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objective: 3240-0501
EARTH IN MOTION

You and I live on the earth's lithosphere. The lithosphere
consists of two parts, a thin outside layer of solid rock
called the crust and the rigid upper part of the mantle. It
seems so solid that you would think the earth is solid all
the way through. However, we are actually "floating" on thick,
gooey, molten rock called the asthenosphere. The lithosphere
isn't just one continuous covering. It is divided into sections
called plates. These plates move around on top of the
asthenosphere which is about the consistency of a corn starch
and water mixture (obleck).
What happens when these plates move? Three things
can happen. They can collide, move apart, or slide past each
other.
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The boundary where two plates move apart is called a divergent
boundary.The illustration is courtesy of United States Geological
Survey (USGS).
As the plates at the boundary move apart, magma(molten rock) oozes
up and forms new crust. If this oozing magma is continually forming
new crust, then why doesn't the crust get bigger and bigger? As
new crust is added at divergent boundaries, it is also recycled
at convergent boundaries. |

Convergent boundaries are boundaries where the plates collide.
As they crash into each other, one plate almost always slides under
the other plate. This is called subduction zone, which means "to
be led down." Where subduction occurs old crusts is moved down into
the mantle where it melts. The magma is less dense which rises to
the surface forming volcanoes. |
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If you were to plot volcanoes on a map, you would see a pattern.
Many of the world's volcanoes are located in a region called the
Pacific Ring of Fire where the Pacific plate collides with other
plates. How do you think it got its name?
Continental to continental convergence is the collision between
two continental crustal plates. At this type boundary mountains
form buckeling, cracking, folding and up thrusting until the compressional
force stops. This process is often refered to as an ogogenesis.
The Himalaya mountains are an example of a range that is still
building.
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