Types of plate margins
Conservative plate boundaries
Constructive/divergent plate boundaries
destructive plate boundaries
oceanic plates
continental plates
subduction
the oceanic plate is recycled into the earth’s mantle at a destructive plate boundary
mantle plume
a large column of magma rising through the mantle that creates a hot spot on the surface
Intra-plate
occurring within a tectonic plate e.g. an earthquake in Gujarat, 2001
Convection
the exchange of heat by the movement of a liquid. Convection currents in the mantle move tectonic plates
Seismic waves
When energy from an earthquake is released from the focus in shock waves and travels through the earth’s layers. Can be P-waves, S-waves and L-waves
Focus
Where an earthquake occurs. Where the pressure is released underground and where the energy radiates out from
Epicentre
The point directly above the center of the earthquake on the earth’s surface.
Hazard
A perceived natural event that has potential to threaten life and property
Disaster
The reality of a hazard happening and causing a significant impact on a vulnerable population
Hazard risk equation
risk = hazard * vulnerability / capacity to cope
Distribution of tectonic hazards
Hotspots
-Hot plumes of magma rising under a weakness in a plate causes the magma to rise through the surface through the weakness
- The magma plume stays where it is as the plate slowly moves over it,
- The magma dries, a chain of volcanic islands with extinct volcanoes are produced e.g. Hawaii
Intra-plate earthquakes
Earth’s core
Mantle
Asthenosphere
Lithosphere
Ridge push
elevated altitudes of oceanic crust and convection currents at ocean ridges causes plates to slide down