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Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2

Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2

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Type of Boundary DescriptionSpecial FeatureExample DIVERGENT2 plates separate from each other Move in opposite drx Rift valley Mid Ocean Ridge Sea floor spreading Mid Atlantic Ridge Iceland Red Sea Gulf of Aden CONVERGENT TRANSFORM HOT SPOT

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Page 1: Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2

Lithospheric Plate Boundaries

Plate Tectonics Part 2

Page 2: Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2

Type of Boundary

Description Special Feature Example

DIVERGENT

CONVERGENT

TRANSFORM

HOT SPOT

Page 3: Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2

Type of Boundary

Description Special Feature Example

DIVERGENT 2 plates separate from each other

Move in opposite drx

Rift valley

Mid Ocean Ridge

Sea floor spreading

Mid Atlantic RidgeIcelandRed SeaGulf of Aden

CONVERGENT

TRANSFORM

HOT SPOT

Page 4: Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2

Type of Boundary

Description Special Feature Example

DIVERGENT 2 plates separate from each other

Move in opposite drx

Rift valley

Mid Ocean Ridge

Sea floor spreading

Mid Atlantic RidgeIcelandRed SeaGulf of Aden

CONVERGENT 2 plates move toward each other

collide

Subduction zoneMountain chainVolcanoes/EQDeep sea trenches

Mt. St. HelensAndes Mtns.Japan/PhilippinesMarianas Trench

TRANSFORM

HOT SPOT

Page 5: Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2

Type of Boundary

Description Special Feature Example

DIVERGENT 2 plates separate from each other

Move in opposite drx

Rift valley

Mid Ocean Ridge

Sea floor spreading

Mid Atlantic RidgeIcelandRed SeaGulf of Aden

CONVERGENT 2 plates move toward each other

collide

Subduction zoneMountain chainVolcanoes/EQDeep sea trenches

Mt. St. HelensAndes Mtns.Japan/PhilippinesMarianas Trench

TRANSFORM Plates slide past each other

Stressearthquakes

San Andreas Fault

HOT SPOT

Page 6: Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2

Type of Boundary

Description Special Feature Example

DIVERGENT 2 plates separate from each other

Move in opposite drx

Rift valley

Mid Ocean Ridge

Sea floor spreading

Mid Atlantic RidgeIcelandRed SeaGulf of Aden

CONVERGENT 2 plates move toward each other

collide

Subduction zoneMountain chainVolcanoes/EQDeep sea trenches

Mt. St. HelensAndes Mtns.Japan/PhilippinesMarianas Trench

TRANSFORM Plates slide past each other

Stressearthquakes

San Andreas Fault

HOT SPOT Magma rises and punches through the middle of a plate

Island chains form as the plate moves ORGeysers erupt

HawaiiYellowstone NP

Page 7: Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2

WHAT CAUSES TECTONIC ACTIVITY ?1. CONVECTION –

internal heat of the Earth rises

2. RADIOACTIVE DECAY – of Uranium (Ur), Thorium (Th) or Potassium (K)

3. VULCANISM4. CONDUCTIONOther planets have no tectonic

activity because they have already cooled

Page 8: Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2
Page 9: Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2

Movements of Plates

Page 10: Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2

Make a pattern of colored stripes with markers

Page 11: Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2

TYPES OF PLATE BOUNDARIES

• Divergent Margins

• Convergent Margins

• Transform Margins

• Hot Spots

Page 12: Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2

DIVERGENT BOUNDARIES

• Places where 2 (or more) plates are moving apart

• Most found on ocean floor

• As plates separate, narrow “rift” valley forms

• Ex.- Mid Atlantic Ridge, Red Sea, p 249

Page 13: Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2

CONVERGENT BOUNDARIES

• Place where 2 (or more) plates move toward each other, collide

• Types 1 Oceanic-Continental crusts 2 Continental-Continental Crusts 3 Oceanic- Oceanic Crust

Page 14: Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2

1. Oceanic-Continental Crust

• Oceanic crust is more dense (basalt)• It is forced under the continental crust (granite)• Forms deep ocean trench, volcanic

mountains• Ex.- Peru Trench, Andes Mountains, Cascade Mtns

Page 15: Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2
Page 16: Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2

2. Continental-Continental Crust

• Since both plates are of equal density, neither goes under (gets subducted)

• Plates crumple

• Form uplifted mountains• Ex.- Himalayan Mtns.

Page 17: Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2
Page 18: Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2

3. Oceanic-Oceanic Crust

• Bigger plate forces other under• Deep ocean trenches form and volcanic

island arcs

• Ex.- Marianas Trench, Aleutian Islands

Page 19: Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2
Page 20: Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2

TRANSFORM BOUNDARIES

• 2 or more plates slide past each other

• Plates do not slide smoothly-earthquakes

• Scrape and move in spurts

• Ex.- San Andreas Fault

Page 21: Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2
Page 22: Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2

HOT SPOTS

• Small, long lasting, extremely hot area in the middle of a plate

• Provides local source of energy for volcanism

• Plate continues to move, creating new island or feature above hot spot, geysers

• Ex.- Hawaii, Emperor Sea Mounts, Yellowstone N.P.

Page 23: Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2
Page 24: Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2
Page 25: Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2
Page 27: Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2

Illustration of Main Boundaries

Page 28: Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2

Why do plate move?

• Convection Currents

Page 29: Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2

Natural Hazards

• Earthquakes

• Volcanoes

• Tsunamis

Page 30: Lithospheric Plate Boundaries Plate Tectonics Part 2

Natural Resources

• Fertile Soil

• Ore Deposits

• Fossil Fuels

• Geothermal Energy