Alfred Wegener: Noticed similarities in the shoreline of continent on both sides of the Atlantic...

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Transcript of Alfred Wegener: Noticed similarities in the shoreline of continent on both sides of the Atlantic...

Page 1: Alfred Wegener: Noticed similarities in the shoreline of continent on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, he then began fitting them together. Introduced.
Page 2: Alfred Wegener: Noticed similarities in the shoreline of continent on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, he then began fitting them together. Introduced.

Alfred Wegener:•Noticed similarities in the shoreline of continent on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, he then began fitting them together.

•Introduced the hypothesis of continental drift.

•Suggested a supercontinent, called Pangaea (meaning "all land"), that broke up millions of years ago, slowly moved to their current positions, and continue to move today.

Page 3: Alfred Wegener: Noticed similarities in the shoreline of continent on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, he then began fitting them together. Introduced.
Page 4: Alfred Wegener: Noticed similarities in the shoreline of continent on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, he then began fitting them together. Introduced.
Page 5: Alfred Wegener: Noticed similarities in the shoreline of continent on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, he then began fitting them together. Introduced.
Page 6: Alfred Wegener: Noticed similarities in the shoreline of continent on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, he then began fitting them together. Introduced.
Page 7: Alfred Wegener: Noticed similarities in the shoreline of continent on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, he then began fitting them together. Introduced.

•DIVERGENT- When two plates move away from each other.

Characteristics:

Mid – ocean ridges (underwater mountain ranges)

Rift Valleys (narrow valleys that form where plates separate), Newest rock material (cooling magma forms new oceanic crust).

Page 8: Alfred Wegener: Noticed similarities in the shoreline of continent on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, he then began fitting them together. Introduced.
Page 9: Alfred Wegener: Noticed similarities in the shoreline of continent on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, he then began fitting them together. Introduced.

•CONVERGENT – When two plates collide.

Characteristics: Mountains, most earthquakes, Volcanoes, and trenches

1.ocean – ocean 2.ocean – continent 3.continent – continent

CONVERGENT

Page 10: Alfred Wegener: Noticed similarities in the shoreline of continent on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, he then began fitting them together. Introduced.
Page 11: Alfred Wegener: Noticed similarities in the shoreline of continent on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, he then began fitting them together. Introduced.
Page 12: Alfred Wegener: Noticed similarities in the shoreline of continent on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, he then began fitting them together. Introduced.
Page 13: Alfred Wegener: Noticed similarities in the shoreline of continent on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, he then began fitting them together. Introduced.

•TRANSFORM – When two plates are moving past each other.

Characteristics: San Andreas Boundary

Page 14: Alfred Wegener: Noticed similarities in the shoreline of continent on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, he then began fitting them together. Introduced.

The Pacific plate and North American plate grind past each other side by side.

Page 15: Alfred Wegener: Noticed similarities in the shoreline of continent on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, he then began fitting them together. Introduced.
Page 16: Alfred Wegener: Noticed similarities in the shoreline of continent on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, he then began fitting them together. Introduced.

AREA WITHIN A PLATE WHERE MAGMA WORKS ITSELF TO THE SURFACE ARE CALLED HOT SPOTS.

HOT SPOTS ARE STATIONARY SO WHEN THE PLATE ABOVE IT MOVES A NEW VOLCANOE FORMS.

Page 17: Alfred Wegener: Noticed similarities in the shoreline of continent on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, he then began fitting them together. Introduced.
Page 18: Alfred Wegener: Noticed similarities in the shoreline of continent on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, he then began fitting them together. Introduced.