plate movement and plate boundaries chapter 4, section 3

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Plate Movement and Plate Boundaries Chapter 4, Section 3

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Page 1: Plate Movement and Plate Boundaries Chapter 4, Section 3

Plate Movement and Plate

BoundariesChapter 4, Section 3

Page 2: Plate Movement and Plate Boundaries Chapter 4, Section 3

Plate Tectonics TheoryLithosphere is divided into plates

Plates move around on the asthenosphere

Page 3: Plate Movement and Plate Boundaries Chapter 4, Section 3
Page 4: Plate Movement and Plate Boundaries Chapter 4, Section 3

3 Causes of plate motion

Page 5: Plate Movement and Plate Boundaries Chapter 4, Section 3

Slab PullOceanic plate sinks (more dense)

Pulls rest of tectonic plate with it

Page 6: Plate Movement and Plate Boundaries Chapter 4, Section 3

Ridge PushOceanic crust is higher at ridge

Pushes plate underneath continent

Page 7: Plate Movement and Plate Boundaries Chapter 4, Section 3

ConvectionHappens in asthenosphere

Hot magma rises, cool magma sinks

Drags plates sideways

Page 8: Plate Movement and Plate Boundaries Chapter 4, Section 3

3 Types of Plate Boundaries

ConvergentDivergentTransform Fault

Page 9: Plate Movement and Plate Boundaries Chapter 4, Section 3

Convergent Boundaries

Page 10: Plate Movement and Plate Boundaries Chapter 4, Section 3

Continent / Continent

Plates thicken and buckle

Push upwardsMountain formation

Page 11: Plate Movement and Plate Boundaries Chapter 4, Section 3
Page 12: Plate Movement and Plate Boundaries Chapter 4, Section 3

Continent / OceanicOceanic plate sinks (more dense)

Subduction zoneTrenches formVolcanic mtns on coast

Page 13: Plate Movement and Plate Boundaries Chapter 4, Section 3
Page 14: Plate Movement and Plate Boundaries Chapter 4, Section 3

Oceanic / OceanicOne slides under the other

Subduction zonesVolcanic Islands

Page 15: Plate Movement and Plate Boundaries Chapter 4, Section 3

Divergent BoundaryPlates spread apartMagma risesNew lithosphere formed

Mid – Atlantic Ridge

Page 16: Plate Movement and Plate Boundaries Chapter 4, Section 3
Page 17: Plate Movement and Plate Boundaries Chapter 4, Section 3

Transform Boundary

Plates slide past each other

Produce earthquakes

Page 18: Plate Movement and Plate Boundaries Chapter 4, Section 3

Types of Plate Boundaries:Types of Plate Boundaries:

DivergentDivergent

ConvergentConvergent

TransformTransform

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Continent / Continent Examples

•Appalachian Mtns.

•Atlas Mtns.

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Page 23: Plate Movement and Plate Boundaries Chapter 4, Section 3

Continent / Oceanic Examples

•Andes•Cascades

•Mt. St. Helens

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Page 25: Plate Movement and Plate Boundaries Chapter 4, Section 3

Oceanic / Oceanic Examples

•Aleutians•Japan

•Philippines

Page 26: Plate Movement and Plate Boundaries Chapter 4, Section 3
Page 27: Plate Movement and Plate Boundaries Chapter 4, Section 3

Plate MovementPlate Movement

•Approx. 3-6 cm per year

•Rate a fingernail grows!

Page 28: Plate Movement and Plate Boundaries Chapter 4, Section 3

Flash card reviewFlash card review