Plate Tectonics Engineering Geology
Plate Tectonics Engineering Geology
Plate Tectonics Engineering Geology
The word TECTONICS is of Greek origin and it means to build. The word tectonism refers
to the deformation of the lithosphere. This deformation most notably includes mountain building.
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1. African Plate
1. Arabian Plate
2. Antarctic Plate
2. Caribbean Plate
3. Australian Plate
3. Cocos Plate
4. Eurasian Plate
5. Indian Plate
5. Nazca Plate
7. Pacific Plate
7. Scotia Plate
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Paleoclimate Indicators
Glacial till of the same age is found in southern Africa, South America, India and
Australia-areas that it would be very difficult to explain the occurrence of glaciation.
At the same time, large coal deposits were formed from tropical swamps in
N.America and Europe.
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Plate Boundaries
There are three basic ways that plates interact with one another. Each of these plate
boundaries has the potential to create different geological features.
1. When plates collide with each other = Convergent boundary
2. When plates separate from each other = Divergent boundary
3. When plates slide along side each other = Transform boundary
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1. Convergent Boundary:
Ocean-Continent Collision
Because the oceanic crust is more dense than continental crust, when these two
collide, the continental crust rides up over the oceanic crust and the oceanic crust is
bent down and sub ducted beneath the continental crust. This is called a subduction
zone, where the old oceanic crust is dragged downward and recycled.
Deep-sea trenches are created at subduction zones. Trenches are narrow, deep
troughs parallel to the edge of a continent or island arc. They typically have slopes
of 4-5 degrees, and they are often 8-10 km deep. The deepest spots on earth are
found in oceanic trenches. The Mariana Trench is the deepest ocean depth at 11 km
(35,798 ft) below sea level.
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Convergent Boundary:
Continent-Continent Collision
If two continental plates collide, mountain building usually takes place because they
are both relatively low in density.
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Convergent Boundary:
Ocean-Ocean Collision
If 2 oceanic plates collide, the older, denser one is subducted downward into the
mantle and a chain of volcanic islands can form, called a volcanic arc.
Example: Mariana Islands (Mariana Trench). It is deeper than the earths tallest
mountain is tall. Mariana Trench: 11,000 meters deep. Mt. Everest: 8850 meters
high.
The interaction of the descending oceanic plate causes incredible amounts of
stress between the plates. This usually causes frequent earthquakes along the
top of the descending plate known as the Benioff Zone. The focii of Benioff
earthquakes can be as deep as 700 km below sea level.
Oceanic/oceanic collision
resulting in a chain of island
arcs.
Benioff Zone
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Sea-floor spreading at an
oceanic divergent boundary.
Modified after McGraw Hill/ Glencoe, 1st ed., pg.
138 (with permission)
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3. Transform Boundary
When two plates slide past each other moving in different directions or the same
direction, it is termed a transform boundary and is characterized by a transform
fault and earthquake activity.
An example of a transform fault is the San Andreas Fault in California. Here the
North American Plate joins the Pacific Plate. The difference in plate motion along
the contact (fault) leads to a buildup of strain energy that sometimes slips releasing
a huge amount of energy and causing an earthquake.
permission).
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Tectonic Plate s
Boundaries
Earthquake
epicenters
(1963-1998)
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Earthquakes
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Introduction
Earthquake is a quaking or shaking of the
ground caused by the sudden release of energy
stored in the rocks beneath the earths surface
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Epicenter = spot on
Earths surface directly
above the focus
Body Waves
Seismic waves that travel through the earths
interior, spreading outward from the focus in all
directions
P (primary) wave: a compressional (or longitudinal)
wave in which rock vibrates back and forth parallel
to the direction of wave propagation; can travel
through rock, gas, or liquid
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Surface Waves
surface waves: seismic waves that travel on the earths
surface away from the epicenter
Long waves: waves that have no vertical displacement;
they move side to side in a horizontal plane that is
perpendicular to the direction the wave is traveling or
propagating; do not travel through liquids; because of
horizontal movement the waves tend to knock buildings
off their foundation
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Seismic Waves
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Measuring Earthquakes
Seismograph: a recording device that produces a
permanent record of earth motion detected by a
seismometer, usually in the form of a wiggly line drawn
on a moving strip of paper
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Seismogram Printout
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Richter Scale
Measures the energy released by
fault movement
related to the maximum amplitude of
the wave measured from the
seismogram
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Logarithmic-scale
992 times
more
energy!!
times
energy
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Effects of Earthquakes
ground motion
fire
landslides
liquefaction (a special type of ground failure)
permanent displacement of the land surface
aftershocks: small earthquakes that follow the main shock
tsunami
Tsunamis
Tsunamis (seismic sea waves): huge ocean
wave produced by displacement of the sea floor
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A tsunami is a series of
ocean waves with very long
wavelengths (typically
hundreds of kilometers)
caused by large-scale
disturbances (earthquake) of
the ocean
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Damage due to
the Tsunami in
2004, Sri Lanka
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Japan earthquake,
March 2011
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Summary-Earthquake
1. Earthquakes generate waves that travel through
the earth
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