2-Earth_Composition_Structure
2-Earth_Composition_Structure
2-Earth_Composition_Structure
Structure:
A Journey to the Center of the
Earth
Earth’s Surface
• Our experience with Earth is limited to its surface.
• Yet Earth has a complicated interior.
• Earth is characterized by…
– An internally generated magnetic field.
The Black Canyon of the Gunnison, CO
– A layered interior
• Solid and liquid layers.
– A gaseous envelope.
• i.e. atmosphere
The Solar System
• Human perceptions have changed.
– Early history – Planets as moving lights.
– 1600s – 1st telescopes saw hazy spheres.
– Today – A complex, evolving system.
– Structure
– History
Magnetic field
- region affected by force
emanating from a magnet
- grows stronger as
separating
distance decreases
- attracts or repels magnetically
charged or moving electrically
charged objects
Earth’s Magnetic Field
Magnetic field
- Like a bar magnet, Earth’s magnetic field is a dipole, (has both a N and S pole)
- Solar wind contains electromagnetic particles that are deflected by earth’s field.
These particles distort the shape of earth’s magnetic field in space
- Van Allen belts – two belts in the inner magnetic field where high energy cosmic
rays are trapped. Protects us from solar radiation!
Northern & Southern Lights
o Convection
o Method of heat transfer in a fluid
o Think lava lamp!
o Cold is more dense = sinks
o Hot is less dense = rises
o This process results in circular convection
cells
o Also causes pressure gradients which
create wind!
o Also applies to the interior of the Earth
• Density = Mass/Volume
• Measures how much mass is in a given volume.
• Expressed in units of mass/volume e.g. g/cm3
• Ice floats…why?
Then centrifugal force (not centripetal) would cause the planet to flatten into a
disk.
This has (obviously) not happened…
Earth’s Layers
Earth’s shape as a clue to the layering of the earth
• If the Earth consisted of a thin solid shell over a thick liquid
center, then the surface would rise and fall with tides like
the ocean – This does not happen; only the oceans rise and
fall.
© W. W. Norton
The Crust
• The outermost “skin” of Earth with variable thickness.
– Thickest under mountain ranges (70 km – 40 miles).
– Thinnest under mid-ocean ridges (3 km – 2 miles).
• The Mohorovičić discontinuity or “Moho” is the
lower boundary.
– Separates the crust from the upper mantle.
– Discovered in 1909 by Andrija Mohorovicic.
– Marked by a change in the velocity of seismic P waves.
Two Types of Crust
• Continental crust – Underlies the continents.
– Avg. rock density about 2.7 g/cm3.
– Avg. thickness 35-40 km.
– Felsic composition. Avg. rock type = Granite
• Oceanic crust – Underlies the ocean basins.
– Density about 3.0 g/cm3.
– Avg. thickness 7-10 km.
– Mafic composition
Avg. rock type =
Basalt/Gabbro
Two Types of Crust
• Crustal density controls surface position.
– Continental crust
• Less dense; “floats higher.”
– Oceanic crust
• More dense: “floats lower.”
Crustal Composition
• 98.5% of the crust is comprised of just 8 elements.
• Oxygen is (by far!) the most abundant element in the crust.
– This reflects the importance of silicate (SiO2-based) minerals.
– As a large atom, oxygen occupies ~93% of crustal volume.
Bulk Earth Composition
35%
10%
30%
10%
15%
Earth’s Mantle
• Solid rock layer between the crust and the core.
• 2,885 km thick, the mantle is 82% of Earth’s volume.
• Mantle composition = ultramafic rock called peridotite.
• Below ~100-150 km, the rock is hot enough to flow.
• It convects: hot mantle rises, cold mantle sinks.
• Three subdivisions: upper, transitional, and lower.
The Core
• An iron-rich sphere with a radius of 3,471 km.
• 2 components with differing seismic wave behavior.
– Outer core
• Liquid iron-nickel-sulfur
• 2,255 km thick
• Density – 10-12 g/cm3
– Inner core
• Solid iron-nickel alloy
• Radius of 1,220 km.
• Density – 13 g/cm3