Lecture 3 - ERTH 2403
Lecture 3 - ERTH 2403
Lecture 3 - ERTH 2403
Mapped Atlantic
Density of water masses
Determined 4-layer structure of Atlantic
Manned Vehicles
1. Alvin
a. Oldest manned (3-person)
b. More than 4200 dives
c. Slow but to 4000m for 5 hours
d. 1970s East Pacific Rise
e. First Hydrogen
ROVs
Remotely operated robots (operated the ship or ashore)
Autonomous not tethered to the ship
Instructions are programmed before released
Collect samples & examine equipment
HROV (hybrid) Nereus: deepest diving robot: 1,902 meters
Skandi Neptune during Horizon Platforms oil spill (Gulf of Mexico) 2010
Satellites
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) established in 1958
Important contribution to marine science
Imaging of oceans
Positioning of ocean vessels
1. 1978 NASA SEASAT
a. First oceanographic satellite
b. Determine wave height
c. Variation in sea surface temperature and contour
2. 1985 GESAT
3. 1992 TOPEX & POSEIDON
4. 2002 Jason-1
5. 2002 AQUA
Geological Time
1. Relative Age Dating
a. The sequencing of events
b. The rock layers
c. Fossils
d. Magnetic reversals
e. Oldest to youngest: No absolute age value
2. Radiometric (Absolute) Age dating
a. Radioactive dating: process to determine the age of rocks ratio of
unstable radioactive elements to stable decay productions
b. Radioactive decay: unstable atomic nuclei parent break apart and
release heat (radiation)
c. Rocks contain minerals that contain unstable isotopes
d. By measuring the ration of parent to daughter product.
e. By measuring the ratio of parent to daughter product we can
determine number of lives and the time since the formation of the
mineral (last time it was heated)
f. Gives date in years from time of crystallization
Evidence of Age and Formation of Ocean Basins
1. Radiometric dating oceanic crustal rocks
2. Magnetic Reversal
Isostasy
Continental crust and the rest of Lithosphere float on the denser
asthenosphere
Why mountain chains dont sink in the asthenosphere
Buoyancy: ability of an object to float in a fluid and displacing a volume of
fluid equal in weight to its own
Under the weight of continental and oceanic crust the asthenosphere
behaves like a slowly moving dense and viscous fluid
When high mountains erode: the crust will rise in response to the reduced
weight of the crust isostatic readjustment
Isostatic readjustment = thinning of the continental crust under mountains
and subsidence beneath deposited sediments
Plate Tectonics
1645 Irish Bishop James Ussher: Creation on 26 October 4004BC
1788 Scottish Physician James Hutton: 1788 Principle of Uniformitarianism
Principle of Catastrophism (biblical flood)
1850s Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel: Natural Selection
Continental Drift idea was transformed seismology, echo sounder
In 1960 Harry Hess (Princeton University) and Robert Dietz of Scripps
Institution of Oceanography
o New seafloor is formed at the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and spreads outward
o Continent could move along by the same forces
o This motion is generated by convection current within the mantle
o Hypothesis seafloor spreading source of hot new ocean floor rising
form the asthenosphere
In 1965 John Tuzo Wilson, geophysicist at the U of T: continental drift and
seafloor spreading: Plate tectonics
In 1965 John Tuzo Wilson
o Plates tectonics: Earths outher layer is composed of about dozen of
lithospheric plates floating on the asthenosphere
Rates = 1-2cm/year to 17/18cm/year
Plate Boundaries
1. Divergent
a. Oceanic
b. Continental
2. Convergent
a. Ocean to ocean
b. Ocean to continent
c. Continent to continent
3. Transform fault
1. Divergent Plate Boundaries
a. Oceanic Divergent Plates boundaries
i. Ocean basins form at divergent plate boundaries
ii. Volcanism: basaltic (Fe, Mg, Silicates)
iii. New ocean floor: (seafloor spreading)
iv. Rift valley along center
v. Dense 2.9g/cm3, shallow earthquakes
2. Convergent Plate boundaries
a. Oceanic to oceanic crust