physical geography tidbits: oceania

56
Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Upload: parson

Post on 12-Jan-2016

27 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania. Formation of Oceania Islands. Reason for Movement. Excess heat from radioactive decay creates liquid outer core (and magnetic field), and forces mantle to have convection. Exactly how mantle moves?. ASU view. Stream Systems on Dynamic Earth. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Page 2: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Formation of Oceania Islands

Page 3: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Reason for Movement

Excess heat from radioactive decay creates liquid outer core (and magnetic field), and forces mantle to have convection

Page 4: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Exactly how

mantle moves?

ASU view

Page 5: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

3 TYPES OF PLATE INTERACTION

Stream Systems on

Dynamic Earth

Page 6: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

New Zealand - 2 of the 3

Page 7: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

East

Pacific

Rise

Mid

Atlantic

Ridge

Mid Indian

Ridge

Page 8: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Millions of years before present

Page 9: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Island Arcs from Ocean-Ocean Convergence

Page 10: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Trench

Island arc

Page 11: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Older colder ocean plate

subducts

Page 12: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Convergence & Tsunami

Page 13: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Effects Of Plate Locking

Page 14: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

EQ (or landslide or volcanic eruption ) Movement Generates the Wave that travels about 500 mph

Page 15: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Animated gif

Page 16: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Mega-Quake Set off 2004 Tsunami & will happen

again

Energy ripple

Page 17: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Sri Lanka Sumatra Uplift

Page 18: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Indonesia

Page 19: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Indonesia

Page 20: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Has Happened, Will Happen Again

Hilo, 1960

Chile EQ generated Tsunami that destroyed Hilo in 1960

Page 21: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Hot Spots

Often in the middle of a plate

Focus here on Hawaii & Oceania

Page 22: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Hawaiian Hotspot

Page 23: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania
Page 24: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania
Page 25: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania
Page 26: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania
Page 27: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Hawaii - also example of isostacy

Page 28: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Trail of the Hot Spot

Note change in direction 43 myr agoChange in direction 43 myr ago

Page 29: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Are plumes real?

Page 30: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Alternative Hypothesis

Page 31: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

After Formed … Sink

Page 32: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

This NOAA animation shows the dynamic process of how a coral atoll forms. Corals (represented in tan and purple) begin to settle and grow around an oceanic island forming a fringing reef. It can take as long as 10,000 years for a fringing reef to form. Over the next 100,000 years, if conditions are favorable, the reef will continue to expand. As the reef expands, the interior island usually begins to subside and the fringing reef turns into a barrier reef. When the island completely subsides beneath the water leaving a ring of growing coral with an open lagoon in its center, it is called an atoll. The process of atoll formation may take as long as 30,000,000 years to occur.

http://www.oceanservice.noaa.gov/education/kits/corals/media/supp_coral04a.html

Page 33: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Fringing Reef

Holand Island

Grand Cayman Is.

Page 34: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania
Page 35: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Tureia, Coral Atoll Oeno, Fringing Reef

Page 36: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Bora Bora Atoll

Page 37: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Climate: What would you expect?

Realm of the Intertropical Convergence Zone

Page 38: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Hadley Cell

Ascending

moist air

condenses

& rains

ITCZ

Equatorial & Tropical

Latitudes influenced by

ITCZ

Descendingwarms & driesIn subtropics

Desertzone

Descendingair warms& dries insubtropics

Desert Zone

Trade winds Trade winds

Page 39: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Global CirculationPatterns

Hadley Cell

Page 40: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania
Page 41: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Little Seasonal Change in Temp

Page 42: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Soils of the Tropics

Soils form over tens of thousands of years

Gives you a “map” of the “average” location of rainforests & savanna

Synonym: Oxisol Soils

Page 43: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Process ofLatosol or Oxisol Soils

Page 44: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Laterization soil development

Oberlander & Muller, 1984

Soil Name

OxisolLatosol(synonyms indifferentclassifications)

Clay type(kaolinite)Not holdnutrients

Page 45: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Oxisol Profiles

• Little organic matter

• Red from iron oxides

• Loose & friable texture

Page 46: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania
Page 47: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Paradox: Poor soils because few nutrients, yet great rainforests

Why? Natural nutrient recycling

Page 48: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

With Deforestation

• organic matter leached• nutrients lost• Gradual loss of fertility

Page 49: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

With deforestation• soil structure hardened by desiccation and

compaction into laterite

• Can make “laterite” by drying out the soil

Page 50: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Deforestation has always occurred: traditional swidden (slash and burn)

agriculture – burn to release nutrients and move to another plot

Page 51: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Feral relief

Steep landscapes

made by landsliding

from intense rains

in places like Hawaii

Andes where a lot

of relief exists

Page 52: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Steep slopes made possible by vegetation holding soil to steep faces

Page 53: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Intense rains saturates slopes and landslides rush down slopes

Page 54: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Flat valleys eroded by torrential floods

Landslides strip

trees

Page 55: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Net effect is relief gone wild (feral)

Kauai(GoogleEarth)

Page 56: Physical Geography Tidbits: Oceania

Mt Rotui, Moorea

Rarotonga, Cook Islands