SEA FLOOR SPREADING
The Mid Atlantic ridge neatly divides the
Atlantic Ocean into two equal halves, and the geography of
the
ridge is almost exactly parallel to the coastlines of Africa and South America
as well as Europe and North America. Additionally, the age distribution
of the ocean floor is symmetrical along the axis of the ridge. The youngest
rocks on the floor of the Atlantic are at the mid ocean ridge. In fact, the
mid-ocean ridges are the site of active volcanic eruptions. The oceanic rocks
become older on either side of the ridge, increasing in age to a maximum of
approximately 175 million years in the North Atlantic near the coasts of Europe
and North America. 
MAGNETIC ANOMALIES AND THE AGE OF THE EARTH
For hundreds of years, since people began using compasses, we have relied
on them to point North. However, a million years ago, compasses would
have pointed South; before that, North, and so on, because the earth's magnetic
field flips its direction from time to time. It does not flip at regular intervals.
For example, the field was "normal" (the same direction as now)
for 200,000 years, "reversed" (the opposite direction from now)
for 300,000 years, normal for 50,000 years, reversed for 190,000 years, and
has now been normal for 730,000 years. These reversals are recorded in rocks
that contain iron (particularly basaltic volcanic rocks, because when the
volcanic flows cool, the iron contained within them is aligned parallel to
the prevailing magnetic field at that time). This means that basalts which
erupted at the midocean ridges preserve the record of magnetic field reversals;
rocks that cooled under "normal" magnetic fields are normally polarized
and rocks that cooled under "reversed" conditions are reversely
polarized. As the hot basalt emerges from the ridge, it is pushed away from
the ridge in both directions by more emerging basalt. This pushing out to
both sides causes magnetic "stripes", or anomalies, that are symmetrical
about the ridges. Because the reversal pattern is irregular, but the same
all over the world, it can be used like tree rings to date rocks by examining
the pattern of magnetization that they preserve. This "magnetostratigraphy"
has been verified by direct sampling of sea floor rocks and age determinations.
Discovery Topics > Plate Tectonics > Sea Floor Spreading <