新东方背诵文选 L36.Plate Tectonics and Sea-floor Spreading
时间:2005-05-03 16:00:00
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(单词翻译)
The theory of plate tectonics describes the motions of the
lithosphere1, the comparatively
rigid2 outer layer of the Earth that includes all the crust and part of the
underlying3 mantle4. The lithosphere(n.[地]岩石圈)is divided into a few dozen plates of various sizes and shapes, in general the plates are in motion with respect to one another. A mid-ocean
ridge5 is a boundary between plates where new
lithospheric6 material is injected from below. As the plates
diverge7 from a mid-ocean ridge they slide on a more yielding layer at the base of the lithosphere.
Since the size of the Earth is
essentially8 constant, new lithosphere can be created at the mid-ocean
ridges9 only if an equal amount of lithospheric material is consumed elsewhere. The site of this destruction is another kind of plate boundary: a subduction zone. There one plate dives under the edge of another and is reincorporated into the mantle. Both kinds of plate boundary are associated with fault systems, earthquakes and volcanism, but the kinds of
geologic10 activity observed at the two boundaries are quite different.
The idea of sea-floor spreading actually preceded the theory of plate tectonics. In its original version, in the early 1960's, it described the creation and destruction of the ocean floor, but it did not
specify11 rigid lithospheric plates. The hypothesis was
substantiated12 soon
afterward13 by the discovery that periodic reversals of the Earth's magnetic field are recorded in the oceanic crust. As magma rises under the mid-ocean ridge,
ferromagnetic14 minerals in the magma become magnetized in the direction of the magma become magnetized in the direction of the geomagnetic field. When the magma cools and
solidifies15, the direction and the polarity of the field are preserved in the magnetized
volcanic16 rock. Reversals of the field give rise to a series of magnetic stripes running parallel to the
axis17 of the
rift18. The oceanic crust thus serves as a magnetic tape
recording19 of the history of the geomagnetic field that can be dated independently; the width of the stripes indicates the rate of the sea-floor spreading.
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