Tags:

Select Language

Plate tectonics is the scientific theory explaining the movement of Earth's lithosphere, which is divided into several plates.

Table of Contents

Lithosphere and Asthenosphere

Lithosphere: It is the rigid outer layer of the Earth, consisting of the crust and the upper mantle.

Asthenosphere: It is the semi-fluid layer beneath the lithosphere, allowing the plates to move.

Tectonic Plates

Earth's lithosphere is broken into major and minor plates (e.g., Pacific Plate, North American Plate).

These plates float on the semi-fluid asthenosphere.

Plate Movements

Plates move due to convection currents in the mantle, slab pull, and ridge push.

Movements can be divergent (moving apart), convergent (coming together), or transform (sliding past each other).

Types of Plate Boundaries

Divergent Boundaries: Plates move apart, creating new crust (e.g., Mid-Atlantic Ridge).

Convergent Boundaries: Plates collide, leading to subduction or mountain formation (e.g., Himalayas).

Transform Boundaries: Plates slide horizontally past each other (e.g., San Andreas Fault).

Geological Activities

Earthquakes: Caused by the release of energy as plates move.

Volcanic Activity: Occurs at divergent and convergent boundaries.

Mountain Building: Result of convergent plate interactions.

Historical Development

Alfred Wegener's continental drift hypothesis laid groundwork.

Further evidence from sea-floor spreading and paleomagnetism solidified the theory.

Significance

Explains distribution of earthquakes, volcanoes, mountain ranges, and oceanic trenches.

Fundamental for understanding Earth's geological history and processes.

Share

 

Hindi Version Not Available

Sorry for the inconvenience. Coming soon!