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Types of Plate Boundaries Divergent Plate Boundaries Convergent Plate Boundaries Transform Faults
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Divergent Plate Boundaries Mid-ocean ridges form along divergent boundaries. Magma pushes continental crust up causing it to break apart. Plates begin to move apart in opposite directions causing crustal material to slump downward, creating a rift valley. See animation.. Click here!!
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Divergent Plate Boundaries A linear sea is formed as water fills in the valley. Through continued divergence, an ocean basin forms, creating an ocean. Ex: Red Sea See animation.. Click here!!
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Red Sea
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Divergent Plate Boundaries Mid-ocean ridges have oceanic rises and oceanic ridges. –Oceanic rises gently sloping due to a fast rate of spreading. Ex: East Pacific Rise
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East Pacific Rise
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Divergent Plate Boundaries –Oceanic ridges have steeper slopes due to a slower rate of spreading. Ex: Mid-Atlantic Ridge
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Iceland and Mid-ocean Ridge
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Convergent Plate Boundaries Plates are pushed together Oceanic crust is subducted and absorbed into the mantle creating a subduction zone Produces a deep- ocean trench and volcanic arc.
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Three types of Convergence Oceanic/ Continental (Fig 1) Creates a subduction zone Subduction creates a deep trench On the continental plate, a continental arc forms parallel to the trench. Ex: Cascade & Andes Mountains
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The Andes
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Cascade Mountains
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Three types of convergence Oceanic/ Oceanic (Fig 2) –Subduction creates a deep trench. –As one oceanic plate subducts, a chain of volcanic mountains form, producing an island arc. Ex: Aleutian Islands & Mariana Trench
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Aleutian Island Arc
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Marianas Trench
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Three types of convergence Continental/ Continental (Fig 3) –As two continental plates collide, they buckle, fold and push upward to produce a mountain range. Ex: Himalayas
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Transform Faults/Boundaries Plates slide past one another along faults in the lithospheric plate Crustal material is neither created nor destroyed Ex: San Andreas Fault
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San Andreas Fault
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Hot Spots & Mantle Plumes Hot spots are areas of continued volcanic activity NOT associated with plate boundaries. Ex: Hawaiian Islands & Yellowstone National Park Hot spots are fueled by regions of rising molten rock called mantle plumes. (pg 62) Super volcano?????Super volcano Old Faithful
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Convection Cells and Magma Plumes
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Seamounts & Tablemounts Underwater volcanoes are called seamounts. As seamounts break the surface of the ocean, they may become islands. Over time, the seamount’s peak erodes away as the seamount subsides, eventually becoming a flat-top tablemount or Guyot.
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Hawaiian-Emperor Seamount
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Coral Reef Formation Fringing Reef: grow close to land, associated with active volcanic islands. Ex: Kurumba Island in the Maldives
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Coral Reef Formation Barrier Reef: Linear or circular reefs separated from land by a lagoon of water. Ex: Great Barrier Reef
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Coral Reef Formation Atoll: By this stage, the volcano is completely submerged. All that remains is the reef and a lagoon. Ex: Atafu in S. Pacific Click Me
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The Big Picture
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1-Asthenosphere 2-Lithosphere 3-Hot spot 4-Oceanic crust 5-Subducting plate 6-Continental crust 7-Continental rift zone (young plate boundary) 8-Convergent boundary plate 9-Divergent boundary plate 10-Transform plate boundary 11-Shield volcano 12-Oceanic spreading ridge 13-Convergent plate boundary 14-Strato volcano 15-Island arc 16-Plate 17-Asthenosphere 18-Trench
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And finally...
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