Seafloor Spreading Rate Calculator
Calculated Results:
Half-Spreading Rate: cm/year
Full Spreading Rate: cm/year
Note: Spreading rates vary globally, typically ranging from 1 cm to 16 cm per year.
Understanding Seafloor Spreading Rates
Seafloor spreading is a geological process where tectonic plates—large slabs of Earth's lithosphere—split apart from each other. This occurs at mid-ocean ridges, where new oceanic crust is formed through volcanic activity and then gradually moves away from the ridge.
How to Calculate Seafloor Spreading
The calculation of the seafloor spreading rate is a fundamental exercise in paleomagnetism and plate tectonics. Because we know that the Earth's magnetic field flips polarity at known intervals, geologists can use the magnetic "stripes" on the ocean floor to determine how old the crust is at a specific distance from the ridge.
The basic formula used is:
Units of Measurement
In geology, spreading rates are most commonly expressed in centimeters per year (cm/yr). This is because tectonic plates move roughly at the same speed that human fingernails grow. To calculate this using standard geological data, we must convert:
- Distance: Kilometers to Centimeters (1 km = 100,000 cm)
- Time: Millions of years (Ma) to Years (1 Ma = 1,000,000 years)
Half-Spreading vs. Full Spreading Rate
When you measure the distance from the central ridge to a specific point on one side, you are calculating the half-spreading rate. However, because the ridge is pushing plates in both directions simultaneously, the full spreading rate (the speed at which the two plates are moving away from each other) is double that value.
Realistic Examples
| Region | Approx. Full Rate | Classification |
|---|---|---|
| Mid-Atlantic Ridge | 2 – 5 cm/year | Slow-spreading |
| Southeast Indian Ridge | 5 – 9 cm/year | Intermediate-spreading |
| East Pacific Rise | 9 – 16 cm/year | Fast-spreading |
Step-by-Step Calculation Example
Suppose you find a sample of basalt on the seafloor that is 200 km away from the ridge axis. Laboratory dating shows this rock is 10 million years old (10 Ma).
- Convert distance to cm: 200 km × 100,000 = 20,000,000 cm.
- Convert time to years: 10 Ma × 1,000,000 = 10,000,000 years.
- Calculate Half-Rate: 20,000,000 / 10,000,000 = 2 cm/year.
- Calculate Full-Rate: 2 cm/year × 2 = 4 cm/year.