advertisement

Plate Tectonics

Plate tectonics - the theory of global tectonics (geologic structural deformations) that has served as a master key, in modern geology, for understanding the structure, history, and dynamics of the earth's crust. The theory is based on the observation that the earth's solid crust is broken up into 13 major plates and a few smaller semirigid plates. The boundaries between the plates are of three types: midocean ridges, where plates diverge; deep-sea trenches, or "subduction" zones, where two plates converge and one dives under the other; and transform, or "strike-slip," faults, where plates slide past each other. The plate discovered in 1995 in the Indian Ocean is convergent and divergent at the same time. The plate boundaries are zones of tectonic activity, where earthquakes and volcanic eruptions tend to occur.

Background

Although the plate-tectonics revolution in geologic thought occurred in the 1960s and '70s, the roots of the theory were established by earlier observation and deduction. In one such discovery, James Hall (1811-98), a New York geologist, observed that sediments accumulated in mountain belts are at least ten times thicker than those in continental interiors. This planted the seeds for the later geosynclinal theory that continental crust grows by progressive additions that originate as ancient and folded geosynclines, hardened and consolidated into plates. This theory was well established by the 20th century. Another 19th-century discovery was that there was a midocean ridge in the Atlantic; by the 1920s scientists had concluded that this ridge was continuous almost all the way around the world.

In the period 1908-12, theories of continental drift were proposed by the German geologist and meteorologist Alfred Lothar Wegener and others, who recognized that continental plates rupture, drift apart, and eventually collide with each other. Such collisions crumple geosynclinal sediments, thus creating future mountain belts. Geophysical work on the earth's density and observations by petrologists had previously shown that the earth's crust consists of two quite different materials: sima, a silicon-magnesium rock, typically basalt, which is characteristic of oceanic crust; and sial, a silicon-aluminum rock, typically granitic and characteristic of continental crust. Wegener thought that the sialic continental plates sail across the simatic ocean crust like icebergs in the ocean. This reasoning was fallacious, because the melting point of sima is higher than that of sial. Geologists subsequently discovered the so-called asthenosphere, a layer of relatively low strength in the earth's mantle that underlies the crust at depths of 50 to 150 km (30 to 80 mi). First deduced hypothetically, it was later seismically demonstrated to be a low-velocity, plastic material capable of flowage.

One of Wegener's strongest arguments for continental drift was the geometric matching of continental margins, which he postulated had rifted apart from a single landmass he named Pangaea (Gr., "all earth"). To support his theory, he pointed out that rock formations on opposite sides of the Atlantic—in Brazil and West Africa—match in age, type, and structure. Furthermore, they often contain fossils of terrestrial creatures that could not have swum from one continent to the other. These paleontological arguments were among the most persuasive to many specialists, but they did not impress others (mostly geophysicists).

Wegener's best examples of rifted continental borders, as mentioned, were along the two sides of the Atlantic Ocean. Sir Edward Crisp Bullard (1907-79), in fact, tested their precise fitting by computer-based analyses and presented his results to the Royal Society of London: The fit was perfect. Along many other ocean margins, however, no such match is found—for example, along the entire circum-Pacific belt or along the Burma-Indonesian sector of the Indian Ocean. This discrepancy points out a characteristic of continental margins that had been noted by a famous Austrian geologist, Eduard Suess, in the 1880s. He recognized an "Atlantic type" of margin, identified by abrupt truncation of former mountain belts and rifting structures, and a "Pacific type," marked by parallel cordillera-type mountains, lines of volcanoes, and frequent earthquakes. To many geologists, the Pacific-type coasts appeared to be located where geosynclines are in the process of becoming crumpled and uplifted to create mountains.

Seafloor Spreading

In the 1920s, the study of seafloors was advanced when SONAR, the echo-measuring device, was modified to measure ocean depths. With sonar, submarine topography could be surveyed and the seafloor mapped. Next, geophysicists adapted the airborne magnetometer so that it would record variations in geomagnetic intensity and orientation. Shipborne magnetometric traverses across the midocean ridges showed that the rocks on one side of the ridge produced a mirror-image geomagnetic pattern of the rocks on the other. Age dating of the basaltic crustal rocks of the seafloor showed that those nearest the ridge were distinctly younger (relatively recent, in fact) than those farther away. In addition, no blanket of marine sediment was found at the ridge crest, but it appeared on either side and also grew older and thicker with increasing distance from the ridge. These observations, added to those of the high heat flow, led to the conviction that the ridge is where new ocean crust is being created; it is carried up by convection currents as hot lava, but is rapidly cooled and consolidated on contact with the cold deep-ocean water. To make room for this continual addition of new crust, the plates on either side of the ridge must constantly move apart. In the North Atlantic, the rate of movement is only about 1 cm (about 0.4 in) per year, while in the Pacific it amounts to more than 4 cm (almost 2 in) annually. It is these relatively slow rates of movement, driven by thermal convection currents originating deep in the earth's mantle, that have, over the course of millions of years, been generating the phenomenon of continental drift.

