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Plate Tectonics and Plate Tectonics and Climate Climate

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Page 1: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Plate Tectonics and ClimatePlate Tectonics and Climate

Page 2: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Glaciation on Continents –Glaciation on Continents –The Polar Position HypothesisThe Polar Position Hypothesis

• Two Key Testable Predictions– When continents are near the poles they

should have ice sheets– If no continents are near the poles no ice

sheets should appear on Earth

• Does not consider world-wide climate changes– Only considers positions of the continents

Page 3: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Seafloor Spreading Has Moved ContinentsSeafloor Spreading Has Moved Continents

• During the past 500 Myr continents have changed position between– Warm low latitudes– Colder higher latitudes

• If latitude alone is the controlling factor, these movements should have produced predictable glaciations

Page 4: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Three “Icehouse Eras” During the Three “Icehouse Eras” During the Last 500 MyrsLast 500 Myrs

Page 5: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

South Pole Positions Correlate to South Pole Positions Correlate to Periods of GlaciationPeriods of Glaciation

• Changes in the position of the pole– Slow movement of

Gondwana across a stationary pole

• 430 Myr ago– S. Pole position

consistent with glaciation in the Sahara

Page 6: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

South Pole Positions Correlate to South Pole Positions Correlate to Periods of GlaciationPeriods of Glaciation

• From 325 to 240 Myr ago– Gondwana continues

to move across the South Pole

– A huge region on the southern continent was glaciated

Page 7: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

South Pole Positions Correlate to South Pole Positions Correlate to Periods of GlaciationPeriods of Glaciation

• Gondwana’s glaciation ended about 240 Myr ago– It moved away from

the pole and merged with northern continents forming Pangaea

Page 8: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

The Polar Positions Hypothesis: The Polar Positions Hypothesis: Some inconsistenciesSome inconsistencies

• The first southern glaciation (430 Myr ago)– Brief in terms of geologic time– 1 to 10 Myr in duration

• The slow motion of Gondwana across the South Pole doesn’t easily explain a brief period of glaciation

Page 9: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Lack of Ice Sheets on Land over the Lack of Ice Sheets on Land over the South PoleSouth Pole

• Land existed at the South Pole for almost 100 Myr without glaciation

• This argues against the hypothesis being the only requirement for large-scale glaciations.

Page 10: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Lack of Ice Sheets on Land over the Lack of Ice Sheets on Land over the South PoleSouth Pole

• After the breakup of Pangaea Antarctica, India, and Australia moved back over the South Pole.

• No ice developed– Antarctica remained directly over the pole from 125 Myr ago to

almost 35 Myr ago, but free from ice.

• Again, this argues against the hypothesis being the only requirement for large-scale glaciations.

Page 11: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Pangaea’s ClimatePangaea’s Climate

• Extended from high northern latitudes to high southern latitudes• Almost symmetrical about the equator• Wedge-shaped tropical seaway indented the continent from the east • Represented almost 1/3 of Earth’s surface. It spanned:

– 180o of longitude at it’s northern and southern limits, both near 70o latitude– ¼ of Earth’s circumference at the equator

Page 12: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Climate Models Input . .Climate Models Input . . ..

• Sea Level – Rock evidence indicates S.L. comparable to

today’s

• Topography– To minimize errors caused by incorrect guess

as to the distribution of mountains• Interior land represented as a low-elevation

plateau with a uniform height of 1000 m and gradually sloping towards the sea along the continental margins

Page 13: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Climate Models Input . .Climate Models Input . . ..

• Higher CO2 level than today– Compensates for a weaker Sun (about 1%) – This is because geologic evidence indicates a warmer

Earth• Absence of polar ice

– Fossil vegetation– Palm-like trees at latitudes as high as 40o were

not killed by hard freezes on Pangaea

• Indicates that the hard freeze limit was at a higher latitude than today’s limit of 30o to 40o

Page 14: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Precipitation on PangaeaPrecipitation on Pangaea

• Arid low latitudes, especially in the continental interior

• Large land area under the dry, descending portion of the Hadley Cell

• Large expanse of land in the tropics– Trade winds lose moisture

by the time they reach the continental interior

Page 15: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Supported by Evaporite DepositsSupported by Evaporite Deposits

• Salts precipitated in lakes or in coastal margin basins

• Limited exchanges of water with the ocean• Requires an arid climate• More evaporates precipitated during the later phases of Pangaea

than during any time in the last several hundred million years

• Mesozoic Rifting• Opens the Atlantic• Evaporites in shallow basins

Page 16: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Temperatures on PangaeaTemperatures on Pangaea

• Continental interior– Season extremes of heating in summer and cooling in winter

• May explain lack of ice sheets in high latitudes because summers were so warm that rapid summer melting prevented the build-up of snow.

