QUESTION IMAGE
Question
plate tectonics webquest
task one: pangaea and alfred wegener
watch the animated life: pangaea video on the hhmi biointeractive website. as you watch, answer the following questions
tiny url: http://tinyurl.com/yacu99w
full url: http://www.hhmi.org/biointeractive/animated - life - pangaea
- what year did wegener make his discovery and idea of continental drift?
- in what direction did wegener think that the continents moved?
- what evidence did wegener have to support his theory of plate tectonics?
- where is wegeners body?
- the video states that the continental plates dont drift along the ocean floor, as wegener suggested. how do the plates really move?
task two: our dynamic earth interactive
complete the dynamics of earth interactive by annenberg learner. as you use this interactive, follow the directions and answers the questions below.
tiny url: https://tinyurl.com/sddj67o
full url: https://www.learner.org/series/interactive - dynamic - earth/
move your cursor over the structures of the earth and write two facts per structure in the table below.
structure fact 1 fact 2
- mantle made of hot, semi - solid rock. ~1,800 miles thick
- crust thinnest layer 20 miles thick
- lithosphere made of slowly - moving plates (solid rock) holds continents + oceans
- asthenosphere plates of lithosphere float on the asthenosphere asthenosphere is semi - liquid
- Wegener first proposed the idea of continental drift around 1912, but started formulating it around 1910.
- He thought continents moved horizontally.
- Evidence included the fit of the continents like puzzle - pieces, similar fossils across continents, and matching rock formations.
- Wegener's body remains in the Arctic where he died during an expedition.
- Plates move due to convection currents in the mantle and gravity.
- The mantle is made of hot, semi - solid rock and is about 1,800 miles thick.
- The crust is the thinnest layer, about 20 miles thick.
- The lithosphere is made of slowly - moving solid rock plates and holds continents and oceans.
- The asthenosphere is semi - liquid and the plates of the lithosphere float on it.
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- 1910 (or around 1912 when formally proposed)
- Horizontally
- Fit of continents, similar fossils, matching rock formations
- Somewhere in the Arctic
- Due to convection currents + gravity
- Made of hot, semi - solid rock; ~1,800 miles thick
- Thinnest layer; 20 miles thick
- Made of slowly - moving plates (solid rock); Holds continents + oceans
- Plates of lithosphere float on the asthenosphere; Asthenosphere is semi - liquid