Detailed mapping of the ocean floor was collated in the 1960s and incorporated in physiographic maps in which the submarine landforms were artistically rendered by scientists at Columbia University's Lamont Geological Observatory. They noticed that the crest of the midocean ridge is in the form of a rift, or cleft, a few kilometers across, that coincides with the ridge center. They also found that in the Red Sea the rift enters the African continent to become an integral part of the famous Great Rift, which runs from the Jordan Valley and Dead Sea through the Red Sea to Ethiopia and East Africa. Evidently, the rift marks a split in the continental crust, as well as that of the ocean.

The new physiographic maps of the ocean floor also revealed, for the first time, that the crest of the midocean ridge is extensively offset by deep cracks, which have been called fracture zones. These cracks mark the course of transform ("strike-slip") faults that have developed to accommodate strain generated by uneven rates of seafloor spreading. Although most of these faults are hidden below the ocean, one of them, the quake-prone SAN ANDREAS FAULT emerges from the Pacific near San Francisco and crosses hundreds of miles of land.

Volcanic Arcs and Subduction

Dynamic problems unique to Pacific-type coasts were recognized as early as the 1930s by American seismologists, who showed that earthquakes associated with these belts are at shallow depths near the outer (ocean) side of volcanic island arcs, but that the depth of seismic shocks increases until it reaches a maximum of about 700 km (about 430 mi) at a distance of 700 km landward from the front of the arc. By close analysis of a single instance, the American seismologist Hugo Benioff (1899-1968) concluded that this geometry represented a fault plane extending through the crust into the upper mantle and inclined downward, toward land, at an angle of about 45°. A similar underthrusting, of the Southern Alps beneath the Northern Alps, had been proposed in 1906, and in the 1950s the process was named subduction.

The existence of similar subduction planes has now been demonstrated along almost all Pacific-type coasts. (Those where the zone is absent possess geologic evidence to show that a zone of this type formerly existed, but that it is simply inactive today.) Most of these belts disclose a major fault system that runs parallel to the general mountain system. At long intervals, the movement on the fault changes from gradual to abrupt, and a shift of about 1 to 5 m (about 3 to 15 ft) may be produced by just a single earthquake. Such faults are found in Chile, Alaska, Japan, Taiwan, the Philippines, New Zealand, and Sumatra.

During subduction, ocean crust is constantly being drawn down into the mantle and melted. Because it is continually recycled, no part of the modern ocean crust is more than 200 million years old. Indeed, crustal blocks are constantly moving and jostling as they are carried by the various plates.

An important effect of the melting of subducted ocean crust is the production of new magma. When subducted ocean crust melts, the magma that forms rises upward from the plane of subduction, deep within the mantle, to erupt on the earth's surface. Eruption of magma melted by subduction has created long, arc-shaped chains of volcanic islands, such as Japan, the Philippines, and the Aleutians. Where an oceanic tectonic plate is subducted beneath continental crust, the magma produced by subductive melting erupts from volcanoes situated among long, linear mountain chains, such as the CORDILLERA, up to 100 km (up to 60 mi) inland from the zone of subduction. (The zone itself is located along a submarine trench offshore of the continent.) In addition to creating and feeding continental volcanoes, melting of subducted ocean crust is responsible for the formation of certain kinds of ore deposits of valuable metallic minerals.

Integrated Plate-Tectonics Theory

With this knowledge of seafloor spreading and subduction zones, all that remained was for the ideas to be melded into an integrated system of geodynamics. In the 1950s, the Canadian geophysicist J. Tuzo Wilson (1908-93) demonstrated the global continuity of the subduction zones, rather like the stitching on a baseball. The American geologist Harry Hammond Hess (1906-69) argued that if the ocean floor were rifted apart in one part of the globe, the expansion that would result there had to be accommodated by subduction in another part; otherwise the earth would grow larger and larger. Xavier LePichon (1937- ), a French student of seismology at Lamont, worked out the geometry of the plates from seismic evidence, and the American geophysicist Robert Sinclair Dietz (1914-95) took Wegener's evidence of continental drift and reconstructed the positions of the continents and oceanic plates in successive stages back in time to about 200 million years ago. In the 1990s, geologists suggested that Wegener's Pangaea was formed in its own turn from another single landmass, Rodinia (Rus., "motherland"), that broke up about 500 million years ago.

The theory of plate tectonics continues to be debated, tested, and expanded and has become both a paradigm and a center of controversy for the geological sciences.

An article from Funk & Wagnalls® New Encyclopedia. © 2005 World Almanac Education Group. A WRC Media Company. All rights reserved. Except as otherwise permitted by written agreement, uses of the work inconsistent with U.S. and applicable foreign copyright and related laws are prohibited.