Zusammenfassung der Ressource
GCSE Geography - Plate Boundaries
- Collision boundary
- Plates involved
- Eurasian plate
- Indo-Australian plate
- What happens
- Two continental plates clash into each other
- As they collide, they trigger earthquakes
- The rock between the plates gets pushed up and folded
- Hazards
- Earthquakes
- Landforms
- Mountains
- Conservative boundary
- What happens
- Two plates slide in the same direction
- However, one is moving faster
- As the plates slide past each other, they snag
- Pressure and tension builds up as the plates lock together
- Eventually one breaks down
- This causes a sudden surge forward
- Plates involved
- North American plate
- Pacific plate
- Hazards
- E.g. San Francisco earthquake
- April 18th 1906
- 8.25 on Richter scale
- Landforms
- San Andreas fault line
- Destructive boundary
- Plates involved
- Nazca plate
- Oceanic crust
- South American plate
- Continental crust
- What happens
- Two plates are pushed together
- The heavier oceanic plate gets subducted
- Oceanic plate sticks and locks as it tries
to slide under the continental plate
- Heat from friction and the mantle starts to melt the subducted plate
- Hazards
- Paricutin volcanoes
- Volcanoids
- Landforms
- Paricutin volcanoes
- Volcanoids
- Constructive boundary
- Plates involved
- North American plate
- Eurasian plate
- What happens
- Two plates move apart from one another
- A gap appears between them
- Molten magma rises to fill the gap
- This solidifies to create new rocks on the seabed
- Over time, the new rocks build up and break through the surface
- Hazards
- Volcanoes undersea
- Landforms
- Surtsey Island
- Created 14th November 1963
- Off the coast of Iceland