Welcome, dear student! In this unit, we will learn about the powerful forces inside our Earth that shape continents, build mountains, cause earthquakes, and create volcanoes. These processes are all connected to plate tectonics. Are you ready? Let us start step by step!
1.1 The Continental Drift Theory
Have you ever looked at a world map and noticed that the coastlines of Africa and South America seem to fit together like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle? A German meteorologist named Alfred Wegener noticed this too, and in 1912, he proposed the Continental Drift Theory.
The theory says that all the present continents were once joined together as a single large landmass called Pangaea (meaning “all Earth”). During the Carboniferous period, about 350 million years ago, Pangaea was located around the South Pole.
Then, during the Triassic period of the Mesozoic era, Pangaea started to break apart into two large parts:
- The northern part was called Laurasia (which later became North America, Europe, and Asia).
- The southern part was called Gondwanaland (which later became South America, Africa, India, Australia, and Antarctica).
Through a very slow process of drifting over millions of years, these continents reached their present locations. Can you imagine how slowly this happens? Just a few centimeters per year!
Geological Evidences Supporting Continental Drift Theory
Wegener did not just guess — he used real evidence. Let us look at each one carefully:
1. Coastline Similarity: The coastlines of Africa and South America show remarkable similarity on opposite sides of the Atlantic Ocean. When placed together, they fit like a puzzle.
2. Rock Type and Structural Similarities: When we fit Africa and South America “back together,” we find that similar rock types extend from one continent to the other, the rocks are the same age, and several mountain belts also continue from one continent to the next.
3. Fossil Evidence: Fossils of the same organisms have been found on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean. For example, Mesosaurus — a small reptile that lived about 250 million years ago — has been found in both South America and Africa. This could only happen if the continents were once joined!
4. Paleoclimatic Evidence: Similar climatic data reconstructed from rock structures are found in present continents that are now far apart. For example, glacial deposits have been found in tropical regions, suggesting those landmasses were once located near the poles.
Why Was Wegener’s Theory Rejected?
Even with good evidence, the scientific community at that time rejected Wegener’s theory. Why do you think that happened? Here are the main reasons:
- Wegener was not a geologist by profession — he was a meteorologist, which made his opponents doubt him.
- Most influential geoscientists were based in the Northern Hemisphere, while most of the conclusive evidence came from the Southern Hemisphere.
- Wegener thought Pangaea did not break up until the Cenozoic era, and scientists found it hard to believe so much drifting could happen in such a short time.
- The greatest problem was the lack of direct evidence for the actual movement of continents and no explanation for the mechanism — how exactly did the continents move?
Practice Questions — Continental Drift Theory
Q1. Name the two large continents that Pangaea broke into, and list which present-day continents each formed.
(1) Laurasia (northern part) — formed North America, Europe, and Asia.
(2) Gondwanaland (southern part) — formed South America, Africa, India, Australia, and Antarctica.
Explanation: This breakup happened during the Triassic period of the Mesozoic era. The process of continental drift took millions of years for these fragments to reach their current positions.
Q2. Explain two fossil-based pieces of evidence that support the continental drift theory.
(1) Mesosaurus fossils — This small reptile lived about 250 million years ago. Its fossils have been found on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, in South America and Africa. Since Mesosaurus was a freshwater reptile that could not swim across oceans, its presence on both continents strongly suggests they were once joined.
(2) Similar fossils of other organisms have been found across separated continents (e.g., in India, Africa, South America, and Australia), supporting the idea that these landmasses were once connected as part of Gondwanaland.
Q3. Why was Wegener’s continental drift theory not accepted by most scientists of his time? Give two reasons.
(1) Wegener was a meteorologist, not a geologist, so his professional background made other scientists skeptical of his geological claims.
(2) He could not provide a convincing mechanism for how the continents actually moved — the driving force was unknown at that time.
(Other valid reasons: Most evidence came from the Southern Hemisphere while influential scientists were in the North; the timeline of breakup in the Cenozoic seemed too short for such large movements.)
1.2 Plate Tectonics Theory
Now, let us move from Wegener’s idea to the modern theory that replaced and improved upon it. Are you following so far? Good!
The Plate Tectonics Theory was developed in the late 1960s. It explains how the outer layers of the Earth move and deform. This theory caused a revolution in the way geologists think about the Earth!
What Does the Theory State?
The theory states that the Earth’s lithosphere (the uppermost mantle and crust together) is broken into about a dozen large pieces (plus some smaller ones), called plates. These plates move slowly on top of a weaker layer called the asthenosphere.
Here are the important facts about plates:
- Plates move at a rate of a few centimeters per year.
- Plates may be made entirely of continental rocks, entirely of oceanic rocks, or both.
- The edges of plates do not always match the boundaries of continents or oceans. For example, the North American Plate includes the western half of the North Atlantic Ocean’s seafloor.
Major Tectonic Plates
| Continental Plates | Oceanic Plates |
|---|---|
| African Plate | Pacific Plate |
| Eurasian Plate | Nazca Plate |
| Indo-Australian Plate | Philippine Plate |
| North American Plate | Cocos Plate |
| South American Plate | Caribbean Plate |
| Antarctic Plate | — |
Think about this: Does the edge of the African plate correspond exactly to the boundary of the African continent? No! The plate boundary extends into the ocean floor.
