floor spreading, subduction, and continental collision.

HEAT CONVECTION

Let us start with a simple idea: Earth’s interior is hot and space is cold. This thermal gradient drives the slow dispersion of heat from our planet. Some of the internal energy finds its origin in Earth’s formation approximately 4.6 billion years ago. The rest of this energy arises from radioactive decay of uranium, thorium and potassium within the mantle. In the metallic, liquid outer core heat can disperse easily due to rapid convection and conduction, but the mantle drastically hinders this cooling. The mantle is composed of solid, less conductive silicate rock. Although it’s solid, mantle material can rise upward very slowly (a few centimeters per year) in convection cells ( Figure 2 ). This “fluid” behavior allows heat to eventually reach the asthenosphere (upper mantle). With the thermal energy is near the crust, the next step in plate tectonics can begin.

RIFTING

Typically, the heat of the asthenosphere slowly conducts through the solid crust and radiates into space, but in some special locations, known as hot spots, heat is concentrated enough to melt and break through the crust. Hot spots that occur in continental crust are key to our second step, rifting. Rifting occurs where continental crust thins and

Figure 2

Figure 1

faults to form rift basins ( Figure 3 ). In order to create a rift basin that divides an entire continent, multiple adjacent hotspots are required. The thinning of crust occurs above and between each hot spot until a large rift basin forms. Some rifts fail, but others continue to spread further apart until the sea floods the basin, forming two separate continents. The thinning of the crust continues under this new ocean until the asthenosphere finally reaches the surface. With little crustal mass overlying the asthenosphere, the hot rock near the center of the rift is no longer compressed into a solid and melts. A modern example of this rifting process is the African Rift Valley.

SEAFLOOR SPREADING

The third step in plate tectonics is seafloor spreading. The newly formed ocean fills what was a rift basin, but is now an ocean basin. The decompression melting described in the previous step allows molten mantle material to reach the surface and solidify into new oceanic crust. This crust formation occurs symmetrically around a series of linear ridges which lie at the center of the basin. The existence of these ridges is due to low density of the hot asthenosphere, which lifts the thin oceanic crust above it ( Figure 4 ). As rock continues to solidify on either side the ridge, the oceanic crust moves away from the divergent boundary analogous to a conveyer belt. Unlike a conveyer, the crust also sinks downward with respect to distance from the ridge due to cooling of the lithospheric mantle attached below the crust. Since the oceanic crust is connected to each of the rifted pieces of continental crust, they continue to separate as new crust is placed between them. After at least 100 million years of cooling and thickening, the mean density of the oceanic plate furthest from the ridge becomes greater than the density of the asthenosphere and it starts to sink. At this point the next step of plate tectonics, subduction, can begin.

SUBDUCTION

Subduction is a process that occurs at a convergent boundary where either an oceanic plate sinks under a continental plate or under a younger, less dense oceanic plate. To maintain the consistency of the steps described thus far, we will focus on the first case. Also for simplicity, we will assume the continental plate on the right of Figure 5 is stationary relative to the subducting oceanic plate on the left. As the oceanic plate sinks beneath the continent, it tugs on the rest of plate in a process known as slab pull. Most geologists currently agree that slab pull is the primary force driving sea floor spreading, not the “slab push” that occurs at the ridge. The oceanic plate that sinks will continue descending into Earth’s interior until its recycled back into mantle material. This completes the mantle convection process mentioned in step one. Subduction is also responsible for other tectonic phenomena including volcanism and earthquakes.

Figure 5

Figure 4

Figure 3

oceanic crust for more than 4 billion years and will continue doing so for the next few billion. All the while, the continents have collided into super continents (like Pangea) and rifted apart (like present day) as they ride upon the relatively fluid mantle below. Many common phenomena like mountain building, volcanism, earthquakes, etc. are all results of the interaction of continental and oceanic tectonic plates. Figure 7 provides a holistic diagram of the steps in plate tectonics (excluding mantle convection). It shows hot spots, rifting, sea floor spreading, subduction, and other tectonic processes occurring simultaneously. This is just like the real Earth, where the cycle of plate tectonics is occurring on many locations; and at each site, displaying a different step in the process.

REFERENCES

 Kious, W. Jacquelyne, and Robert I. Tilling. "Understanding Plate Motions." USGS. USGS, 15 Sept.

  1. Web. 29 Oct. 2015.  Fichter, Lynn S., and Steve J. Baedke. "A Simple Wilson Cycle." A Simple Wilson Cycle. N.p., 13 Sept.
  2. Web. 29 Oct. 2015.

Figure 1 (edited): http://www.bucknell.edu/x17758.xml

Figure 2 (edited): http://geology12- 7.wikispaces.com/Unit+2+Internal+Processes+and+Plate+Tectonic+Theory

Figure 3 (edited): "Northern Cordilleran Volcanic Province rift" by Black Tusk - Own work. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 via Commons https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Northern_Cordilleran_Volcanic_Province_rift.jpg#/med ia/File:Northern_Cordilleran_Volcanic_Province_rift.jpg

Figure 4 (edited): http://www.columbia.edu/~vjd1/MOR_basic.htm

Figure 7

Figure 5 (edited): "Active Margin" by en:User:Booyabazooka - http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/b/b7/Oceanic- continental_convergence_Fig21oceancont.svg. Licensed under Public Domain via Commons https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Active_Margin.svg#/media/File:Active_Margin.svg

Figure 6 (edited): "Continental-continental convergence Fig21contcont". Licensed under Public Domain via Commons - https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Continental- continental_convergence_Fig21contcont.gif#/media/File:Continental- continental_convergence_Fig21contcont.gif

Figure 7 (edited): "Tectonic plate boundaries" by Jose F. Vigil. USGS - [1]. Licensed under Public Domain via Commons - https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tectonic_plate_boundaries.png#/media/File:Tectonic_p late_boundaries.png