Convection Currents
Earth’s structure
- The Earth is composed of layers:
- Inner core: About 1400km in diameter, a solid and dense layer composed of iron and nickel with temperatures of about 5500°C
- Outer core: About 2100km thick, a semi-molten metal layer with temperatures between about 5000–5500°C
- Mantle: About 2900km thick, a semi-molten layer that is less dense than the outer core
- The upper mantle has two layers:
- The rigid layer above the asthenosphere, which, together with the crust, makes up the lithosphere
- The asthenosphere is a semi-molten, plastic-type layer, which moves under high pressure
- Crust: The thickness varies, and is made up of two types of crust
Earth's structure
- The Mohorovičić discontinuity – also known as Moho – is the boundary between the crust and the mantle
Crust
- There are two types of crust:
- The oceanic crust, which is thinner (5–10km) but heavier and denser
- The continental crust, which is thicker (25–90km) but is older and lighter
- Oceanic crust is continually being created and destroyed as a result of plate movement:
- The oceanic crust is denser and so subducts under the continental crust
- The continental crust is not destroyed and so is much older than the oceanic crust
Plate tectonics
- The crust is broken into several tectonic plates
Distribution of the major tectonic plates
- The tectonic plates move on top of the semi-molten mantle below
- A plate boundary or margin is where two plates meet
Convection currents
- In the past, the theory of convection currents was used on its own to explain tectonic plate movement
- The heat from radioactive decay in the core moves upwards into the mantle, creating convection currents
- More recently there are the ridge push and slab pull theories:
- Ridge push theorises that, as new crust is formed, it is pushed up into the spreading mid-ocean ridge, which forces them further apart
- Slab pull theory suggests that movement is the result of the weight of the denser oceanic plates subducting and dragging the remainder of the plate along
Diagram of convection currents