The plate tectonic process also influences the composition of the atmosphere and oceans, serves as a prime cause of long-term climate change, and contributes to the chemical and physical environment in which life evolves.
Practice Questions — Plate Tectonics Theory
Q4. Define the terms “lithosphere” and “asthenosphere” and explain their relationship in plate tectonics.
Lithosphere: The rigid outer layer of the Earth, consisting of the crust and the uppermost part of the mantle. It is broken into tectonic plates.
Asthenosphere: The ductile (semi-molten, weak) layer of the mantle directly below the lithosphere. It can flow when enough force is applied.
Relationship: The rigid lithospheric plates sit on top of and move over the weaker asthenosphere. The asthenosphere allows the plates to slide, and convection currents within it drive plate movement.
Q5. Why is plate tectonics theory considered a “scientific revolution”?
1.3 Plate Movements and Plate Boundaries
Now we come to a very important section! The way plates interact at their margins depends on whether the crust at the point of contact is oceanic or continental. Remember: continental crust (mostly granite) is less dense than oceanic crust (mostly basalt).
As plates move, they interact in three main ways. Let us study each one carefully.
1. Convergent Plate Boundaries (Destructive)
At convergent boundaries, two plates move toward each other. The denser plate is forced under the less dense one — a process called subduction. The subducted crust is eventually destroyed (melted in the mantle).
Case 1: Oceanic crust meets continental crust
The denser oceanic crust is pushed down into the mantle. It melts and produces magma, which rises to the surface and forms volcanoes. Example: The Nazca Plate (oceanic) is being subducted under the South American Plate (continental), forming the Andes Mountains.
Case 2: Oceanic crust meets oceanic crust
One oceanic plate subducts under the other, producing an arc of volcanic islands. Example: The Mariana Islands in the western Pacific Ocean.
Case 3: Continental crust meets continental crust
Neither crust is dense enough to subduct easily. The pressure deforms the crust, pushing it upward. Example: The Indo-Australian Plate colliding with the Eurasian Plate formed the Himalayas — the highest mountain range on Earth!
2. Divergent Plate Boundaries (Constructive)
At divergent boundaries, plates move away from each other. Magma rises from the asthenosphere, intrudes and erupts at the boundary to create new seafloor. This process is called seafloor spreading.
Example: The Mid-Atlantic Ridge in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean. Shallow earthquakes are common here.
Divergence can also happen on continents, producing fractures called rift valleys. Example: The East African Rift Valley. Over millions of years, the continental crust may separate completely, and the area between may flood with water to become a new ocean.
3. Transform Fault Boundaries (Conservative)
At transform boundaries, plates slide past each other laterally along fractures. The plates stick and then occasionally slip, producing earthquakes. Crust is neither created nor destroyed at these boundaries.
Most transform faults are found on the seafloor along oceanic ridges, but they also occur on continents. Example: The San Andreas Fault in California.
Driving Mechanism: Convection Currents
What makes the plates move? The internal energy of the Earth! Most geoscientists agree that plate motion is driven by convection currents in the mantle.
Convection is a means of heat transfer where heat moves with the material. The asthenosphere is ductile and flows more readily than the lithosphere. Rising convection currents carry heat toward the surface at oceanic ridges, and descending currents sink at subduction zones after losing heat. The brittle plates riding on top are, in a sense, dragged along by the moving asthenosphere.
• Convergent = Destructive (crust is destroyed by subduction)
• Divergent = Constructive (new crust is created)
• Transform = Conservative (no crust created or destroyed)
Also remember: continental crust is less dense (granite), oceanic crust is denser (basalt).
Practice Questions — Plate Boundaries
Q6. Explain what happens when two continental plates converge. Give a real-world example.
Example: The northward-moving Indo-Australian Plate collided with the Eurasian Plate, forming the Himalayas — the highest mountain range on Earth. The process continues today, and the Himalayas are still rising!
Q7. Describe the process of seafloor spreading at a divergent boundary.
Q8. Why is a transform fault boundary described as “conservative”?
1.4 Major Geological Processes
This is the heart of our unit! Geological processes are the natural forces that shape the physical makeup of our planet. The forces that bring changes on the Earth’s surface are divided into two broad categories:
- Endogenic (Internal) Forces — originating from inside the Earth
- Exogenic (External) Forces — originating from outside the Earth (atmosphere)
Let us study each in detail.
1.4.1 Internal (Endogenic) Forces
Internal forces come from inside the Earth. They create irregularities on the Earth’s surface by breaking, bending, or folding rocks. The main internal processes are: folding, faulting, earthquakes, and volcanic eruptions.
FOLDING
When rock layers are pushed sideways by earth movements — from one direction or from two opposite directions — the layers are compressed and bent. This bending is called folding.
The basic features of a fold are:
- Anticline: An upfold (the rock layers bend upward, like an arch).
- Syncline: A downfold (the rock layers bend downward, like a trough).
If compression continues, simple folds change into more complex forms:
- Asymmetrical fold: One limb is steeper than the other.
- Over fold: One limb is pushed over the other limb.
- Over thrust fold: When pressure is very great, a fracture occurs in the fold and one limb is pushed forward over the other limb.
