Year 10 Science Revision Notes — Continental Drift & Plate Tectonics III

Pangaea

Pangaea was a supercontinent where all Earth’s continents were joined together about 300 million years ago.

Over millions of years, Pangaea broke apart and the continents moved into their current positions.

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Breakup of Pangaea

Laurasia

Northern supercontinent:

  • North America
  • Europe
  • Asia

Gondwana

Southern supercontinent:

  • Australia
  • Antarctica
  • Africa
  • South America
  • India

Australia was once connected to Antarctica as part of Gondwana.


Alfred Wegener

Wegener proposed the theory of continental drift in 1912.

He suggested:

  • continents move slowly over time
  • continents were once joined together

Scientists rejected the theory at first because Wegener could not explain how continents moved.


Evidence for Continental Drift

EvidenceExplanation
Matching coastlinesContinents fit together like puzzle pieces
FossilsSame fossils found on separate continents
Rocks & mountainsSimilar geology across continents
Climate evidenceGlacial evidence found in warm regions

Examples of fossils:

  • Mesosaurus
  • Glossopteris

Plate Tectonics Theory

Modern theory explaining continental movement.

Earth’s outer layer is broken into tectonic plates that move slowly over the mantle.


Structure of Earth

LayerDescription
CrustThin outer layer
MantleHot semi-solid rock
Outer CoreLiquid iron and nickel
Inner CoreSolid iron and nickel
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Mantle Convection

Heat from inside Earth causes convection currents in the mantle.

These currents slowly move tectonic plates.

\text{Heat inside Earth causes mantle convection, which moves tectonic plates.}


Plate Boundaries

Divergent Boundary

Plates move apart.

Results:

  • mid-ocean ridges
  • volcanoes
  • new crust formed

Convergent Boundary

Plates move together.

Results:

  • mountains
  • volcanoes
  • earthquakes
  • subduction zones

Transform Boundary

Plates slide past each other.

Results:

  • earthquakes
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Earthquakes

Earthquakes occur when tectonic plates suddenly move along faults.

Important terms:

  • Focus (hypocentre): underground starting point
  • Epicentre: point on Earth’s surface above the focus

Earthquakes release seismic waves.

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Volcanoes

Volcanoes form when magma rises through Earth’s crust.

Magma

Molten rock underground

Lava

Molten rock on Earth’s surface

Volcanoes commonly occur near plate boundaries.


Seafloor Spreading

New ocean crust forms at mid-ocean ridges.

Older crust moves away from the ridge.

This provided strong evidence for plate tectonics.


Natural Hazards

Plate movement can cause:

  • earthquakes
  • volcanoes
  • tsunamis

Scientists study tectonic activity to reduce risk and improve preparedness.


Geological Time

Earth is about 4.5 billion years old.

Geological changes happen slowly over millions of years.


Key Terms

TermMeaning
Continental DriftContinents moving over time
Plate TectonicsTheory explaining plate movement
PangaeaAncient supercontinent
GondwanaSouthern supercontinent
LaurasiaNorthern supercontinent
Mantle ConvectionMovement of hot mantle rock
SubductionOne plate forced under another
EpicentreSurface point above earthquake focus
LithosphereRigid outer layer of Earth

Common Exam Questions

  1. Describe two pieces of evidence for continental drift.
  2. Why was Wegener’s theory rejected?
  3. Explain mantle convection.
  4. Compare the three plate boundaries.
  5. Explain how earthquakes occur.
  6. Describe how seafloor spreading supports plate tectonics.

Quick Summary

\text{Pangaea split apart as tectonic plates slowly moved due to mantle convection inside Earth.}

  • Continents were once joined together
  • Evidence includes fossils, rocks, coastlines, and climate
  • Tectonic plates move slowly over time
  • Plate movement causes earthquakes, volcanoes, and mountains
  • Plate tectonics is the accepted modern theory

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