There are rocks on every continent that are 3 to 4 billion years old.
Age of oldest rocks on ocean floor.
In 1990 after 20 years of searching geologists found the oldest oceanic rocks by drilling into the seafloor of the western pacific.
The crust overlies the solidified and uppermost layer of the mantle the crust and the solid mantle layer together constitute oceanic lithosphere.
The oldest ocean floor is located near the continents next to a subduction zone.
Consider how the age of rocks is related to the shape of the seafloor you saw in step 3.
This image shows the age of rocks on the atlantic ocean seafloor.
Oceanic crust is the uppermost layer of the oceanic portion of a tectonic plate it is composed of the upper oceanic crust with pillow lavas and a dike complex and the lower oceanic crust composed of troctolite gabbro and ultramafic cumulates.
These rocks turned out to be about 200 million years old only.
The ocean plates spread and grow in opposite directions so rocks that are equidistance from the center have the same magnetic polarity and age.
Examine the color code to understand how the age of rocks changes from the center to the edges of the ocean floor.
Why are there no oceanic rocks older than 200 million years.
This dataset shows the age of the ocean floor along with the labeled tectonic plates and boundaries.
Contours of 20 million years are available as a layer that is currently set to invisible.