Types of Fold Mountains
Fold mountains are grouped into two categories based on their age:
| Feature | Young Fold Mountains | Old Fold Mountains |
|---|---|---|
| Age | Formed during Alpine orogeny (recent) | Formed during first and second mountain-building periods |
| Height | Very high | Lower (more weathered) |
| Date | Less than 400 million years | 250–300 million years |
| Examples | Andes, Rockies, Alps, Himalayas, Atlas, Australian Alps | Scandinavian (Caledonides) Mountains, Appalachian Mountains, Urals |
Q9. Differentiate between an anticline and a syncline with a simple diagram description.
Anticline: An upfold in rock layers where the layers arch upward, with the oldest rocks at the center. It looks like an arch or a dome shape.
Syncline: A downfold in rock layers where the layers bend downward, with the youngest rocks at the center. It looks like a trough or basin shape.
In simple terms: anticline = arch up, syncline = trough down. Both are formed by compressive forces acting on rock layers from two directions.
Q10. Why are the Himalayas classified as “young fold mountains” while the Appalachians are “old fold mountains”?
The Himalayas were formed during the most recent mountain-building period (Alpine orogeny) and are still rising due to the ongoing collision of the Indo-Australian Plate with the Eurasian Plate. They are very high and less weathered.
The Appalachians were formed during an earlier mountain-building period (about 250–300 million years ago) and have been exposed to weathering and erosion for much longer. As a result, they are now lower in height and more rounded compared to young fold mountains.
FAULTING
While folding bends rocks, faulting breaks them. A fault is a crack in the Earth’s crust formed by forces of tension and compression. When rocks displace along a fault — either upward or downward — various landforms are created.
Usually, a series of parallel faults develops. The land between two parallel faults may either sink down or be pushed upward, forming two major landforms:
1. Rift Valley (Graben): Formed when the land between two parallel faults sinks down. The blocks on both sides form plateaus. Example: East African Rift Valley.
2. Block Mountain (Horst): Formed when the land between two parallel faults is pushed upward. Example: Afar Horst in Ethiopia.
Q11. Explain the difference between a horst and a graben. How is each formed?
Horst (Block Mountain): Formed when the land between two parallel faults is pushed upward relative to the surrounding blocks. Example: Afar Horst in Ethiopia.
Graben (Rift Valley): Formed when the land between two parallel faults sinks downward relative to the surrounding blocks. Example: East African Rift Valley.
Key difference: In a horst, the middle block goes UP; in a graben, the middle block goes DOWN. Both are caused by tensional or compressional forces acting along parallel fault lines.
EARTHQUAKES
Have you ever felt the ground shake? That is an earthquake — the sudden shaking of the ground when masses of rock change position below the Earth’s surface. The shifting of rock releases a great amount of energy, sending out shock waves (seismic waves) through the rock.
Earthquakes occur most often along geologic faults — fractures in the rocks of Earth’s crust. Along faults, rock masses on opposite sides strain against each other and sometimes “slip,” causing an earthquake.
Measuring Earthquakes: The Richter Scale
Earthquakes are measured using the Richter scale, which gives readings from 0 (no movement) to 9 (extremely severe). Important: the Richter scale is logarithmic, meaning each step up represents about 10 times more ground motion and roughly 31.6 times more energy than the previous step.
Solution: The difference is $7.0 – 5.0 = 2$ units.
Ground motion ratio = $10^{2} = 100$ times greater.
Energy ratio $\approx 10^{2 \times 1.5} = 10^{3} = 1000$ times greater.
So a magnitude 7 earthquake has 100 times more ground motion and about 1000 times more energy than a magnitude 5 earthquake!
Seismic Waves
The shock waves from an earthquake are called seismic waves. There are two broad classes:
1. Body Waves (travel within the Earth’s body):
- P-waves (Primary waves): Fastest waves. They alternately compress and expand rock. They vibrate in the same direction as wave travel (longitudinal).
- S-waves (Secondary waves): Slower than P-waves. They vibrate at right angles to the direction of wave travel (transverse). S-waves cannot travel through liquids.
2. Surface Waves (travel along Earth’s surface):
- Love waves and Rayleigh waves (named after the scientists who identified them).
- They travel more slowly than body waves but have larger amplitude, making them responsible for most of the destructive shaking far from the epicenter.
Focus and Epicenter
- Focus (Hypocenter): The point inside the Earth where the earthquake originates — where the rock actually breaks or slips.
- Epicenter: The point on the Earth’s surface directly above the focus.
Effects of Earthquakes
- Ground movements — thrusting up cliffs, opening cracks
- Changes in groundwater flow
- Landslides and mudflows
- Damage to buildings, bridges, pipelines, railways, dams
- Fires — e.g., 1906 San Francisco earthquake: 521 blocks burned for 3 days
- Tsunamis — giant waves caused by underwater earthquakes
Tsunamis
Violent shaking of the seafloor produces waves that spread over the ocean surface. In deep water, a tsunami can travel as fast as 800 km/h. By the time it reaches shore, it can reach heights of up to 30 meters and can wipe out entire coastal settlements.
