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Tectonic hazards
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Created by
Jacenter Frimpong
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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