Earth's Layers & Plate Tectonics
earthquake
A movement or trembling of the ground that is caused by a sudden release of energy when rocks along a fault move. Often happens along the edges of transform boundaries
volcano
A weak spot in the crust where magma comes to the surface, often occurs where an oceanic plate subducts under a continental plate
Pangaea
Alfred Wegner's name for a supercontinent that existed about 245 million years ago, and from which all present day continents are formed.
Convection Currents
Circular currents in the mantle caused by the magma being heated by the core of the Earth and cooling as it rises. This leads to the cooler mantle falling back toward the center where it is again heated by the core.
mountains
Formed by two continental plates colliding and forcing each other upwards.
Tectonic Plates
Huge pieces of lithosphere (crust and mantle) that move around on top of the asthenosphere (lower mantle).
magma
Molten rock beneath Earth's surface. Once it rises above the surface, it is called lava.
oceanic-continental boundary
The boundary between an oceanic and continental plate. These are all convergent (no divergent examples exist). These result in the more dense oceanic crust subducting under the continental plate. This can result in volcanoes being formed in the continental plate.
Convergent Boundary
The boundary between two colliding tectonic plates
continental-continental boundary
The boundary between two continental plates. Convergent boundaries can result in mountain ranges. Divergent boundaries can result in rift valleys although these are mostly extinct and no longer moving.
oceanic-oceanic boundary
The boundary between two oceanic plates. Divergent boundaries can result in sea-floor spreading and convergent boundaries can result in volcanic island arcs.
Divergent Boundary
The boundary between two tectonic plates that are moving away from each other
Transform Boundary
The boundary between two tectonic plates that are sliding past each other
Lithosphere
The cool, rigid, outermost layer of the earth that is divided into enormous pieces called tectonic plates. It is made up of the crust and the top part of the mantle.
mantle
The layer of hot, solid material between Earth's crust and core. (the upper part is found as part of the lithosphere while the bottom is part of the asthenosphere)
Sea Floor Spreading
The process by which new oceanic lithosphere (sea floor crust) forms at mid-ocean ridges. As the new crust forms, it pushes existing crust in the opposite direction away from the ridge.
Asthenosphere
The soft, lower layer of the mantle on which the lithosphere floats.
Continental Drift
The theory proposed by Alfred Wegener that today's continents were once part of a single landmass that broke into pieces that drifted apart from one another into their present day locations. It also suggests they are still drifting.
Plate Tectonics
The theory that pieces of Earth's lithosphere are in constant motion, caused by convection currents in the mantle.
Trench
a long steep-sided dip in the ocean floor caused by an oceanic plate sinking below a continental plate and pulling a bit of the continental plate with it
Alfred Wegener
he proposed the theory of continental drift that states that all land on the earth was once a single mass but eventually broke apart from one another and drifted away
core
the HOTTEST and MOST DENSE layer of Earth, found in the center of Earth
Subduction Zone
the area where an oceanic plate sinks down into the asthenosphere at a convergent boundary (usually between continental and oceanic plates)
Plate boundary
the region where two tectonic plates are in contact
continental crust
thicker, less dense, older part of Earth's crust that makes up the continents. Made mostly of granite. ARROW ON THE RIGHT SIDE OVER THE MOUNTAINS
oceanic crust
thinner, more dense, younger crust that makes up ocean floor. Made mostly of basalt. ARROW ON THE LEFT SIDE OVER THE WATER