Earthquake Occurrence: World Distribution
Most earthquakes occur along specific belts:
| Belt | Location | % of World’s Earthquake Energy |
|---|---|---|
| Circum-Pacific Belt (Ring of Fire) | Circles the Pacific Ocean along west coasts of Americas and through island areas of Asia | ~80% |
| Mediterranean-Asian Belt | Between Europe and North Africa through Mediterranean, eastward through Asia to East Indies | ~15% |
| Mid-Oceanic Ridge Belt | Along mid-oceanic ridges in Arctic, Atlantic, western Indian Oceans and East African Rift Valley | Remaining ~5% |
Focus Depth Classification
- Shallow focus: Less than about 60 km deep — releases more than 75% of annual seismic energy
- Intermediate focus: About 60 to 300 km deep — about 12% of total energy
- Deep focus: Greater than 300 km (max about 700 km) — about 3% of total energy, commonly in Benioff zones
Benioff Zone: A zone that dips down into the mantle at places where two tectonic plates converge. It extends down along the plate being subducted. Deep-focus earthquakes commonly occur in these zones.
Q12. An earthquake measures 6.0 on the Richter scale. How much greater is its ground motion compared to an earthquake measuring 4.0?
Difference = $6.0 – 4.0 = 2$ units on the Richter scale.
Since the Richter scale is logarithmic (base 10):
Ground motion ratio = $10^{2} = \mathbf{100 \text{ times greater}}$
Energy ratio $\approx 10^{2 \times 1.5} = 10^{3} = \mathbf{1000 \text{ times greater}}$
So a magnitude 6.0 earthquake has 100 times more ground motion and approximately 1000 times more energy than a magnitude 4.0 earthquake.
Q13. Differentiate between P-waves and S-waves.
P-waves (Primary):
• Fastest seismic waves (arrive first)
• Longitudinal — vibrate parallel to direction of travel
• Can travel through solids, liquids, and gases
• Compress and expand rock as they pass
S-waves (Secondary):
• Slower than P-waves (arrive second)
• Transverse — vibrate perpendicular to direction of travel
• Can travel through solids only (cannot pass through liquids)
• Used to help locate the earthquake epicenter
Q14. What is a Benioff Zone and where does it occur?
VOLCANISM
Volcanism is the process by which molten rock (magma when underground, lava when it reaches the surface), together with gaseous and solid materials, is forced out onto the Earth’s surface.
Magma reaches the surface through two types of openings:
- Vents: Holes or pipe-like openings through which magma flows out. If lava emerges via a vent, it builds up a volcano (cone-shaped mound).
- Fissures: Large, narrow cracks or fractures in rock. Molten materials move upward along these cracks and spread over the surrounding area. If lava emerges via a fissure, it builds up a plateau (lava plateau) with little or no explosive activity.
Occurrence of Volcanoes
- Volcanoes occur mainly near plate boundaries — both divergent and convergent.
- Nearly 1,900 volcanoes are active today or have been active in historical times.
- Almost 90% are in the Pacific Ring of Fire.
- Others are along the Mediterranean-Asian belt, oceanic ridges, and the Great Rift Valley of East Africa.
Types of Volcanoes (by Activity)
- Active volcano: Has erupted or is thought to have erupted in the last 500 years. Example: Erta Ale, Ethiopia.
- Dormant volcano: Currently inactive but has erupted within historic times and may erupt again. Example: Mount Kilimanjaro, Tanzania.
- Extinct volcano: Not erupting and not likely to erupt in the future. Example: Mount Zuqualla, Ethiopia.
Types of Volcanoes (by Shape)
1. Shield Volcanoes: Have a low but broad profile created by highly fluid (basaltic) lava flows that spread over wide areas. Sides are usually no steeper than about $7°$. Example: Hawaiian Islands — built up from the seafloor about 5 km to the surface.
2. Strato Volcanoes (Composite Volcanoes): The most common type. Steep cones composed of alternating layers of lava and pyroclastics (rock fragments). Characterized by periodic, explosive eruptions. The lava is highly viscous and cools before spreading far. Example: Mount Fuji, Mount St. Helens.
3. Cinder Cone Volcanoes: Conical hills made mostly of cinder-sized pyroclastics. The steepness is determined by the angle of repose — the steepest angle at which debris remains stable without sliding downhill.
4. Craters: Bowl-shaped depressions formed by massive collapse of material during volcanic activity, by violent explosions, or by erosion during dormancy.
5. Calderas: Large, basin-shaped depressions. Most form when a magma chamber drains and no longer supports the overlying cone, which then collapses inward to create the basin.
| Volcano Type | Shape | Lava Type | Eruption Style | Example |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shield | Low, broad | Fluid basaltic | Gentle, flowing | Hawaiian Islands |
| Strato | Steep cone | Viscous (layers) | Explosive | Mount Fuji |
| Cinder Cone | Small conical hill | Pyroclastics | Explosive | Parícutin, Mexico |
Intrusive Volcanic Landforms
When magma cools and solidifies within the crust (without reaching the surface), it forms intrusive (plutonic) igneous rocks and landforms:
- Batholith: A very large dome-shaped intrusion, located several kilometers deep, extending over hundreds of square kilometers. Sometimes forms the core of a mountain.
- Sill: A near-horizontal intrusion of igneous rock between two rock layers, forming a sheet more or less parallel to the surrounding layers.
