Chapter 3. Earth’s Interior

Figure 3.1 The red rocks of the Tablelands in Gros Morne National Park are a sample of Earth’s mantle. Top: Red Tablelands rocks on the right stand in contrast to the green surroundings. Bottom: A closer view of Tablelands terrain, showing rocks weathered red, and a near absence of plant life. Click for attributions.

Chapter Goals

Complete this chapter so you can:

  • Explain the variations in the composition and characteristics of Earth’s different layers.
  • Explain how seismic data can be used to understand the structure of Earth’s interior.
  • Describe the temperature variations within Earth and their implications for internal processes such as mantle convection.
  • Explain the origins of Earth’s magnetic field and the timing of magnetic field reversals.
  • Describe the isostatic relationship between the crust and the mantle, and the implications of that relationship for geological processes on Earth

Ways to Know About Earth’s Interior

We need to know something about the inside of our planet—what it’s made of, and what happens within it—in order to understand how Earth works, especially the mechanisms of plate tectonics. Lucky for us, there are many ways for geologists gather information about Earth’s deep interior, because the one thing they can’t do is go down and look at it.

Happy Little Accidents of Plate Tectonics

The barren red rocks of the Tablelands stand in stark contrast to their lush green surroundings in Gros Morne National Park (Figure 3.1, top). If the Tablelands appear out of place, it’s because they are. The Tablelands are one of few places on Earth where you can walk directly on the rocks of Earth’s mantle, thanks to an accident of plate tectonics that happened hundreds of millions of years ago. The red colour comes from iron-bearing minerals reacting with oxygen. Unaltered, the rocks are dark green (Figure 3.2). The rocks lack vegetation because their chemical composition doesn’t provide adequate nutrients for plants.

Figure 3.2 Tablelands mantle rock with reddish weathering rind, and dark green fresh surface. Scale in cm. Source: Karla Panchuk (2017) CC BY 4.0.

Space Smash-Ups

Meteorites derived from smashed differentiated bodies (e.g., asteroids large enough to have separated into mantle and core) are another way to infer the nature of Earth’s interior. Asteroids that formed at a similar distance from the sun as Earth had a mineral composition akin to Earth’s. When these objects were shattered in giant collisions, the result was stony meteorites from fragmented mantle rock, and iron meteorites from fragmented core.

Earthquakes

We also get information about the structure of Earth’s interior by analyzing the speeds and paths of earthquake vibrations, called seismic waves.

 

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Physical Geology - H5P Edition V1.1 Copyright © 2021 by Karla Panchuk is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.