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Divergent Plate Boundaries Are Locations Where Plates Are Moving Away From One

Divergent plate boundaries occur where plates are moving apart. Molten rock rises from below, pushing and stretching the plates until they break apart. This creates new crust as magma fills the gap. Examples are mid-ocean ridges like the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. Convergent boundaries occur where plates move toward each other. One plate subducts under the other, which can cause volcanoes and earthquakes. Examples are the Cascadia subduction zone off the US Northwest coast and the Andes. Transform boundaries connect divergent boundaries, where plates slide horizontally past each other, causing earthquakes.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
98 views4 pages

Divergent Plate Boundaries Are Locations Where Plates Are Moving Away From One

Divergent plate boundaries occur where plates are moving apart. Molten rock rises from below, pushing and stretching the plates until they break apart. This creates new crust as magma fills the gap. Examples are mid-ocean ridges like the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. Convergent boundaries occur where plates move toward each other. One plate subducts under the other, which can cause volcanoes and earthquakes. Examples are the Cascadia subduction zone off the US Northwest coast and the Andes. Transform boundaries connect divergent boundaries, where plates slide horizontally past each other, causing earthquakes.

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Jann Roed Flores
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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Divergent plate boundaries are locations where plates are moving away from one

another. This occurs above rising convection currents. The rising current pushes up on the
bottom of the lithosphere, lifting it and flowing laterally beneath it. This lateral flow causes
the plate material above to be dragged along in the direction of flow. At the crest of the
uplift, the overlying plate is stretched thin, breaks and pulls apart.

Divergent Plate Boundary - Oceanic: When a divergent boundary occurs beneath


oceanic lithosphere, the rising convection current below lifts the lithosphere producing a
mid-ocean ridge. Extensional forces stretch the lithosphere and produce a deep fissure.
When the fissure opens, pressure is reduced on the super-heated mantle material below. It
responds by melting and the new magma flows into the fissure. The magma then solidifies
and the process repeats itself.

The Mid-Atlantic Ridge is a classic example of this type of plate boundary. The Ridge is a
high area compared to the surrounding seafloor because of the lift from the convection
current below. (A frequent misconception is that the Ridge is a build-up of volcanic
materials, however, the magma that fills the fissure does not flood extensively over the
ocean floor and stack up to form a topographic high. Instead, it fills the fissure and solidifies.
When the next eruption occurs, the fissure most likely develops down the center of the
cooling magma plug with half of the newly solidified material being attached to the end of
each plate.

Effects that are found at a divergent boundary between oceanic plates include: a submarine
mountain range such as the Mid-Atlantic Ridge; volcanic activity in the form of fissure
eruptions; shallow earthquake activity; creation of new seafloor and a widening ocean basin.

Divergent Plate Boundary - Continental: When a divergent boundary occurs beneath a


thick continental plate, the pull-apart is not vigorous enough to create a clean, single break
through the thick plate material. Here the thick continental plate is arched upwards from the
convection current's lift, pulled thin by extensional forces,and fractured into a rift-shaped
structure. As the two plates pull apart, normal faults develop on both sides of the rift and the
central blocks slide downwards. Earthquakes occur as a result of this fracturing and
movement. Early in the rift-forming process, streams and rivers will flow into the sinking rift
valley to form a long linear lake. As the rift grows deeper it might drop below sea level
allowing ocean waters to flow in. This will produce a narrow, shallow sea within the rift. This
rift can then grow deeper and wider. If rifting continues a new ocean basin could be
produced.

The East Africa Rift Valley is a classic example of this type of plate boundary. The East Africa
Rift is in a very early stage of development. The plate has not been completely rifted and
the rift valley is still above sea level but occupied by lakes at several locations. The Red Sea
is an example of a more completely developed rift. There the plates have fully separated
and the central rift valley has dropped below sea level.
Convergent plate boundaries are locations where lithospheric plates are moving towards
one another. The plate collisions that occur in these areas can produce earthquakes,
volcanic activity and crustal deformation.

Convergent Plate Boundary - Oceanic and Continental Plates: (see illustration above)
When continental and oceanic plates collide the thinner and more dense oceanic plate is
overridden by the thicker and less dense continental plate. The oceanic plate is forced down
into the mantle in a process known as "subduction". As the oceanic plate descends it is
forced into higher temperature environments. At a depth of about 100 miles (160 km)
materials in the subducting plate begin to approach their melting temperatures and a
process of partial melting begins.