- Dike (Dyke): Formed when magma rises through a near-vertical crack and cools, forming a vertical sheet of rock or wall-like structure that cuts across existing rock layers.
Q15. Differentiate between a vent and a fissure in the context of volcanism. What landform does each produce?
Vent: A hole or pipe-like opening through which magma flows out to the surface. Lava emerging through a vent builds up a cone-shaped volcano.
Fissure: A large, narrow crack or fracture in rock through which molten materials move upward and spread over the surrounding area. Lava emerging through a fissure builds up a lava plateau, with little or no explosive activity.
Key difference: Vents produce cone-shaped mountains; fissures produce flat plateaus.
Q16. Explain the difference between a crater and a caldera.
Crater: A bowl-shaped depression at the top of a volcano, formed by the massive collapse of material during volcanic activity, by unusually violent explosions, or by erosion during dormancy. Craters are relatively small.
Caldera: A much larger, basin-shaped depression formed when a magma chamber drains and can no longer support the overlying volcanic cone, which then collapses inward. Calderas are significantly larger than craters.
Q17. Why are shield volcanoes much flatter than strato volcanoes? Explain in terms of lava type.
In contrast, strato volcanoes are formed by highly viscous lava (mixed with pyroclastics) that does not flow far before cooling and hardening. This causes the material to pile up near the vent, creating a steep-sided cone with alternating layers of lava and rock fragments.
1.4.2 External (Exogenic) Forces
Now let us briefly look at forces that act on the Earth’s surface from the outside. These include running water, wind, moving ice, and sea waves. External forces generally level the ups and downs created by internal forces. This process occurs in two ways:
- Denudation: The lowering of the land by wearing away the surface. Denudation consists of:
- Weathering: The gradual breakdown of rocks into pieces in place (without movement). It occurs by physical (mechanical) and chemical means.
- Erosion: The removal and transport of weathered rock material by agents like running water, wind, ice, and waves.
- Deposition: The dropping of eroded material in new locations, building up landforms like deltas, beaches, and alluvial plains.
Q18. Compare endogenic and exogenic forces in terms of their origin, effect on the landscape, and examples.
Endogenic Forces:
• Origin: Inside the Earth (internal energy)
• Effect: Create irregularities — build up the land (mountains, rift valleys, volcanoes)
• Examples: Folding, faulting, earthquakes, volcanic eruptions
Exogenic Forces:
• Origin: Outside the Earth (atmospheric processes, solar energy)
• Effect: Level the land — wear down and redistribute material
• Examples: Weathering, erosion, deposition by water, wind, ice, and waves
The Earth’s surface features are the result of the continuous interaction between these opposing forces.
Q19. The eruption of Krakatoa in 1883 caused a devastating tsunami. Explain the connection between volcanic eruptions and tsunamis.
Revision Notes — Exam Focus
Important Definitions
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Continental Drift | The theory that Earth’s continents have moved over geologic time relative to each other, drifting across the ocean bed. |
| Pangaea | The single supercontinent that existed about 350 million years ago, before breaking apart. |
| Laurasia | The northern part of Pangaea (formed North America, Europe, Asia). |
| Gondwanaland | The southern part of Pangaea (formed South America, Africa, India, Australia, Antarctica). |
| Plate Tectonics | The theory that Earth’s lithosphere is divided into plates that move on top of the asthenosphere. |
| Lithosphere | The rigid outer layer of Earth (crust + uppermost mantle), broken into tectonic plates. |
| Asthenosphere | The ductile, semi-molten layer below the lithosphere that allows plates to move. |
| Subduction | The process where a denser tectonic plate is forced beneath a less dense plate at a convergent boundary. |
| Seafloor Spreading | The process at divergent boundaries where new oceanic crust is formed as magma rises and plates move apart. |
| Anticline | An upfold in rock layers (arch shape) formed by compressive forces. |
| Syncline | A downfold in rock layers (trough shape) formed by compressive forces. |
| Horst | A block mountain formed when land between two parallel faults is pushed upward. |
| Graben | A rift valley formed when land between two parallel faults sinks downward. |
| Focus (Hypocenter) | The point inside the Earth where an earthquake originates. |
| Epicenter | The point on the Earth’s surface directly above the focus. |
| Seismic Waves | Shock waves produced by earthquakes that travel through the Earth. |
| Tsunami | A giant ocean wave caused by underwater earthquakes or volcanic eruptions. |
| Volcanism | The process by which magma, gases, and solid materials are forced out onto the Earth’s surface. |
| Vent | A pipe-like opening through which magma reaches the surface, building a cone-shaped volcano. |
| Fissure | A large crack through which magma spreads out, building a lava plateau. |
| Benioff Zone | A zone of earthquake activity dipping into the mantle along a subducting plate. |
| Caldera | A large basin-shaped depression formed by the collapse of a volcanic cone after magma chamber drainage. |
| Batholith | A very large dome-shaped intrusive igneous rock body deep in the crust. |
| Denudation | The lowering of land surface by weathering and erosion. |
Key Formulas and Calculations
If two earthquakes differ by $n$ units on the Richter scale:
1 unit difference → 10× motion, ~31.6× energy
2 units difference → 100× motion, ~1000× energy
