17.3
Rift Valley
Continental crust begins to seperate, the stretched crust forms a long narrow depression.
Tectonic Plates
Huge pieces of crust and rigid upper mantle that fit together at their edges to cover Earth's surface.
Convection Current
In the mantle that helps to drive the movement of the rigid plates making up the Earth's surface.
Slab Pull
Occurs as the weight of the subducting plate pulls the trailing lithosphere into a subduction zone.
Ridge Push
Occurs when the weight of an elevated ridge pushes an oceanic plate toward a subduction zone.
Divergent Boundary
Occurs where tectonic plates move away from each other.
Transform Boundary
Occurs where tectonic plates move horizontally past each other.
Convergent Boundary
Occurs where tectonic plates move toward each other.
Oceanic Crust
Part of Earth's lithosphere that surfaces in the ocean basins. Oceanic crust is primarily composed of mafic rocks, or sima, which is rich in iron and magnesium.
Continental Crust
The layer of igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic rocks which forms the continents and the areas of shallow seabed close to their shores, known as continental shelves.
Lithosphere
The rigid outer part of Earth. Consisting of the crust and upper mantle.
Asthenosphere
The upper layer of the earth's mantle, below the lithosphere, in which there is relatively low resistance to plastic flow and convection is thought to occur.
Subduction Zone
Two plates collide, the denser plate eventually descends below the other, less dense plate.