• Freezing average daily winter temperatures extended to 40o latitude

Patterns switch back and forthbetween hemispheres with

changes in the seasons.

Page 17: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Monsoons on PangaeaMonsoons on Pangaea• Strong reversal between summer and winter

monsoon circulations • Winter Hemisphere has high pressure over the interior of the continent - Weak insolation and high radiative cooling - Air sinks building high pressure - Air flows out towards the ocean• Summer Hemisphere has strong solar heating - Air rises and a strong low pressure cell develops. - Causes a net inflow of humid air

Page 18: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Monson Circulation and Seasonal Monson Circulation and Seasonal PrecipitationPrecipitation

• Eastern margins from 0o to 45o latitude– Winds reverse directions between seasons

• Extremely wet summers• Dry winters

Page 19: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Geologic Evidence – Red BedsGeologic Evidence – Red Beds

• Sedimentary rocks stained red by oxidation– Wet season provides the moisture– Rust forms in the dry season or interval– Red beds are widespread on Pangaea and is consistent with the

model of high seasonal changes in moisture

Permian – U.K.

Triassic - CA L. Permian, TriassicPalo Duro Canyon,TX

Page 20: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Effect of Pangaea’s Breakup on ClimateEffect of Pangaea’s Breakup on Climate

• Northern Hemisphere continents moved farther northward– High latitude ocean water displaced– Steeper global temperature gradient resulted

Page 21: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Change in Oceanic CirculationChange in Oceanic Circulation• A single ocean

(Panthalassa) with a single continent– Simple pattern

• Separate continents– More complex

circulation– Affects atmospheric

circulation– Warm an cold currents– Conveyer

Page 22: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

The BLAG Spreading Rate The BLAG Spreading Rate HypothesisHypothesis

• Also known as the Spreading Rate Hypothesis• Proposes that climate changes in the last several

hundred million years:– Caused mostly by changes in the rate of CO2 input to the

atmosphere– CO2 input driven by plate tectonic processes

• Named using initials of its authors– Robert Berna– Antonio Lasaga– And . . .– Robert Garrels

Page 23: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

COCO22 Released into the Atmosphere Released into the Atmosphere

by Plate Tectonicsby Plate Tectonics

• Most CO2 is released– At Mid Ocean ridges– By Subduction Volcanoes

Page 24: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

COCO22 Released into the Atmosphere Released into the Atmosphere

by Plate Tectonicsby Plate Tectonics

• A smaller input of CO2 is released at hot spots– Most are not associated with plate boundaries

Page 25: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Distribution of Hot SpotsDistribution of Hot Spots

• Identified by volcanic activity and structural uplift within the last few million years

Page 26: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Rate of Seafloor Movement Controls Rate of Seafloor Movement Controls Delivery of CODelivery of CO22 from Rocks into the Air from Rocks into the Air

• Rates of plate motion presently varies from plate to plate• South Pacific spreads up to 10X faster than the Mid-Atlantic Ridge

Page 27: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Age of the SeafloorAge of the Seafloor

• Magnetic data shows widely varying rates over millions of years• Continue to change

Page 28: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Fast SpreadingFast Spreading

• Larger releases of CO2 to the ocean

• Results in faster subduction– Larger volumes of carbon-bearing sediment and rock melt

Page 29: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Increased COIncreased CO22 Causes an Initial Shift Causes an Initial Shift

Towards a Greenhouse ClimateTowards a Greenhouse Climate

• Activates increased chemical weathering– combined effect of temperature, precipitation, and vegetation

• CO2 drawn out of atmosphere at a faster rate• Negative Feedback

Page 30: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Slow Plate MovementSlow Plate Movement

• Slow CO2 input results in cooling

Page 31: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

A Colder Icehouse ClimateA Colder Icehouse Climate

• Decreased chemical weathering– Decreased removal of CO2 (greater amount remains in the

atmosphere– Reduces the rate of cooling

• Negative Feedback

Page 32: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Carbon Cycling in the BLAG HypothesisCarbon Cycling in the BLAG Hypothesis

• Carbon cycles continuously between rock reservoir and the atmosphere

Page 33: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Removal of Carbon from the AtmosphereRemoval of Carbon from the Atmosphere

• Carbon from chemical weathering – Ends up in shells of marine life – Forms sediments when marine organisms die

Page 34: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Return of Carbon to the AtmosphereReturn of Carbon to the Atmosphere

• Suduction– Some sediment is scraped off, eroded and redeposited– Most is taken into Earth’s interior

• Doesn’t reach the mantle• Returned to the atmosphere by volcanism

Page 35: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Does Data Support BLAG?Does Data Support BLAG?

