Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the...

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Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006
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Transcript of Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the...

Page 1: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Dynamic Earth

Class 13

21 February 2006

Page 2: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Volcanic Imagination(Chapter 4, continued)

Exploring the Earth’s Interior

Page 3: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

How do we know about the Earth’s Interior?

• Meteorites

• Direct observation

• High-pressure experimental petrology

• Earthquake waves (seismology)

Page 4: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Layers of the Earth

• Crust

• Rigid upper mantle (+crust = lithosphere)

• Asthenosphere

• Upper mantle

• Lower mantle

• Outer core

• Inner core

Page 5: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Earth’s internal heat•Original heat

•Subsequent radioactive decay

•Conduction

•Convection

Page 6: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Crust as an Elastic Sheet

Continental ice loads the mantle

Ice causes isostatic subsidence

Melting of ice causes isostatic uplift

Return to isostatic equilibrium

Page 7: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

The less dense crust “floats” on the less buoyant, denser mantle

MohorovicicDiscontinuity

(Moho)

Page 8: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Convection in Earth’s Mantle

• Convection happens when – Temperature gradient exists

– Heat is directional

– Conduction operates slowly

– Surface area to depth ratio is low

– Viscosity of material not extremely high

Page 9: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Convection in Earth’s Mantle

• Assumptions– Solid mantle behaves fluidly over time

– Mantle and core do not mix

– Heat generated from within the Earth

Page 10: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Temperature vs. Depth

Page 11: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Convection as a Possible Mechanism for Plate Tectonics

Page 12: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Mantle Tomography

• Uses numerous seismic data

• Uses small changes in speed of seismic waves

• Faster wave motion may correspond to denser or colder regions

• Slower wave motion may correspond to buoyant or warmer regions

Page 13: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Basics of Tomography

Page 14: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Tomography of the Mantle

Page 15: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

At 2770 km

Tomography at the Base of the Mantle

Page 16: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Tomography Beneath Active Volcanoes

Page 17: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Tomography Beneath Active Volcanoes

Page 18: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Volcanic Activity on Earth

• Spreading centers (ridges)

• Island arc

• Hotspots

Page 19: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Hotspots

• Areas with volcanic activity NOT explained by plate tectonics

• Mantle beneath may be hot, wet, or chemically different

• Commonly active for long time

Page 20: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Global Hotspots

http://www.hvo.usgs.gov

Page 21: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Flood basalts

Hotspot tracks

Oceanic plateaus

Page 22: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Karoo / Etendeka Flood Basalts

Page 23: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Columbia River Flood Basalts

Page 24: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Linear Volcanic Chains

Page 25: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Hawaiian Islands - Emperor Seamounts

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (LZW) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 26: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

The trail of the Hawaiian Hot Spot goes all the way to the far northwest Pacific

Page 27: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

In addition to the Hawaiian Hot Spot track, there are several others in the Pacific

Page 28: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.
Page 29: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.
Page 30: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Age Progressions Along Volcano Chains

Page 31: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Hawaiian Islands

Oldest

Youngest

Page 32: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Hotspot Observations

• Volcanic activity, NOT explained by plate tectonics

• Active for long time

• Age varies (youngest in opposite direction of plate motion)

Page 33: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Hot spots are regions in the Asthenosphere that are hotterthan their surroundings

Page 34: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Molten magma rises to the surface to form volcanoes, similar to what happens at

Spreading Centers

Page 35: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Hot spot volcanoes are relatively small, isolated

features.

Page 36: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Hot spots are believed to be fixedrelative to the mantle.

BUT – this is controversial!

Page 37: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

When a plate moves over afixed Hot Spot,

a linear chain of volcanoes is formed.

Page 38: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Oceanic crust

Lithosphericmantle

6-9 km

10-60 km

H o t

C o ld

200-400 km

Oceanic flood basalts

Hotspot Origins - Mantle Plumes

Page 39: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Mantle plumes and eruption sizes

Page 40: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Convection in the Mantle

Page 41: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Convection and Mantle Plumes

Page 42: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Why Linear Chains of Volcanoes?

Page 43: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Model of Mantle Plumes

A mantle plume rising beneath a slow-moving plate or continent will “puddle” beneath the lithosphere

Page 44: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Model of Mantle Plumes

When eruptions begin, they are voluminous, causing oceanic plateaus

and flood basalt provinces

Page 45: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Model of Mantle Plumes

Page 46: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Model of Mantle Plume

Page 47: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Mantle Plume Shape Unknown

Page 48: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Model of Mantle Plumes

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (LZW) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 49: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Models of Mantle Plumes

Wolfe et al., Nature, [1997]

Page 50: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

At 2770 km

Tomography at the Base of the Tomography at the Base of the MantleMantle

Page 51: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Instability Causes Mantle Plumes

Page 52: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

How Can Plate Tectonics and Mantle Plumes Work Together?

Page 53: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Why Are Hotspots Important

• Associated with Large Volcanic Eruptions– May inject gas and particles into air– May re-landscape large areas– May decrease habitable areas– May make life difficult for some plants and

animals (and cause mass extinction)

Page 54: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Volcanic Eruptions and the Atmosphere

Page 55: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Life on Earth is Difficult!

• Earthquakes

• Floods

• Climate changes (draught, ice ages)

• Other weather hazards (tornadoes, cyclones)

• Volcanic eruptions

• Meteor / asteroid impacts

Page 56: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Meteor / Asteroid Impacts

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (LZW) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 57: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Meteor / Asteroid Impacts

Page 58: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Environmental Catastrophes and Hotspots

End Cretaceous (65 Ma)

Eruption of Deccan Traps (Reunion hotspot)

Page 59: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Extinction Percentages and Hotspots

Page 60: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

Extinction is Forever

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Dinosaurs - ~65 Ma

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Giant Ground Sloth ~10 Ka

Trilobites~ 300 Ma

Page 61: Dynamic Earth Class 13 21 February 2006. Volcanic Imagination (Chapter 4, continued) Exploring the Earth ’ s Interior.

ThursdayVideo:

Death of the Dinosaurs