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Plate boundaries 8-3.6 Chapter 6, lesson 3 Page 198-205.

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Presentation on theme: "Plate boundaries 8-3.6 Chapter 6, lesson 3 Page 198-205."— Presentation transcript:

1 Plate boundaries 8-3.6 Chapter 6, lesson 3 Page

2 Divergent boundary Where 2 plates are moving apart
Most are located along mid-ocean ridge (sea floor spreading) New crust forms b/c magma pushes up & hardens between separating plates

3 Convergent boundary Where 2 plates come together & collide
Activity depends on the types of crust that meet More dense oceanic plate slides under less dense continental plate or another oceanic plate -subduction zone , some crust is destroyed 2 continental plates converge, both plates buckle & push up into mountain ranges

4 Transform boundary Where 2 plates slide past each other
Crust is neither created nor destroyed Earthquakes occur frequently along this type of boundary

5

6 Changes of Landforms over Geologic Time
Plates very slow rates- from about 1 to 10 cm per year At 1 time- continents joined together in one large landmass called Pangaea As plates continued to move & split apart, oceans were formed, landmasses collided 7 split apart until Earth’s landmasses came to be in the positions they are in now

7 Evidence Evidence of these landmasses, collisions, & splits comes from fossils, landform shape, features, rock structures, & climate changes Landmasses changes can occur at hot spots within the lithospheric plates Hot spot- area of volcanic activity in the middle of a tectonic plate Earth’s landmasses will continue to move & change during the geologic time of the future


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