Tuesday, August 31, 2010

plate tectonics and continental drift

         Hey you have reached Science Rocks. If you think this blog is boring please turn your computor off now.


 According to the theory of continental drift, the world was made up of a single continent through most of geologic time. That continent eventually separated and drifted apart, forming into the seven continents we have today. The first comprehensive theory of continental drift was suggested by the German meteorologist Alfred Wegener in 1912. The hypothesis asserts that the continents consist of lighter rocks that rest on heavier crustal material—similar to the manner in which icebergs float on water. Wegener contended that the relative positions of the continents are not rigidly fixed but are slowly moving—at a rate of about one yard per century.


According to the generally accepted plate-tectonics theory, scientists believe that Earth's surface is broken into a number of shifting slabs or plates, which average about 50 miles in thickness. These plates move relative to one another above a hotter, deeper, more mobile zone at average rates as great as a few inches per year. Most of the world's active volcanoes are located along or near the boundaries between shifting plates and are called plate-boundary volcanoes.

7 comments:

  1. good but i think u should of put a vid or pic

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  2. wow informational but i was bored... sorry

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  3. HEY DANIEL! I LIKE IT! YOU PUT UP SOME FUNNESSNESS AND PERSONALITY IN IT! MAYBE, LIK,E CHASE SAID, YOU COULD HAVE USED SOME PICS OR VIDS! KEEP IT UP! <3

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  4. Good job Daniel but u need 2 be yourself!! your more interesting that that!!!

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  5. i liked the very biggining but then it went down hill. it has gr8 info but u STILL need to be urself. add a video or a picture. make it fun to read! i no u cood do that:)

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  6. hey that was awsome keep making funny blogs

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