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Name ____________________________ GEO101 Week 2 Activity: Introduction to Plate Tectonics via Google Earth Developed by Laurel Goodell, Princeton University Plate tectonics is a unifying framework for understanding the dynamic geology of the Earth
Name ____________________________
GEO101 Week 2 Activity: Introduction to Plate Tectonics via Google Earth
Developed by Laurel Goodell, Princeton University
Plate tectonics is a unifying framework for understanding the dynamic geology of the Earth. The theory posits that the outermost layers of the Earth (the crust and uppermost mantle) make up the brittle lithosphere of the Earth. The lithosphere is broken up into a number of thin plates, which move on top of the asthenosphere (middle mantle). The asthenosphere is solid, but flows plastically over geologic time scales. Plate interiors are relatively stable, and most of the tectonic action (earthquakes, volcanism) takes place where plates meet – where they collide at convergent boundaries, move away from one another at divergent boundaries, or slide past one another at transform boundaries.
Reconstructions of the Earth’s tectonic plate locations through time are available, for example, at:
http://www.ig.utexas.edu/research/projects/plates/recons.htm#movies http://www.scotese.com/newpage13.htm
http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/geology/tectonics.html
But how do we define plates and plate boundaries? On what are plate reconstructions and animations based? How do we know plates are moving, how can we track their positions in the past, and how can we predict their positions in the future?
To answer these questions, this assignment guides you through an examination of patterns on Earth – the topography of the earth’s surface above sea level, the bathymetry of the ocean floor below sea level, and the distribution of earthquakes and volcanic rock ages. You’ll then use geologic data to determine long-term average plate motions.
To do this, you’ll use the program Google Earth, and Google Earth layers compiled from various sources.
A. Getting started with Google Earth
· On your computer, install the latest free version of Google Earth from http://earth.google.com/ To use all the features of the google earth program, you will need to download the “Desktop” version.
· Once installed, open Google Earth, under the Tools/Options/3D View/ menu choose the “Decimal Degrees” and Meters Kilometers” options and makes sure the “Show Terrain” box is checked.
· Open the View menu. Go ahead and experiment with the options, but in general you should just have the Tool Bar, Side Bar and Status Bar checked. Also on the View menu, hover over Navigation and you will see several options for the compass arrow and slide bars in the upper right corner of the Google Earth screen. “Automatically” is a good choice as it leaves a ghost of the image visible until you hover over it.
· Load the DynamicEarth.kmz file into GE. You should be able to double-click on the filename and it will open within GE. Or, you can download the file onto your computer, and open it in GE by using File/Open and navigating to the file.
Once the DynamicEarth.kmz is loaded, click and drag to move it from “Temporary Places” to “My Places.” Then save “My Places” by clicking File/Save/Save My Places. DynamicEarth.kmz will now be available every time you open GE on this particular computer.
When you exit, GE should save “My Places” for the next time.
Ok, with an active Internet connection, you now have an interactive view of the earth! Take some time to explore the Earth with Google Earth and figure out how the navigation works using the keyboard, your touch pad, your mouse. For example:
· Zoom in and out, move N, S, E, W, grab and spin the globe, etc. The resolution will change as you zoom. Clicking on the “N” of the navigation compass reorients the view so north is “up.”
· At top left, “search” (and fly to) any place of interest. Zoom in and click on the “street view” icon (orange stick figure under the compass at top right) to explore an area as if you were on foot
· Zoom in to see individual buildings, roads, cars, etc. (Try finding the “M” on Mount Sentinel)
· Go 3D - zoom into a significant topographic feature (e.g. Mount Everest, the Grand Canyon, Niagara Falls). Hold the Shift key down and tilt the terrain using the Up/Down arrows to tilt the terrain, and spin the terrain using the Right/Left buttons. Do the same thing for topographic features on the ocean floor. Note that under Tools/Options/3D View you can increase the vertical exaggeration by up to 3x. This is useful to emphasize subtle features, but is pretty scary when you look at the Grand Canyon that way!
· On the Google Earth tool bar, click the clock-with-an-arrow icon to explore historical imagery in an area of interest
When was the Native American Center on the UM Oval constructed? –
This image is before: date _____________________
This image is during construction: date________________________
This image is the oldest after completion: date________________________
· By clicking and dragging, you can move things that you have found and want to save, from the “Search” menu into “My Places.” You can also re-organize “My Places” by adding and deleting items, changing the order of things, making subfolders, etc.
· Explore the built-in items under the Layers menu at bottom left, and Dynamic Earth layers in your Places menu.
Expand and contract the folders and subfolders, turn various items on and off, etc. For example, with the Dynamic Earth/Volcanoes of the World layer displayed, right-clicking on a volcano brings up an information box about it.
1. Find something interesting, significant, cool, etc. to share on Google Earth with your classmates at your first lab session. This can even be something that other people have developed – if you want to spend some time poking around on the web to see what others have found. Feel free to include more than one.
Give a brief description of your item(s) below:
B. Topographic Patterns Uncheck all of the layers and focus on topographic features of the earth.
Topography of the earth ABOVE sea level
2. Are mountains randomly distributed on the continents, or do they tend to occur in particular patterns (clusters, linear chains, arcs, etc.)?
Be sure to check out the glaciers in this area before you leave it!
Topography of the earth BELOW sea level
4. Features like this are called mid-ocean ridges or spreading ridges (more on the “spreading” in lab). Zoom in enough to see that although the ridge is a topographic high, it also has a valley (the “rift valley”) running along the middle of it. In the space below, complete the topographic profile of the Atlantic Ocean floor between South America and Africa.
Scan around to see the ocean ridges in the Indian, Pacific and Southern Oceans.
The deep linear features, the lowest points on Earth, are called ocean trenches .
8. Give the locations of three other ocean trenches on earth.
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In the vicinity of ridges – the mid-Atlantic Ridge, for example |
In the vicinity of trenches – the west coast of South America, for example |
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Is there any pattern to the depth distribution?
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Find the boundary between the African and South American plates
13. Where is this plate boundary, relative to the coastlines of Africa and South America?
Travel westward across the South American plate to its boundary with the Nazca plate
15. Where is this plate boundary, relative to South America?
17. How many years does each colored band represent? _______________________
What is the age of the oldest seafloor? _______________________________
On average, which is oldest – the continents or the ocean basins? _________________
21. Is this plate boundary divergent, convergent, or transform? ________________
23. Did the northern Atlantic Ocean basin start opening at the same time as the southern Atlantic Ocean basin? How much older or younger is the northern Atlantic basin than the southern Atlantic basin? Describe your reasoning.
· Significant topographic features of the continents and the seafloor
· Earthquake hypocenters (indicating depth below epicenter)
· Plate names and plate boundary locations
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