Plate Tectonics: Diagram 1 Himilayan Mountain Range
Plate Tectonics: Diagram 1 Himilayan Mountain Range
Plate Tectonics
1 The lithosphere (uppermost mantle + crust) which behaves as a strong rigid layer, is
broken up into pieces called called plates.
2 These plates move on the asthenosphere (which is weak and able to slowly flow in
response to uneven distribution of heat deep within the earth)
Diagram 1
Himilayan Mountain
Range
Diagram 2
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Diagram 3
Diagram 4
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Conclusion: It appears that all three of these forces (in (I) and (II)) are at work in plate motion,
but the contribution of each is currently unclear.
Diagram 5 (a)
(ii) E.g. Mid-Atlantic Ridge and East Pacific Rise (see Diagram 2)
Continental Rifting
(i) Divergent plate boundary can also develop within a continent, splitting it
into two or more smaller segments, forming a riftt (E.g. East African Rift
Valley)
Diagram 6
When two oceanic plates converge, the denser plate descends beneath
the lighter one.
Similar to the mechanism in Ocean-continental convergent boundary,
the subducting oceanic plate triggers melting in the hot wedge of mantle
rock that lies above it, causing volcanoes to grow up from the ocean
floor.
Continental drift:
1 Todays continents once formed a single landmass, which he named Pangaea (Greek for
"all land").
2 It broke into pieces due to the weaknesses in the earth's crust as they were made up of
less dense materials, which drifted centimeter by centimeter over millions of years until
they arrived at where they are now.
3 Figure 12 shows how the Pangaea split up into plates and drifted over the millions of
years.
4 The drift of the plates across the surface of the earth has been going on over millions of
years, which still changes the outward appearance of the earth.
5 When you look at the map of the world, you see how well the east coast of North and
South America fits into the west coast of Europe and Africa.
6 Over millions of years these continents have slowly drifted apart. (continental drift).