• Data does seem to support the BLAG Hypothesis

Page 36: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

The Uplift Weathering The Uplift Weathering HypothesisHypothesis

• Asserts that chemical weathering is:– The active driver of climate change– Not just a negative feedback to BLAG

Page 37: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Available Surfaces Affect the Available Surfaces Affect the Rate of Chemical WeatheringRate of Chemical Weathering

• BLAG views chemical weathering as responding to three climate factors:– Temperature– Precipitation– Vegetation

• The Uplift Weathering Hypothesis considers availability of fresh rock and mineral surfaces to be weathered– This exposure can override the combined effects of

BLAG’s three factors

Page 38: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Rock Exposure and the Rate of Rock Exposure and the Rate of WeatheringWeathering

• As rocks an minerals physically disintegrate, the total surface area of the particles increases

Page 39: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Increased Surface Area Results in a Increased Surface Area Results in a Faster Weathering RateFaster Weathering Rate

• The proportional increase of weathering far exceeds the estimated result from changes in temperature,

precipitation, and vegetation.

Page 40: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Uplift and WeatheringUplift and Weathering

• Tectonics results in the uplifting of Earth’s crust and the formation of mountains at many plate boundaries.

• In regions of uplift exposure of freshly fragmented rock is enhanced.

Page 41: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Factors Increasing Weathering Factors Increasing Weathering Rates in Uplifting AreasRates in Uplifting Areas

• Steep Slopes– Erosional processes

are unusually active– Higher frequency of

earthquakes in young mountain regions along plate boundaries

• Dislodge debris and further weaken bedrock

Page 42: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Factors Increasing Weathering Factors Increasing Weathering Rates in Uplifting AreasRates in Uplifting Areas

• Steep Slopes– Erosional pocesses

called Mass Wasting are unusually active

• Rock slides and falls• Landslides• Flows of water

saturated debris

– Removal of overlying debris exposes fresh bedrock

Page 43: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Mass Wasting or Mass Movement is . . .

• the movement in which – bedrock, – rock debris, – or soil – moves downslope in bulk, or as a mss,

because of the pull of gravity.

• Examples

Page 44: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Rockfalls

Page 45: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Talus

An apron of fallen rock fragments that accumulates at the base of a cliff.

Page 46: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Yosemite Valley Rockfall, 1999

• Two 80,000 ton slabs of an overhang broke off • Slid a short distance over steep rock and then flew 500 meters,

launched as if from a ski jump• They shattered upon impact and created a huge dust cloud.

Page 47: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Debris SlideSlide• A coherent mass of debris moving along a surface• Rotational debris slide (slump) if the movement is

along a curved surface.

La Concita, CA (1995)

Earthflow andSlumping

Debris in the upper part remained mostly intact as it moved in blocks.

Debris in the lower portion flowed with rotational sliding.

Page 48: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Earthflow

Earthflow in Santa Tecia, El Salvador, January 13, 2001

Page 49: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Factors Increasing Weathering Factors Increasing Weathering Rates in Uplifting AreasRates in Uplifting Areas

• Steep Slopes– Mountain Glaciation

• Pulverizes underlying bedrock

• Carries sediment to lower elevations

• Increases regional rates of chemical weathering

Page 50: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Factors Increasing Weathering Factors Increasing Weathering Rates in Uplifting AreasRates in Uplifting Areas

• Steep Slopes– Heavy precipitation

generated on• High but narrow

mountain belts– Intercept moisture

carried by tropical easterlies and mid-latitude westerlies

• Large plateaus create their only monsoonal circulation (e.g., Tibetan Plateau) by pulling moisture from adjacent oceans

Page 51: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Tectonic UpliftTectonic UpliftOcean-continent convergence

• Subduction occurs relatively steadily over time• Total amount of high mountain terrain on Earth remains constant through time - Locations and heights of individual ranges may vary

Page 52: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Tectonic UpliftTectonic Uplift

Continent-continent collision – the Himalayas and Tibetan Plateau

Page 53: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Active Tectonic Uplift Cools Active Tectonic Uplift Cools ClimateClimate

• Uplift accelerates chemical weathering

• Draws CO2 out of the atmosphere– Cools climate

• Greenhouse Conditions– Slower uplift– Less chemical

weathering• More CO2 in

atmosphere

Page 54: Plate Tectonics and Climate. Glaciation on Continents – The Polar Position Hypothesis Two Key Testable Predictions –When continents are near the poles

Does Data Support the Uplift Does Data Support the Uplift Weathering Hypothesis?Weathering Hypothesis?

• Data does seem to support the hypothesis.