structure of the earth
inner core: solid iron and nickel- 6000 degrees Celsius
outer core: semi molten iron and nickel
mantle: semi molten 1000-3500 degrees Celsius
asthenosphere: rigid layer of mantle below lithosphere
crust: rock
lithosphere: top layer of mantle and crust which is split into tectonic plates
difference between continental and oceanic crust
continental crust is thicker but less dense- 30-70km thick
oceanic: thinner but more dense- 6-10km thick
explain the convection currents theory
explain slab pull
explain ridge push( gravitational pull)
sea floor spreading
name the 9 tectonic plates
pacific nazca north american south american african eurasion indo australian philippine antartic
name the 3 types of plate margins with examples
constructive: when two plates move apart
e. g. North American(east) and Eurasian(west) - Iceland
destructive: when two plates move towards each other
e. g. Eurasian (west) and Pacific (east) - Japan
conservative: when two plates move against each
other at different speeds and/or directions
e.g. Pacific and North American - San Andreas Fault
characteristics/processes associated with constructive plate margins
shield volcanoes - Eyjafjallajokull
shallow focused earthquakes
ocean ridges
rift valleys
how are ocean ridges formed
example of an ocean ridges
Iceland was formed by the build up of volcanoes along the mid Atlantic ridge
how are rift valleys formed
example of a rift valley
-east African rift valley: series of rift valleys from Mozambique to the red sea that is 400km long
it was created by diverging of the Nubian and Somalian plates
characteristics/processes associated with destructive plate margins
composite volcanoes - Mnt St Helens
OvO: shallow intermediate deep focused earthquakes
CvO: intermediate deep focused earthquakes
CvC: shallow focus earthquakes
deep sea trenches
fold mountains
island arcs
how are deep sea trenches formed
examples of deep sea trenches
peru-chile trench in the pacific ocean
how are fold mountains formed
examples of fold mountains
Himalayan mountain
how are volcanoes formed at destructive plate margins
- the magma is less dense than the continental plate so it will rise back up as a volcano
how are island arcs formed
they are formed when the magma created by one plate subducting under another rises along the fault line
example of island arcs
the Mariana cluster islands
characteristics/processes associated with conservative margins
earthquakes occur here
how do earthquakes occur at conservative plate margins
examples of earthquakes at conservative plate margins
the pacific plate is moving past the North American plate
-San Andreas Fault in California