3 units difference → 1000× motion, ~31,623× energy
Plate Boundary Summary
| Boundary Type | Movement | Also Called | Crust Status | Features | Example |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Convergent | Toward each other | Destructive | Crust destroyed | Subduction zones, volcanoes, trenches, fold mountains | Andes (Nazca + S. American), Himalayas (Indo-Australian + Eurasian) |
| Divergent | Away from each other | Constructive | New crust created | Mid-ocean ridges, rift valleys, seafloor spreading | Mid-Atlantic Ridge, East African Rift Valley |
| Transform | Slide past each other | Conservative | No change | Earthquakes, faults | San Andreas Fault, California |
Seismic Waves Summary
| Wave Type | Category | Speed | Motion | Can Pass Through | Destructiveness |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P-wave | Body | Fastest | Longitudinal (parallel) | Solids, liquids, gases | Less |
| S-wave | Body | Faster than surface | Transverse (perpendicular) | Solids only | Moderate |
| Love wave | Surface | Slow | Horizontal shearing | Surface only | High |
| Rayleigh wave | Surface | Slowest | Rolling (elliptical) | Surface only | Highest |
Volcano Types Summary
| Type | Shape | Lava | Eruption | Example |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shield | Low, broad (<7° slope) | Fluid basaltic | Gentle | Hawaiian Islands |
| Strato (Composite) | Steep cone | Viscous, layered | Explosive | Mount Fuji |
| Cinder Cone | Small conical hill | Pyroclastics | Explosive | Parícutin |
Ethiopian Examples to Remember
- East African Rift Valley — example of a rift valley (graben) formed by faulting at a divergent boundary
- Afar Horst — example of a block mountain (horst) formed by faulting
- Erta Ale — active volcano in Ethiopia
- Mount Zuqualla — extinct volcano in Ethiopia
- Mount Kilimanjaro — dormant volcano in Tanzania (near Ethiopia)
Earthquake Distribution Quick Facts
- Ring of Fire (Circum-Pacific Belt): ~80% of world’s earthquake energy
- Mediterranean-Asian Belt: ~15% of world’s earthquake energy
- Mid-oceanic ridges + East African Rift: remaining ~5%
- Shallow focus (<60 km): >75% of annual seismic energy
- Intermediate (60–300 km): ~12% of energy
- Deep (>300 km, max ~700 km): ~3% of energy — in Benioff zones
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Confusing crust types: Continental crust = granite (less dense). Oceanic crust = basalt (more dense). The denser one always subducts!
- Confusing focus and epicenter: Focus is INSIDE the Earth. Epicenter is ON the surface, directly above the focus.
- Confusing vent and fissure: Vent → cone-shaped volcano. Fissure → flat lava plateau.
- Confusing crater and caldera: Crater = small bowl at top. Caldera = large basin from collapse.
- Confusing horst and graben: Horst = middle goes UP (block mountain). Graben = middle goes DOWN (rift valley).
- Forgetting the Richter scale is logarithmic: A magnitude 7 is NOT just “a bit stronger” than a magnitude 5 — it is 100 times more ground motion!
- Saying S-waves travel through liquids: They do NOT! S-waves only travel through solids.
- Saying transform boundaries create or destroy crust: They do NEITHER — that is why they are called “conservative.”
- Confusing young and old fold mountains: Young = high, recent (Alpine orogeny). Old = low, weathered (250–300 million years).
- Saying Wegener was a geologist: He was a meteorologist — this was one reason his theory was rejected!
Evidence for Continental Drift — Quick List
2. Rock type and structural similarities (same rocks, same age, across continents)
3. Fossil evidence (Mesosaurus found on both sides of the Atlantic)
4. Paleoclimatic evidence (similar ancient climate data from now-distant continents)
Challenge Exam Questions
Test yourself with these difficult exam-style questions. Try to answer each one before clicking “Show Answer”!
Multiple Choice Questions
Q1. The Mesosaurus fossil evidence is significant for the continental drift theory because:
A) It was found only in Africa
B) It was a marine reptile that could cross oceans
C) It was a freshwater reptile found on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean
D) It lived only 10 million years ago
Mesosaurus was a freshwater reptile that could not have crossed the vast Atlantic Ocean. Its fossils being found on both sides of the Atlantic (in South America and Africa) strongly indicates that these continents were once joined together, allowing the reptile to live across both landmasses. Options A and D are factually incorrect. Option B is wrong because Mesosaurus was freshwater, not marine.
Q2. At a convergent boundary where two oceanic plates meet, which of the following is most likely to form?
A) A rift valley
B) An arc of volcanic islands
C) A young fold mountain range
D) A transform fault
When two oceanic plates converge, one subducts beneath the other. The subducted plate melts and produces magma that rises to form a chain of volcanic islands called an island arc. The Mariana Islands in the western Pacific are a classic example. Option A (rift valley) forms at divergent boundaries. Option C (young fold mountain) typically forms when continental plates converge. Option D (transform fault) forms where plates slide past each other.
Q3. Which seismic wave is MOST responsible for the destructive shaking felt far from the epicenter?
A) P-waves
B) S-waves
C) Love waves
D) Body waves
Love waves (a type of surface wave) have the largest amplitude among all seismic waves and are responsible for much of the destructive shaking far from the epicenter. Surface waves (Love and Rayleigh) travel more slowly than body waves but cause the most damage because of their large amplitude. P-waves and S-waves are body waves — while S-waves can cause damage, surface waves are the most destructive at distance.
