2019-07-01_Discover

(Rick Simeone) #1

NORTH AMERICAN


SOUTH


AMERICAN


PACIFIC


Nazca


Cocos


Caribbean


Juan de Fuca


Easter


Juan Fernandez


Scotia


Shetland


Galapagos


Rivera


Altiplano


Northern
Andes

Panama


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40 DISCOVERMAGAZINE.COM


EARTH IS ACTION-PACKED. Even if there were zero life


on our planet, the place would be full of birth and death,


marriage, breakup and even a little dirty dancing. That’s


all thanks to the lithosphere, a solid layer of crust and


part of the upper mantle that’s broken into more than


a dozen slabs, or plates, of varying sizes. These pieces,


divided between older continental crust and younger


oceanic crust, ride atop the gooey asthenosphere, a


semiliquid layer of magma and partly melted rock.


Most of us may think of Earth’s cracked and creep-


ing crust only when we hear of a catastrophic event


caused by it, such as an earthquake or volcanic erup-


tion. But the puzzle pieces of the lithosphere are always


in motion, slamming against one another, grinding


past or getting shoved under another slab. More than


a mere geological mosh pit, the plates play a key role in


climate and evolution.


Our planet’s big, slow square dance.


BY GEMMA TARLACH


Plate


Te c tonic s


CONTINENTAL: Crust that’s older and thicker,


made of lighter-weight rock.


OCEANIC: Younger and thinner, oceanic crust


is made of relatively heavier rock.


CONVERGENT: Where plates smash together,


resulting in deformation or destruction of


one or more plate edges. When one plate


sinks below another, forcing it back down to


Meltytown, it’s called subduction. This usually


involves a heavier oceanic plate being shoved


below a lighter continental plate. Examples:


the Izu-Bonin-Mariana subduction zone (where


the Pacific Plate is being pushed below the


Philippine Plate, creating the deepest oceanic


trenches in the world) and the Himalayan


mountain range (where the Eurasian and Indian


continental plates collide, crumpling up).


Types of Plates Types of Boundaries


CO
NTINENTAL
PL
A
T
E

O
C
E
A
N
IC

(^) P
LA
TE
Nearly all
tectonic
action occurs
at plate
boundaries.
Smaller plates
may get
worn away
completely
over time, but
the centers,
or cratons,
of larger
continental
plates remain
stable — they
include the
oldest rocks
on the planet.
Sources: USGS This Dynamic Planet, NASA, Peter Bird
EARTH'S CRACKED CRUST
EVERYTHING
WORTH
KNOWING

Free download pdf