Seafloor Spreading



This diagram shows the Americas being separated from the Europe and Africa as the seafloor spreads. Continents are grey in color. Youngest seafloor is red and as seafloor gets older it becomes yellow, green and then blue.
Click on image for full size version (40K GIF)
Image from: NOAA/NESDIS/National Geophysical Data Center, Boulder, CO

This diagram provides evidence of seafloor spreading by showing the ages of ocean floor in the Atlantic and eastern Pacific Oceans. The red colors are the youngest parts of the seafloor, where fresh new crust is formed as lava seeps up from the deep interior of the Earth at spreading ridges. As new crust forms at these spreading ridges, older crust, colored green in the diagram, moves away from the ridge. The blue portions are the oldest regions of the seafloor. They are either next to continents, which also contain very old rocks, or are near areas on Earth where subduction is taking place.

The diagram shows the American continents being separated from the Eurasian and African continents. This is a very fast model of what has happened to the Earth’s plates over the past 250 million years.


Return to Plate Tectonics

Return to Earth's Surface & Interior

Earthquakes Under Pacific Ocean Floor Reveal Unexpected Circulation System

Rock Eating Bacteria Found at the Bottom of the Sea

Seafloor Spreading



This diagram shows the Americas being separated from the Europe and Africa as the seafloor spreads. Continents are grey in color. Youngest seafloor is red and as seafloor gets older it becomes yellow, green and then blue.
Click on image for full size version (40K GIF)
Image from: NOAA/NESDIS/National Geophysical Data Center, Boulder, CO

This diagram provides evidence of seafloor spreading by showing the ages of ocean floor in the Atlantic and eastern Pacific Oceans. The red colors are the youngest parts of the seafloor, where fresh new crust is formed as lava seeps up from the deep interior of the Earth at spreading ridges. As new crust forms at these spreading ridges, older crust, colored green in the diagram, moves away from the ridge. The blue portions are the oldest regions of the seafloor. They are either next to continents, which also contain very old rocks, or are near areas on Earth where subduction is taking place.

The diagram shows the American continents being separated from the Eurasian and African continents. This is a very fast model of what has happened to the Earth’s plates over the past 250 million years.


Return to Plate Tectonics

Return to Earth's Surface & Interior

Earthquakes Under Pacific Ocean Floor Reveal Unexpected Circulation System

Rock Eating Bacteria Found at the Bottom of the Sea

Seafloor Spreading



This diagram shows the Americas being separated from the Europe and Africa as the seafloor spreads. Continents are grey in color. Youngest seafloor is red and as seafloor gets older it becomes yellow, green and then blue.
Click on image for full size version (40K GIF)
Image from: NOAA/NESDIS/National Geophysical Data Center, Boulder, CO

This picture explains how seafloor spreading works! It shows the ages of ocean floor in the Atlantic and eastern Pacific Oceans.

The red sections are the newest area of the seafloor. They are at mid-ocean spreading ridges. These are places at the bottom of deep oceans where there is a crack between two plates and new lava comes to the surface from deep within the Earth.

As new seafloor forms at the spreading ridges, older parts move away from the ridge. The blue areas are the oldest. Sometimes the oldest parts of the seafloor are next to land and sometimes they are near places where subduction is happening.


Return to Plate Tectonics

Return to Earth's Surface & Interior

Earthquakes Under Pacific Ocean Floor Reveal Surprising Flow of Water

Rock Eating Bacteria Found at the Bottom of the Sea


Last modified February 4, 2008 by Becca Hatheway.
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