Plate Tectonic Theories
Plate tectonics
Landforms caused by tectonic plates
Minor plates
Effects of Plate Tectonics
100

What is the Theory of Plate tectonics?

The Earth's outer shell, the Lithosphere, is divided into several large, rigid plates floating on a hot, mobile mantle.

100

What are the three largest tectonic plates?

Pacific plate, North American Plate, and Eurasian Plate

100

What landform is caused by two convergent continental plates?

Mountains

100

What is the smallest minor plate?

The Juan De Fuca Plate

100

Do plate tectonics move slowly or faster?

Slowly (as slow as a fingernail growing)

200

What is continental drift?

Continental drift is a theory that suggests that all continents were once joined together into a supercontinent, before drifting apart into the seven continents we live on today.

200

What is underneath the tectonic plates (Lithosphere)?

The asthenosphere

200

If two tectonic plates are moving towards each other, how does their movement determine what landforms are created?

When two tectonic plates move toward each other, the landforms that form depend mainly on what kind of crust each plate is made of and which one is denser.

200

What is the largest minor plate?

Somali Plate

200

Why are volcanoes often found in chains or lines?

Due to the movement of tectonic plates over magma sources.

300

What is the Seafloor Spreading hypothesis?

The theory where the ocean floor splits apart at mid-ocean ridges and moves outward, causing magma to rise through the gap and cool.

300

What are the seven major tectonic plates?

Pacific plate, North American plate, Eurasian plate, African plate, Antarctic plate, Indo-Australian plate, and the South American plate.

300

Why are volcanoes often found near tectonic plate boundaries?

Volcanos are often near tectonic plates boundaries because these zones allow magma to rise, either from pathways or by force, and cool on the surface.

300
How many minor plates are there?

10

300

How do two continental plates create a mountain?

Intense pressure forces the crust to buckle, fold, and thicken.

400

Who came up with the Seafloor Spreading hypothesis?

Harry Hess

400

Why do the tectonic plates continue to move even though they are made of solid rock?

Tectonic plates continue to move because they float on the semi-molten, ductile layer of the upper mantle.

400

Why do divergent plate boundaries often form mid-ocean ridges instead of mountains on land?

Divergent plate boundaries occur where plate tectonics pull apart, allowing magma to surface and create Seafloor instead of mountains.

400

Do minor plates move slower, faster, or the same speed as major tectonic plates?

They can move faster or slower (both are acceptable answers)

400

Why is the "Ring Of Fire" an important example of Tectonic Plates?

The Ring of Fire has 75% of volcanoes and hosts 90% of the world's Earthquakes.

500

What is the Mantle Convection theory?

A theory that explains how the heat from Earth's interior causes convection currents in the asthenosphere, serving as a primary driving force for the plate Tectonics.

500

Why does the movement of tectonic plates cause stress to build up over time instead of releasing energy constantly?

The rough edges of tectonic plates get locked together at fault lines due to high friction, while the rest of the plate continues moving.

500

Why do some landforms take millions of years to form while others seem to appear suddenly?

While some things like tectonic plates take years to form things like mountains, earthquakes and volcanoes can cause new ones to appear in a few hours.

500

Where is the Nazca Plate located?

Southeastern Pacific Ocean

500

Why do some areas have more Earthquakes then others?

The further away the area where the edge of the tectonic plates are determines how many Earthquakes happen, the further away, the less likely it is to have one.
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