9.2 & 9.3 Plate Tectonics and Actions
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Transcript 9.2 & 9.3 Plate Tectonics and Actions
9.2 & 9.3 Plate Tectonics
Earth’s Major Plates
The lithosphere is divided up into segments called
plates
These plates continually move and change
Move on average of 5 cm a year (about like your
fingernail)
Movements are powered by unequal distributions
of heat within the Earth
As they move they interact in various ways
Types of Plate Boundaries
Divergent
Convergent
Transform
Divergent Boundaries
Spreading centers
Occurs when 2 plates move apart
Results in upwelling of material form the mantle to
create a new ocean floor
Example
Part of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge emerges from the
ocean & splits Iceland in half
Divergent Boundaries
Seafloor Spreading: the process where the ocean
floor is extended when 2 plates move apart
Oceanic Ridge: underwater mountain range created
from a divergent plate boundary
Typically 1000 – 4000 km wide
Example: Mid-Atlantic Ridge (runs the length of the
Atlantic Ocean separating N & S American Plates from
the Eurasian & African Plates
Divergent Boundaries
Rift Valley: deep faulted structure found along the
axes of divergent plate boundaries.
These can develop on land or on the ocean floor
Narrow
Runs the whole length of a mid-ocean ridge
Convergent Boundaries
Boundary where 2 plates move together
Results in oceanic lithosphere going beneath an
overriding plate, and descending into the mantle
The India Plate pushing upward into Eurasian Plate
and creating the Himalayan Mountains
Plates carrying continental crust are currently
moving toward each other and could one day
collide and merge
Boundary that once separated the 2 plates would
disappear when the 2 plates join
Convergent Boundaries
Subduction zone: a destructive plate where oceanic
crust is pushed down into the mantle under the second
plate
Ocean-Ocean Boundary: when 2 oceanic pieces
converge, 1 goes under the other. Volcanoes form under
the ocean.
Ocean – Continental Boundary: when the continental
plate converges with an oceanic plate, the less dense
continental plate floats. May cause volcanic eruptions.
Continental – Continental Boundary: when an oceanic
plate is subducted under the continental. A volcanic arc
forms
Ocean – Ocean Boundary
Ocean – Continental
Boundary
Continental – Continental
Boundary
Transform Fault
Boundaries
2 plates are sliding past one another without
production or destruction of the lithosphere
Example: San Andreas Fault is 800 km long and
runs throughout California
Plate Boundaries Video
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NtqumXEHK
Us
Resources
http://www.earthtoleigh.com
www.google.com
Prentice Hall Earth Science