Endogenic Processes 1
Endogenic Processes 1
Endogenic Processes 1
ENDOGENIC PROCESS
Exogenic/Endogenic Systems
The EXOGENIC PROCESSES ARE:
WEATHERING, EROSION, TRANSPORTATION,
DEPOSITION and Mass Wasting. They are
energy-atmosphere and water-weather systems
activated. These occur at or near the surface of
the Earth.
The ENDOGENIC PROCESSES, include
TECTONIC Processes and VULCANISM.
Endogenic Processes
• The ground we live on is moving all the time.
Endogenic Forces, are Forces within the earth that
cause the ground to move. Rock layers at the surface
of the earth are broken, twisted and shaken when the
ground moves. Land is destroyed in many places and
created in other places. When the land is shaped by
endogenic Forces we call this endogenic processes.
Oceanic-Oceanic Convergence
Convergent Boundary
Continental-continental Convergence
Divergent Boundary- when two
plates move away from each other.
Most divergent boundaries occur along the crest of the oceanic ridges causing
upwelling of magma due to seafloor spreading.
Seafloor spreading
• Seafloor spreading happens along the
boundaries of tectonic plates that are
moving apart from each other. These
areas are called mid-ocean ridges. New
seafloor is created at the bottom, or rift, of
a mid-ocean ridge. Ocean basins that
have mid-ocean ridges are expanding.
The Atlantic basin, for instance, is
expanding because of seafloor spreading.
Evolution of Ocean basin
Oceanic basins are the result of tectonic forces and processes. All of the ocean
basins were formed from volcanic rock that was released from fissures located at
the mid-oceanic ridges.
Transform Plate Boundary- when
two plates slide past each other.
• Tectonic forces come in three types:
tensional stress, compressional stress and
shearing stress.
• Likewise, tectonic processes come in three
types based on the types of tectonic forces:
folding ( rocks are pushed toward each
other)
Faulting ( rocks are fractured and brittles
are displaced)
Shearing ( rocks are cleaved off )
Foldin
g
Folding is one of the endogenic processes. When two
forces push towards each other from opposite sides, the
rock layers will bend into folds. The process by which
folds are formed are due to compressional forces known as
folding.
There are large-scale and small-scale folds. Large-scale
folds are found mainly along destructive plate boundaries.
Europe Asia
4% 37%
Australia
6%
How do volcanoes work?
• Heat and pressure cause rocks to melt and form magma.
• Magma needs to get out, too much pressure!!!!!!
• Rise in temperature or drop in pressure causes magma to form
faster.
How do volcanoes work?
• Magma is forced
onto Earth’s
surface.
• It dries and
hardens, this
happens many
times over
thousands of years.
• Eventually a
mountain called a
volcano is formed.
Parts of a Volcano
• Most volcanoes share a
specific set of features.
Crater
Lava
Side Vent
Main Vent
Where do most volcanoes occur?
• Volcanoes occur at both
divergent and convergent
boundaries and also at hot
spots.
Magma does not form everywhere. It forms in
subduction zones, hot spots/mantle plumes.
Magma production at the subduction zones occur due to the
following conditions:
1.Increased temperature due to friction-Friction heats
rocks as one plate moves downward. The additional heat
contributes to melting.
2.Addition of water to the asthenosphere- a subducting
plate is covered by oceanic crust which is soaked in seawater.
As the soaked oceanic crust dives into the mantle, the water
boils to generate steam. The addition of hot water melts
portions of the asthenosphere, forming large quantities of
magma.
3.Pressure-relief melting- Melting due to pressure relief
happens when rocks in the asthenosphere flow upward when a
subducting plate descends.
Why do we have different types of
Volcanoes?
• The process of magma formation is different
at each type of plate boundary.