Q4. A batholith is best described as:
A) A vertical sheet of igneous rock cutting across layers
B) A horizontal sheet of igneous rock between layers
C) A very large dome-shaped intrusive igneous body deep in the crust
D) A bowl-shaped depression at the top of a volcano
A batholith is a very large dome-shaped intrusion of igneous rock located several kilometers deep in the crust, extending over hundreds of square kilometers. It sometimes forms the core of a mountain. Option A describes a dike. Option B describes a sill. Option D describes a crater.
Q5. Approximately what percentage of the world’s earthquake energy is released along the Circum-Pacific Belt?
A) 15%
B) 50%
C) 80%
D) 95%
The Circum-Pacific Belt (Ring of Fire) accounts for approximately 80% of the energy released in earthquakes worldwide. This belt circles the Pacific Ocean along the mountainous west coasts of the Americas and through the island areas of Asia. The Mediterranean-Asian belt accounts for about 15%, and the remaining ~5% comes from mid-oceanic ridges and the East African Rift Valley.
Fill in the Blank
Q6. The single supercontinent that existed about 350 million years ago was called __________.
Pangaea was the supercontinent that existed during the Carboniferous period, about 350 million years ago. It later broke into Laurasia (north) and Gondwanaland (south).
Q7. The point on the Earth’s surface directly above the earthquake focus is called the __________.
The epicenter is the point on the Earth’s surface directly above the focus (hypocenter), which is the actual point inside the Earth where the earthquake originates.
Q8. S-waves cannot travel through __________ because they are transverse waves.
S-waves (secondary waves) are transverse waves that vibrate perpendicular to their direction of travel. They can only travel through solids because liquids and gases do not have the shear strength needed to transmit transverse waves. This property is used by scientists to determine that the Earth’s outer core is liquid.
Q9. The process by which new oceanic crust is formed at a divergent boundary is called __________.
Seafloor spreading occurs at divergent boundaries where plates move apart. Magma rises from the asthenosphere, erupts at the oceanic ridge, and creates new seafloor that pushes the plates away in opposite directions.
Q10. A __________ is formed when a magma chamber drains and the overlying volcanic cone collapses inward.
A caldera is a large, basin-shaped depression formed when a magma chamber drains and can no longer support the overlying cone, which then collapses inward. This distinguishes it from a crater, which is smaller and formed by explosions or erosion.
Short Answer Questions
Q11. Explain why the theory of continental drift proposed by Wegener was not accepted by the scientific community of his time. Give at least three reasons.
(1) Professional background: Wegener was a meteorologist, not a geologist. This made established geoscientists skeptical of his geological claims.
(2) Geographic bias: Most influential geoscientists were based in the Northern Hemisphere, while the strongest evidence came from the Southern Hemisphere.
(3) Timeline problem: Wegener believed Pangaea did not break up until the Cenozoic era, and scientists found it hard to believe so much continental movement could occur in such a relatively short period.
(4) Lack of mechanism: Wegener could not provide a satisfactory explanation for HOW the continents actually moved — the driving force was unknown. This was the greatest weakness of his theory.
Q12. Describe the formation of the Himalayas using plate tectonic theory.
Q13. Why are nearly 90% of the world’s active volcanoes located in the Pacific Ring of Fire? Explain the connection to plate tectonics.
Q14. Differentiate between intrusive and extrusive volcanic landforms. Give two examples of each.
Intrusive landforms: Formed when magma cools and solidifies WITHIN the Earth’s crust (does not reach the surface). Examples: Batholith (large dome-shaped intrusion), Sill (horizontal sheet between rock layers), Dike (vertical sheet cutting across layers).
Extrusive landforms: Formed when magma reaches the Earth’s surface as lava and solidifies. Examples: Shield volcano (low, broad, from fluid lava), Strato volcano (steep cone, from viscous lava and pyroclastics), Cinder cone (small conical hill of pyroclastics), Crater (bowl-shaped depression), Caldera (large collapsed basin).
Q15. Explain how a tsunami is generated by an underwater earthquake and why it becomes so destructive when it reaches the shore.
Step-by-Step Calculation Questions
Q16. An earthquake in Region A measures 8.0 on the Richter scale, while an earthquake in Region B measures 5.0. Calculate:
(a) How many times greater is the ground motion of Region A compared to Region B?
(b) Approximately how many times greater is the energy released?
Step 1: Find the difference in magnitude.
$n = 8.0 – 5.0 = 3$ units
Step 2 (a): Calculate ground motion ratio.
$\text{Ground motion ratio} = 10^{n} = 10^{3} = \mathbf{1000 \text{ times greater}}$
Step 3 (b): Calculate energy ratio.
$\text{Energy ratio} \approx 10^{1.5n} = 10^{1.5 \times 3} = 10^{4.5}$
$10^{4.5} = 10^{4} \times 10^{0.5} = 10,000 \times 3.162 \approx \mathbf{31,623 \text{ times greater}}$
Final Answer: The ground motion is 1000 times greater, and the energy released is approximately 31,623 times greater.
