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Published byNoel Crawford Modified over 5 years ago
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Earth’s Crust OCEANIC CONTINENTAL
Denser, Basaltic, THINNER Mafic – rich in Iron (Fe) and Magnesium (Mg) CONTINENTAL Lighter, Granitic, THICKER Felsic – rich in Aluminum (Al) and Silicon (Si) ESRT page 10
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The Crust The crust is composed of two rocks. The continental crust is mostly granite. The oceanic crust is basalt. Basalt is much denser than the granite. Because of this the less dense continents ride on the denser oceanic plates.
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PLATE BOUNDARIES ESRT Page 5
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1. DIVERGENT Plates move apart, magma rises up
New crust is formed, volcanoes Results in Mid-Ocean ridges and Rift Valleys on continents
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2. Transform Plates slide past one another Results in - Faulting
- Ex. San Andreas Fault in California
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2. CONVERGENT plates converge (move together)
SUBDUCTION – more dense plate moves under less dense
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a. Oceanic vs. Continental Crust (subduction)
Oceanic (more dense) plate subducts under continental (less dense) plate Results in - Trenches - volcanic chain along coast of continent EX. Andes Mountains along South America
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b. 2 Oceanic Plates (subduction)
More dense plate subducts under the less dense oceanic plate Results in - Trenches, volcanoes and volcanic island chains Ex. Aleutian Islands in Alaska
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C. 2 Continental Plates (compression)
Plates collide Rocks break and build up Results In - Mountain building Ex. Himalayas
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ESRT Page 5 2 CONVERGING PLATES
OVERRIDING PLATE SUBDUCTING PLATE
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