alfred wegener, a great ses scientist! (1880-1930) thermodynamics of the atmosphere (1911) the...

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Alfred Wegener, a great SES scientist! (1880-1930) Thermodynamics of the Atmosphere (1911) The Origin of Continents and Oceans (1915,1929) Climate and Geological Pre-history (1924)

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Alfred Wegener, a great SES scientist!(1880-1930)

Thermodynamics of the Atmosphere (1911) The Origin of Continents and Oceans (1915,1929)Climate and Geological Pre-history (1924)

quantitative fitting of the shapes of W. Africa and E. South America

The geology matches very closely

Proterozoic orogenic belts

>2000 Ma cratons

North America, Greenland, and Africa can be tied together

And the southern hemisphere continents

India

AustraliaAntarcticaSouth America

Africa

Madagascar

Late Paleozoic glaciation

Paleozoic and Mesozoic mountain belts

The evidence for continental drift was compelling and well established during the first half of the 20th Century-

but it was not accepted by many geologists (almost all U.S. geologists) until the advent of plate tectonics in the late 1960’s-early 1970’s!

Why??

Why?? Wegener was attacked because of his lack of geological credentials and some of his geophysical theories for the dynamics of continental drift. The dynamics were wrong, but the kinematics - “continental drift” - was right.

Why?? Wegener was attacked because of his lack of geological credentials and some of his erroneous geophysical theories for the causes of continental drift. The theories were wrong, but the basic idea was right.

The focus of geologists on complex continental geology at local to regional scales

Why?? Wegener was attacked because of his lack of geological credentials and some of his erroneous geophysical theories for the causes of continental drift. The theories were wrong, but the basic idea was right.

The focus of geologists on complex continental geology at local to regional scales

The obvious importance in continental geology of vertical motions, leading to the "fixest" (versus "mobilist") synthesis that was the reigning theory for much of the first half of the last century.

Why?? Wegener was attacked because of his lack of geological credentials and some of his erroneous geophysical theories for the causes of continental drift. The theories were wrong, but the basic idea was right.

The focus of geologists on complex continental geology at local to regional scales

The obvious importance in continental geology of vertical motions, leading to the "fixest" (versus "mobilist") synthesis that was the reigning theory for much of the first half of the last century. the ocean basins: “terra incognita” before WWII

WWII-Cold War explosion of technology and observations

Marine exploration - opening the last geographic frontier (from naval warfare, especially submarine warfare)

• mapping ocean bathymetry and crustal structure• ocean ridge system • ocean crust a very uniform in structure:

•a single, well defined geological entity •contrasts with thickness, complexity, variability of continental crustal structure •very thin sedimentary cover: ocean floor is a relatively young geological feature

• development of marine magnetometers: led to SEAFLOOR SPREADING

WWII-Cold War explosion of technology and observations

Isotope geochemistry (from development of atomic bomb)

WWII-Cold War explosion of technology and observations

Global seismological networks : global earthquake locations and focal mechanisms - (from nuclear test detection and verification for Cold War and post-Cold War test ban treaties)

WWII-Cold War explosion of technology and observations

Digital computers • enabled realistic modeling of processes and observations • ability to process, analyse and visualize dense, comprehensive spatial data sets

WWII-Cold War explosion of technology and observations Marine exploration Isotope geochemistry Global seismological networks Digital computers

Plate tectonics Revolution

(1962 – 1972)

Simplified view of Earth’s tectonic plates

divergent boundary

convergent boundary

lithospheric plate

asthenosphere

Plate boundary types

divergent boundaries

Transform fault boundary

Plate boundary types

lithospheric plate

asthenosphere

Relative motions across modern plate boundaries (cm/year)

Continental rifting: formation of an ocean

Continental rifting in the Middle East: Red Sea and Gulf of Aden

Convergent boundary: subduction zones

South American Andes

island arc

seafloor age, MaAge of ocean floor recorded by Seafloor

Spreading

The key breakthroughs:

• Paleomagnetism • Seafloor Spreading

• Seismicity, plate boundaries, and subduction

Plate tectonics Revolution

The key breakthroughs:

• Paleomagnetism • Seafloor Spreading

• Seismicity of plate boundaries

Plate tectonics Revolution

Geomagnetism: major key to Earth’s history