Himalayan mountains (David Mark, Pixabay)
Today, most people know that landmasses on Earth move around, but people haven’t always believed this. It wasn’t until the early 20th century that German scientist Alfred Wegener put forth the idea that the Earth’s continents were drifting. He called this movement Continental Drift. He was not the first or only person to think this, but he was the first to talk about the idea publicly. Wegener came up with this idea because he noticed that the coasts of western Africa and eastern South America looked like puzzle pieces, which might have once fit together and then drifted apart. Looking at all of the continents he theorized that they had once been joined together as a supercontinent (which was later called Pangaea) around 225 million years ago (see Figure 4). The name Pangaea comes from the Ancient Greek words “pan,” meaning entire, and “Gaia,” meaning Earth. Pangaea is not the only supercontinent believed to have existed. Older supercontinents are also believed to have come before Pangaea. The idea of moving landmasses seems obvious now, but Wegener’s Theory of Continental Drift (as he called it) was not accepted for many years. Why? Well, for one thing, Wegener did not have a convincing explanation for the cause of the drifting (he suggested that the continents were moving around due to the Earth’s rotation, which later turned out to be wrong). Secondly, he was a meteorologist (someone who studies weather), not a geologist, so geologists didn’t think he knew what he was talking about. Fossil EvidenceOne type of evidence that strongly supported the Theory of Continental Drift is the fossil record. Fossils of similar types of plants and animals in rocks of a similar age have been found on the shores of different continents, suggesting that the continents were once joined. For example, fossils of Mesosaurus, a freshwater reptile, have been found both in Brazil and western Africa. Also, fossils of the land reptile Lystrosaurus have been found in rocks of the same age in Africa, India and Antarctica. Plate TectonicsThe Theory of Plate Tectonics builds on Wegener’s Theory of Continental Drift. In the Theory of Plate Tectonics, it is tectonic plates, rather than continents, which are moving. Tectonic plates are pieces of the lithosphere and crust, which float on the asthenosphere. There are currently seven plates that make up most of the continents and the Pacific Ocean. They are:
There are eight other smaller secondary plates as well as many other microplates which do not make up significant amounts of landmass. Tectonic plates not only move land masses (continental crust), but also oceans (ocean crust). Since the plates are floating on liquid rock, they are constantly moving and bumping against each other. This means that the sizes and positions of these plates change over time. Tectonic plates are able to move because the lithosphere, which makes up the plates, has a higher strength and lower density than the underlying asthenosphere. The solid plates above move along on the liquid rock below. You may imagine that these plates are zipping along, but in fact, they are moving VERY SLOWLY! The speed of the plates ranges from a typical 10–40 mm/year (about as fast as fingernails grow) to as fast as 160 mm/year (about as fast as hair grows). Geologists came to accept the Theory of Plate Tectonics in the late 1950s and early 1960s after coming to understand the concept of seafloor spreading. Seafloor spreading occurs on the seafloor where oceanic plates are moving away from each other (diverging). When this happens, cracks occur in the lithosphere, which allows magma (hot liquid rock) to rise and cool, forming a new seafloor. The opposite of divergence is convergence. This occurs when plates are moving towards each other. Material may push upwards (obduction) forming mountains or downwards (subduction) into the mantle. The material lost through subduction is roughly balanced by the formation of new (oceanic) crust by seafloor spreading. Volcanic eruptions and earthquakes can occur and mountains and ocean trenches can be formed when tectonic plates meet. Let’s look at some of these processes in more detail. Mountains and VolcanoesWhat do mountains and volcanoes have in common? They are both large, steep landforms made of rock that are formed when tectonic plates are pushed and pulled. Whether you get mountains or volcanoes depends on the type of tectonic plates and where they are colliding. To understand whether you will get mountains or volcanoes, you need to remember two things.
Let’s look at how tectonic plates form mountains and volcanoes.
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