Tectonic hazards

Cards (8)

  • Plate boundaries
    Also called plate margins, the parts of the world where one tectonic plate is next to another
  • Constructive (divergent) plate boundaries
    • Magma rising up in the mantle below, cooling off and spreading out to create new crust
    • Mostly appear at the bottom of the sea, with some evidence on land like in Iceland
  • Magma and gases like carbon dioxide along constructive boundaries

    Can melt through the crust and get released out, causing volcanic eruptions
  • Earthquakes happen at constructive boundaries but aren't usually that powerful
  • Destructive (convergent) plate boundaries
    • Tectonic plates being carried towards each other
    • Oceanic plate forced underneath continental plate in subduction
    • Water and dead plankton dragged down, turned into water vapour and carbon dioxide which bubble up and melt continental crust
    • Pressure builds up and eventually erupts violently
    • Extremely powerful earthquakes can happen as plates get stuck and then suddenly unstuck
  • Collision (convergent) plate boundaries
    • Both plates are continental, so they crash head-on and crumple upwards creating mountains like the Himalayas
    • Plates grind, crack and buckle upwards over millions of years, getting stuck and then suddenly unstuck, causing earthquakes
  • No volcanoes at collision boundaries, as there is no magma rising up from underneath
  • Conservative (transform) plate boundaries
    • Tectonic plates sliding past each other, either in opposite directions or at different speeds
    • Plate edges get stuck and then jump back into moving, releasing energy and causing earthquakes
    • No magma rising up, so no volcanoes