Q17. Earthquake X has a Richter scale reading of 7.5. Earthquake Y has a reading of 4.5. Show your working to find the ratio of their ground motions and energy release.
Step 1: Difference in magnitude:
$n = 7.5 – 4.5 = 3$ units
Step 2: Ground motion ratio:
$\text{Ratio} = 10^{3} = \mathbf{1000}$
Earthquake X has 1000 times more ground motion than Earthquake Y.
Step 3: Energy ratio:
$\text{Energy ratio} \approx 10^{1.5 \times 3} = 10^{4.5} \approx \mathbf{31,623}$
Earthquake X releases approximately 31,623 times more energy than Earthquake Y.
Note: Even though the magnitude difference is the same as Q16 (3 units), the actual numbers are different (7.5 vs 8.0 and 4.5 vs 5.0), but the RATIOS are the same because the Richter scale is logarithmic — only the DIFFERENCE matters.
Q18. If the energy released by a magnitude 4 earthquake is approximately $E$ joules, express the energy released by a magnitude 6 earthquake in terms of $E$.
Step 1: Find the magnitude difference.
$n = 6 – 4 = 2$ units
Step 2: Calculate the energy ratio.
$\text{Energy ratio} \approx 10^{1.5 \times 2} = 10^{3} = 1000$
Step 3: Express in terms of $E$.
$\text{Energy of magnitude 6} = 1000 \times E = \mathbf{1000E}$
Answer: The energy released by a magnitude 6 earthquake is $1000E$ joules.
Q19. A tsunami travels at 800 km/h in deep water. If the earthquake epicenter is 2400 km from a coastal city, how long will it take for the tsunami to reach the city? Give your answer in hours.
Step 1: Identify the given values.
Speed = $800$ km/h
Distance = $2400$ km
Step 2: Use the formula:
$$\text{Time} = \frac{\text{Distance}}{\text{Speed}}$$
Step 3: Calculate.
$$\text{Time} = \frac{2400}{800} = \mathbf{3 \text{ hours}}$$
Answer: It will take approximately 3 hours for the tsunami to reach the coastal city. This shows why early warning systems are critical — even though the wave travels fast, there is still a window of time for evacuation if the system is in place.
More Difficult Questions
Q20. “The East African Rift Valley is an example of a divergent boundary occurring on a continent.” Explain this statement by describing the geological processes involved and predicting what might happen to this region in the distant future.
Future prediction: Over millions of years, the continued divergence may cause the continental crust to separate completely. The rift valley will widen and deepen, and eventually seawater will flood into it, creating a new ocean. The eastern part of Africa (Somali Plate) will become a separate landmass, similar to how South America and Africa separated in the past. This process is essentially the early stage of seafloor spreading on a continent.
Q21. Compare and contrast the geological processes and resulting landforms at convergent boundaries involving: (a) oceanic-continental convergence, and (b) oceanic-oceanic convergence.
Similarities:
• Both involve subduction of the denser oceanic plate beneath the less dense plate
• Both produce magma as the subducted plate melts
• Both generate volcanic activity and earthquakes
• Both have ocean trenches at the subduction zone
Differences:
(a) Oceanic-continental convergence:
• The oceanic plate subducts under the continental plate
• Volcanoes form on the continental side (e.g., Andes Mountains)
• Produces a continental volcanic arc — a mountain range with volcanoes
• Example: Nazca Plate subducting under South American Plate
(b) Oceanic-oceanic convergence:
• One oceanic plate subducts under the other (the older, denser one subducts)
• Volcanoes form as an island arc in the ocean
• Produces a chain of volcanic islands rather than a continental mountain range
• Example: Mariana Islands in the western Pacific
Q22. Explain how convection currents in the asthenosphere are thought to drive plate tectonics. In your answer, relate the rising and sinking currents to specific types of plate boundaries.
Rising convection currents: Hot mantle material rises toward the surface at oceanic ridges (divergent boundaries). This rising magma creates new crust and pushes plates apart in opposite directions. These are the constructive boundaries.
Horizontal flow: Near the surface, the material flows horizontally, dragging the lithospheric plates along with it.
Sinking convection currents: After the material moves away from the ridge and loses heat, it becomes denser and sinks back into the mantle at subduction zones (convergent boundaries). These are the destructive boundaries where crust is destroyed.
Thus, a complete convection cell connects divergent boundaries (where material rises) with convergent boundaries (where material sinks), and the plates riding on top are dragged along by this cycle of motion.
Q23. Describe the three stages of fold development from simple fold to over thrust fold. Under what conditions does each form?
1. Simple (Symmetrical) Fold: Formed under moderate compressive forces from two directions. Both limbs of the fold are roughly equal in steepness. Produces gentle anticlines and synclines.
2. Asymmetrical Fold: Formed when compressive forces increase. One limb becomes steeper than the other. The fold is tilted to one side.
3. Over Fold: Formed under even greater compression. One limb is pushed completely over the other limb. The fold is no longer symmetrical at all.
4. Over Thrust Fold: Formed under extreme compressive pressure. A fracture (fault) develops in the fold, and one limb is pushed forward over the other limb along the fracture plane. This is the most complex and deformed type of fold, found in regions of intense mountain building.
Progression: Simple → Asymmetrical → Over fold → Over thrust fold (increasing compressive force).