Earth - S Internal Heat Source & Magmatism
Earth - S Internal Heat Source & Magmatism
Earth - S Internal Heat Source & Magmatism
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SUBDUCTION (1), HOT-SPOT VOLCANISM(2) AND MAGMATISM
ALONG RIFT ZONES(3) .
WHAT IS SUBDUCTION
SUBDUCTION IS A KIND OF GEOLOGICAL RECYCLING. IT OCCURS
AT CONVERGENT TECTONIC PLATE BOUNDARIES OR WHERE TWO
TECTONIC PLATES COME CRASHING TOGETHER, IN SLOW MOTION OF
COURSE. ONE SINKS UNDER THE OTHER AND IS RECYCLED BACK INTO
THE MANTLE.
DEEPWHEN AN OCEANIC LITHOSPHERE
EARTHQUAKES CAN OCCURMEETS A CONTINENTAL
AS THE TWO PLATESLITHOSPHERE IN
RUB AGAINST
AAEACH
SUBDUCTION
TECTONIC
THE OTHER ZONE, THE
TWO TECTONIC
PLATE
AND IS OCEANIC
MADE
PLATES
RELEASE OF PLATE
AND
BOTH
ENERGY, ALWAYS
THECRUST
BUT GOES UNDER
LITHOSPHERE
THEYOR THE
ARE THE CONTINENTAL
OUTER
NOTINVOLVED
AS LAYERINOF
COMMON
IN ATHIS
PLATE. REGION
IS THE IN WHICH
RULE ONE
BECAUSE THEOF TWO
ROCK CONVERGENT
MAKING PLATES
UP AN OCEANIC SINKS
LI THOSPHERE
THE
OR A SUBDUCTION
EARTH
AS AND
DEVASTATING A ZONE
THIN
AS MAY
UPPER
THE BOTH
LAYER
BE
EARTHQUAKES OF
OCEANIC,
THE MANTLE.
THATOR ONE
OCCUR TOGETHER,
MAY
AT BE
OTHER
UNDER
IS DENSER THAN THE
IN A OTHER, WE CALL
CONTINENTAL IT A SUBDUCTION
LITHOSPHERE. ZONE. PLATES
WHEN TWO OCEANIC
THESE
OCEANIC
COME TWO LAYERS
AND
TYPES
TOGETHER, THE
OFONEAREOTHER
PLATE
MAY CALLED
SINK CONTINENTAL.
LITHOSPHERE.
BOUNDARIES.
UNDER THE OTHER.
LITHOSPHERE MELTS INTO THE MAGMA OF THE MANTLE, THIS FLUID ROCK
BUBBLES UP THROUGH CRACKS IN THE CRUST AND ERUPTS, FORMING VOLCANOES.
THESE VOLCANOES FORM IN A LINE ALONG THE SUBDUCTION ZONE. WHEN
OCEANIC CRUST SINKS UNDER CONTINENTAL CRUST, WE SEE A LINE OF
VOLCANOES, CALLED A VOLCANIC ARC, FORM ON THE CONTINENT, USUALLY AS
PART OF A MOUNTAIN RANGE.
WITH OCEANIC CRUST SINKING UNDER OTHER OCEANIC CRUST, THE
VOLCANOES FORM UNDER WATER. THE RESULT IS A CHAIN OF VOLCANIC
ISLANDS CALLED AN ISLAND ARC.
WHAT IS A HOT-SPOT
HOT SPOTS ARE PLACES WITHIN THE MANTLE WHERE ROCKS MELT TO GENERATE
MAGMA.
MANTLE PLUMES ARE AREAS OF HOT, UPWELLING MANTLE. A HOT SPOT
DEVELOPS ABOVE THE PLUME. MAGMA GENERATED BY THE HOT SPOT RISES
THROUGH THE RIGID PLATES OF THE LITHOSPHERE AND PRODUCES ACTIVE
VOLCANOES AT THE EARTH'S SURFACE.
AN EXAMPLE OF WHICH IS THE HAWAIIAN HOT SPOT, IT HAS BEEN ACTIVE AT LEAST
70 MILLION YEARS, PRODUCING A VOLCANIC CHAIN THAT EXTENDS 3,750 MILES
(6,000 KM) ACROSS THE NORTHWEST PACIFIC OCEAN.
RIFTS AND MOUNTAIN BUILDING
LESS SPECTACULAR FORMATION OF MOUNTAINS, INVOLVING MAGMA ADDITION INTO
THE EARTH’S SURFACE, OCCURS ALONG INCIPIENT SPREADING CENTERS, OCEANIC
RIDGES AND (CONTINENTAL) RIFTS.
OCEANIC RIDGES OCCUR AT DIVERGENT BOUNDARIES WHERE PLATES SEPARATE AND
MOVE IN OPPOSITE DIRECTIONS, ALLOWING NEW LITHOSPHERE TO FORM FROM
UPWELLING MAGMA, WHICH RISES UP DUE TO CONVECTION CURRENTS. THE
INTRUSION OF THESE MAGMAS MOST PROBABLY RESULTS FROM DECOMPRESSION
MELTING OF MAFIC ROCKS, GIVING RISE TO THE FORMATION NEW OCEANIC CRUST.
MAGMATISM ALONG CONTINENTAL RIFTS IS GENERALLY OF SMALL VOLUME AND OF
A SPECIFIC AGE. THE VOLCANICS USUALLY SHOW DIVERSE COMPOSITION BECAUSE
THEY ARE NOT SOURCED FROM A SINGLE LARGE HEAT SOURCE. THEREFORE, NO
SINGLE COMPOSITION DOMINATES ALONG THE GEOGRAPHIC EXTENT OF THE RIFT OR
WITH TIME.
Sources:
https://www.reference.com/science/two-main-sources-heat-inside-earth-5e2fe11a83868270
http://www.geology.sdsu.edu/how_volcanoes_work/Heat.html
http://earthsky.org/earth/what-is-the-source-of-the-heat-in-the-earths-interior
http://study.com/academy/lesson/subduction-definition-process.html
http://www.geo.fu-berlin.de/en/v/geolearning/mountain_building/magmatism/index.html
http://volcano.oregonstate.edu/what-is-a-hot-spot
http://www.geo.fu-berlin.de/en/v/geolearning/mountain_building/magmatism/generation_types/rift/index.html
http://www.geo.fu-berlin.de/en/v/geolearning/mountain_building/magmatism/generation_types/hot_spot/index.html
http://www.geo.fu-berlin.de/en/v/geolearning/mountain_building/magmatism/generation_types/subduction/index.html