This partial melting produces magma chambers above the subducting oceanic plate. These
magma chambers are less dense than the surrounding mantle materials and are buoyant.
The buoyant magma chambers begin a slow asscent through the overlying materials,
melting and fracturing their way upwards. The size and depth of these magma chambers
can be determined by mapping the earthquake activity arround them. If a magma chamber
rises to the surface without solidifying the magma will break through in the form of a
volcanic eruption.

The Washington-Oregon coastline of the United States is an example of this type of


convergent plate boundary. Here the Juan de Fuca oceanic plate is subducting beneath the
westward moving North American continental plate. The Cascade Mountain Range is a line
of volcanoes above the melting oceanic plate. The Andes Mountain Range of western South
America is another example of a convergent boundary between an oceanic and continental
plate. Here the Nazca Plate is subducting beneath the South American plate.

Effects of a convergent boundary between an oceanic and continental plate include: a zone
of earthquake activity that is shallow along the continent margin but deepens beneath the
continent, sometimes an ocean trench immediately off shore of the continent, a line of
volcanic eruptions a few hundred miles inland from the shoreline, destruction of oceanic
lithosphere.

Convergent Plate Boundary - Oceanic: When a convergent boundary occurs between


two oceanic plates one of those plates will subduct beneath the other. Normally the older
plate will subduct because of its higher density. The subducting plate is heated as it is
forced deeper into the mantle and at a depth of about 100 miles (150 km) the plate begins
to melt. Magma chambers are produced as a result of this melting and the magma is lower
in density than the surrounding rock material. It begins ascending by melting and fracturing
its way throught the overlying rock material. Magma chambers that reach the surface break
through to form a volcanic eruption cone. In the early stages of this type of boundary the
cones will be deep beneath the ocean surface but later grow to be higher than sea level.
This produces an island chain. With continued development the islands grow larger, merge
and an elongate landmass is created.

Japan, the Aleutian islands and the Eastern Caribbean islands of Martinique, St. Lucia and St.
Vincent and the Grenadines are examples of islands formed through this type of plate
boundary
Effects that are found at this type of plate boundary include: a zone of progressively deeper
earthquakes, an oceanic trench, a chain of volcanic islands, and the destruction of oceanic
lithosphere.

Convergent Plate Boundary - Continental: (see illustration above) This is a difficult


boundary to draw. First it is complex and second, it is poorly understood when compared to
the other types of plate boundaries. In this type of convergent boundary a powerful collision
occurs. The two thick continental plates collide and both of them have a density that is
much lower than the mantle, which prevents subduction (there may be a small amout of
subduction or the heavier lithosphere below the continental crust might break free from the
crust and subduct).

Fragments of crust or continent margin sediments might be caught in the collision zone
between the continents forming a highly deformed melange of rock. The intense
compression can also cause extensive folding and faulting of rocks within the two colliding
plates. This deformation can extend hundreds of miles into the plate interior.

Effects found at a convergent boundary between continental plates include: intense folding
and faulting, a broad folded mountain range, shallow earthquake activity, shortening and
thickening of the plates within the collision zone.

Transform Plate Boundaries are locations where two plates slide past one another. The fracture zone that forms a
transform plate boundary is known as a transform fault. Most transform faults are found in the ocean basin and
connect offsets in the mid-ocean ridges. A smaller number connect mid-ocean ridges and subduction zones.

Transform faults can be distinguished from the typical strike-slip faults because the sense of movement is in the
opposite direction (see illustration above). A strike-slip fault is a simple offset, however, a transform fault is formed
between two different plates, each moving away from the spreading center of a divergent plate boundary. When you
look at the transform fault diagram above, imagine the double line as a divergent plate boundary and visualize which
way the diverging plates would be moving.
Transform faults are locations of recurring earthquake activity and faulting. The earthquakes are usually shallow
because they occur within and between plates that are not involved in subduction. Volcanic activity is normally not
present because the typical magma sources of an upwelling convection current or a melting subducting plate are not
present.

Isostasy:

A condition of gravitational balance (similar to floating) in which a mass of lighter crustal rocks are buoyantly
supported from below by denser mantle rocks. The crustal rocks above subside into the mantle until they have
displaced an adequate amount of mantle material to support them.

Isostasy: (Greek: iso-, "same") Isostasy is the concept that the elevation of the Earth's
surface (over tens of millions of years) seeks a balance between the weight of lithospheric
rocks and the buoyancy of asthenospheric "fluid" (nearly-molten rock). Gentle regional
movement of the lithosphere occurs in response to short-term (thousands to millions of
years) loading and unloading, as by ice, erosion and sediment deposition.

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