Plate Boundaries PDF
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This document explains the concepts of divergent, convergent, and transform plate boundaries. It details the processes of plate movement and their associated geological features, such as volcanoes, earthquakes, and mountain ranges. Knowledge of plate boundaries is crucial to understanding the dynamic processes of Earth's surface and interior.
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# Plate Boundaries **Cut and paste the pictures and statements below into your books under the following headings: Divergent, Convergent and Transform.** ## Divergent Plate Boundaries - This often creates a zone with many volcanoes and earthquakes. - Leads to subduction zones where the sea floor...
# Plate Boundaries **Cut and paste the pictures and statements below into your books under the following headings: Divergent, Convergent and Transform.** ## Divergent Plate Boundaries - This often creates a zone with many volcanoes and earthquakes. - Leads to subduction zones where the sea floor (oceanic crust), which is very dense pushes under the lighter continental crust. - Also known as constructive or extensional plate boundaries. - New crust is generated e.g. the mid-Atlantic Rift. Upwelling magma is ejected at the surface. As the newly-formed basalt cools, it adds to the plates. ## Convergent Plate Boundaries - When tectonic plates slide and grind against each other. - May lead to the formation of mountains either by physically pushing up the continental crust or by the melting and buoyant rise of less dense rock material generated during subduction. - Most are locked in tension before suddenly releasing, sliding and causing earthquakes. - Subduction zones are also being considered as possible disposal sites for nuclear waste, where the action would carry the material into the planetary mantle. - Rock closest to the boundary is younger than rock further away on the same plate. - The Southern Alps rise dramatically beside the Alpine Fault on New Zealand's West Coast. - Initially produce rifts which produce rift valleys if occur on continents. - Convection in the mantle causes material to rise to the base of the plate boundary, supplying heat & reducing pressure that melts rock beneath the rift area, filling the gap left when they part. - Where two plates move towards each other. - Also called destructive plate boundaries. - Continental collisions in which the colliding plate material is of similar density may also cause mountain-building. - Most are found on oceanic plates, but the most famous are continental, e.g. San Andreas Fault. - Subduction causes oceanic trenches, such as the Mariana trench, where one plate begins its descent beneath another. - Without subduction, plate tectonics could not exist. Earth's crust would not have split into continents. Oceans and all of the solid Earth would lie beneath a global ocean. ## Transform Plate Boundaries - Also known as fault/ strike-slip/sliding/ conservative plate boundary. - The plates move away from each other. - Most exist between oceanic plates, causing oceanic rifts. - During collisions between two continental plates, large mountain ranges, such as the Himalayas are formed.