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Earth’s crust is the brittle shell of a deep layer of hot rock
called the mantle. This is moving very slowly, driven by
heat generated deep within the planet. The movement has
made the crust crack into separate plates, which are being
pulled apart in some places and pushed together in others.
As they move, the plates make oceans larger or smaller,
and carry continents around the globe.

Plate tectonics


◀ KIT OF PARTS
There are 15 large tectonic plates, and almost
40 smaller ones. They form the ocean floors,
and some of the largest carry continents.
Continental plates are made of thicker, but
lighter, rock than the ocean floors. The oceanic
parts of the plates are always changing size
and shape, but the continents, although
moving, do not change
so much.

Eurasian plate

Australian plate

South American
plate

Pacific plate

Arabian
plate

Philippine
plate

Antarctic
plate

Cocos
plate

Indian
plate

Scotia
plate

African plate

Nazca plate

North American
plate

Caribbean
plate

PLATE BOUNDARIES
At some plate boundaries the plates are
pulling apart, while at others they are pushing
together. There are also places where one plate
is sliding against another. All these movements
cause earthquakes, and many boundaries are
dotted with volcanoes.

1


2


Divergent boundaries

These

occur where plates are pulling apart,
usually on ocean floors. This allows hot
mantle rock to erupt in the rift zone and
solidify as new ocean floor.

Convergent boundaries
These are found where one plate
grinds beneath another. Ocean
floors always slide under continents,
pushing up mountain ranges.

Rift zone dotted
with underwater
volcanoes

Erupting lava forms
ridges of solid rock

Edge of
continent
rucked up
to form
mountains

Plate slides on
mobile layer at
top of mantle

Friction melts
rock, making
it erupt as
volcanoes

156_157_Tectonics.indd 156 03/01/19 12:10 PM

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