Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byBerenice Sandra Harper Modified over 9 years ago
1
Internal Forces that Shape the Earth (Plate Actions)
2
Plate Tectonics Continental Drift – plates move slowly across upper mantle “Pangaea” – supercontinent existed 250 million years ago
4
Divergent Boundary Plates separate / spread apart
5
A. Mid ocean ridge Two ocean plates separate
6
B. Rift Valley Two land plates separate
7
Convergent Boundaries Plates collide
8
A. Mountains Two land plates collide
9
B. Island Chains Two ocean plates collide
10
C.Ocean Trench and Mountains Land and ocean plates collide
11
Transform Boundary Two plates slide against each other
12
A. Fault
13
V. Earthquakes and volcanoes form along plate boundaries
14
External Forces that Shape the Earth
15
Weathering The breaking down of rock into sediment
16
Physical Weathering
17
Chemical Weathering
18
Erosion The carrying away of sediment
19
A. Water is the greatest agent of erosion
20
B. Wind
21
C. Glaciers / Ice
22
Landforms 1.Created by tectonic processes 1.Mountains, valleys 2.Created by erosion 1.Plateau, plains 3.Created by sediment deposition 1.Sand dune, floodplain
23
Most regions have a combination of all three types Example: Mountain range formed by tectonic activity. Erosion forms deep valleys between the mountains. Sediment eroded from the mountains is deposited at the mountains’ bases. Creates an alluvial fan.
24
Alluvial fan: fan-shaped deposit of mud and gravel often found at the base of mountains. Stream erodes the sediment in the alluvial fan and carries them to a river mouth. Sediment moves into the ocean and sinks, or it may accumulate and build a delta.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.