3.1. Plate Tectonics Flashcards

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1
Q

Why is the Earth’s crust is broken up into moving plates?

A
  • Convection currents in the mantle
  • Heat from the core heats the mantle which makes the magma rise
  • This current cools down as it comes closer to the surface of the Earth
  • As a result it moves in a horizontal direction along the bottom of the crust
  • When the current cools down more, the convection current descends and go towards the core
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2
Q

Oceanic Crust

A
  • Denser, newer and thicker than continental

- Made of dark basaltic rocks

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3
Q

Continental Crust

A
  • Colder, thicker and less dense than continental

- Made of light-colored granite rocks

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4
Q

Mantle

A

Zone of molten Silicates and other minerals. Molten so it moves, the source of this is the Earth’s intense heat which sets up convection currents in the mantle

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5
Q

Outer Core

A
  • Made of liquid Iron and nickel
  • Source of decay due to radioactive elements
  • under slightly less pressure
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6
Q

Inner Core

A
  • Made of solid iron and nickel

- Solid, despite temperatures of 3700 degrees celsius because of the intense pressure there.

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7
Q

Divergent Boundaries

A
  • Occurs where 2 plates move away from each other

- Rifting occurs due to the plates moving apart.

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8
Q

Examples of Divergent Boundaries

A
  • oceanic + oceanic - Mid-Atlantic Ridge - American plates are moving away from the Eurasian and African plates (all oceanic crust sea-floor spreading)
  • continental + continental - East African Rift Valley
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9
Q

Convergent Boundaries

A
  • Occurs where 2 plates converge (oceanic + continental or oceanic + oceanic)
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10
Q

Examples of Convergent Boundaries

A
  • oceanic + continental - Nazca plate (oceanic) and South American plate (continental) creating the Andes mountains
  • oceanic + oceanic - Japan
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11
Q

Collision Boundaries

A
  • Occurs where 2 plates of continental crust converge
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12
Q

Examples of Collision Boundaries

A

Indian plate collides with Eurasian plate (both continental crust) forming the Himalayas

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13
Q

Conservative Boundaries

A
  • Occurs where 2 plates move parallel to each other, land is neither created or destroyed
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14
Q

Examples of Conservative Boundaries

A

North American plate and Pacific plate - The San Andreas fault

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15
Q

Earth Structure

A
Crust 
Lithosphere 
Asthenosphere
Mantle 
Outer core 
Inner core
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16
Q

Lithosphere

A

the rigid outer part of the earth, consisting of the crust and upper mantle.

17
Q

Asthenosphere

A

Semi-molten and what tectonic plates float on

18
Q

Thickness of continental crust

A

35-70km average

19
Q

Thickness of oceanic crust

A

6-10km average

20
Q

Nature of continental crust

A

light - silica and aluminium

21
Q

Nature of oceanic crust

A

dark - mainly basalt

22
Q

Mechanisms of plate movement

A

Ridge push, Convection drag, Slab pull

23
Q

Ridge Push

A

Intrusion of magma into spreading ocean ridges pushes plates apart

24
Q

Convection Drag

A

Convection currents in the mantle drags the crust

25
Q

Slab Pull

A

Cold, denser oceanic lithosphere sinks due to gravity, and drags the rest of the plate with it

26
Q

Sea-floor Spreading

A
  • There is upwelling of magma as it pushes up through the Earth’s mantle and breaks through the crust at the mid-ocean ridge, resulting in doming of the surface
  • The magma hardens to form new ocean crust
  • The new ocean crust splits apart the old crust and pushes both halves away from the ridge
  • The old crust gradually moves further away from the mid-ocean ridge, and the ocean floor gets wider
  • The rock furthest away from the ridge is the most heavy, and so pulls the rest of the plate with it - slab pull
27
Q

Subduction

A
  • Sinking of a plate beneath another
  • Oceanic plates are heavier than continental plates. Zones usually dip at angles 30-70 but older, heavier plates dip more steeply.
28
Q

Fold mountains

A
  • When plates move towards each other they are forced up as they collide
  • The lighter plate buckles up and folds
29
Q

Ocean ridges

A
  • The longest linear, uplifted features of the Earth’s surface
  • Magma rises as the plates move away from each other and cool when it reaches the surface
  • Convection currents cause the uplifting of ocean floors
30
Q

Ocean Trench

A
  • Long, narrow depressions in the ocean floor with depths of over 6000m and up to 11,000m
  • When plates converge, denser plates are pushed beneath the lighter plate and deep into the mantle
31
Q

Volcanic island arcs

A
  • A series of volcanic islands
  • When lithosphere is subducted the slab melts when the edges reach a depth which is sufficiently hot. Hot, remelted material from the subducting slab rises and leaks into the crust, forming a series of volcanoes.
32
Q

Processes at Convergent Boundaries

A
  • two plates converge: an oceanic plate and continental plate and there is subduction of the oceanic plate under the continental plate
  • at the point of subduction, an ocean trench is created on the ocean floor
  • the descending ocean plate is heated by friction created at the subduction zone and melts due to heat and increasing pressure in the mantle
  • the newly formed magma is less dense than the surrounding material and therefore rises through weaknesses towards the surface - where it rises through cracks in the crust
33
Q

Processes at Collision boundaries

A
  • 2 plates of continental crust move together - both plates are rigid, low density and no subduction occurs
  • Forces of collision causes the crust to deform and any ocean sediments between the two plates are forced up
  • This results in Orogenesis as the folding and faulting creates fold mountains
  • No volcanoes due to the absence of a magma source due to lack of subduction