In the
Earth, the lithosphere includes the crust and the uppermost mantle, which
constitute the hard and rigid outer layer of the Earth. The lithosphere is
underlain by the asthenosphere, the weaker,
hotter, and deeper part of the upper mantle. The boundary between the
lithosphere and the underlying asthenosphere is defined by a difference in
response to stress: the lithosphere remains rigid for very long periods of
geologic time in which it deforms elastically and through brittle failure,
while the asthenosphere deforms viscously and accommodates strain through
plastic deformation. The lithosphere is broken into tectonic plates. The uppermost
part of the lithosphere that chemically reacts to the atmosphere, hydrosphere and biosphere through thesoil forming process is called the pedosphere.
The
concept of the lithosphere as Earth’s strong outer layer was developed by Joseph Barrell, who wrote a series of papers introducing the concept. The concept was based on the presence
of significant gravity anomalies over continental crust, from which he inferred
that there must exist a strong upper layer (which he called the lithosphere)
above a weaker layer which could flow (which he called the asthenosphere).
These ideas were expanded by Harvard geologist Reginald Aldworth Daly in 1940 with his seminal work "Strength and
Structure of the Earth" and
have been broadly accepted by geologists and geophysicists. Although these
ideas about lithosphere and asthenosphere were developed long before plate tectonic theory was articulated in the 1960s, the concepts that a
strong lithosphere exists and that this rests on a weak asthenosphere are
essential to that theory.
reference: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lithosphere ,
reference: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lithosphere ,
Walang komento:
Mag-post ng isang Komento