HKDSE Geography/M1/Constructive Plate Boundaries
Appearance
< HKDSE Geography | M1
Constructive plate boundaries are almost always under the sea, between two oceanic crusts. They move because of tensional force.
Mid-Atlantic Zone (Cuts through Atlantic Ocean) | North American | Eurasian |
African | ||
South American | ||
Mid-Indian Zone (Cuts through Red Sea, Indian Ocean) | Arabian | Indo-Australian |
African | ||
Southeast Pacific Zone [Stretching from Mexico southwards towards Antarctica] | Pacific | Juan de Fuca North American Cocos |
Nazca | ||
Antarctic Zone [Around Antarctica] | Antarctica | African Indo-Australian Pacific Nazca South American |
Landforms
[edit | edit source]- Mid-oceanic ridges
- Rift valleys
- Transform faults
- Volcanoes
Mid-Atlantic Zone (N/S American + Eurasian/African)
[edit | edit source]Landforms at a glance:
- Mid-oceanic ridge called the Mid-Atlantic Ridge
- Transform faults
- Diverging/Rising magma currents cause the North American, Cocos, Nazca and Antarctic Plates to move away from the Pacific Plate in the Pacific Ocean under tensional force
- A constructive plate boundary is formed. Magma wells up from the plate boundary to form a bulging zone.
- As the uprising and solidification of magma continues, newly-formed crust is gradually pushed away from the plate boundary by ridge push. This is sea-floor spreading.
- Repeated sea-floor spreading forms a mid-oceanic ridge called the Mid-Atlantic Ridge.
- When the adjacent flows of magma flow at different speeds, lateral force is exerted.
- The force breaks the mid-oceanic ridge and displaces the broken ridges relative to one another horizontally, forming transform faults.
Southeast Pacific Zone (N American/Cocos/Nazca/Antarctic + Antarctic)
[edit | edit source]Landforms at a glance:
- Mid-oceanic ridge called the East Pacific Rise
- Rift valley
- Transform faults
- Volcanoes such as Easter Island (Pacific + Cocos)
- Diverging/Rising magma currents cause the N American, Cocos, Nazca and Antarctic Plates to move away from the Pacific Plate in the Pacific Ocean under tensional force
- A constructive plate boundary is formed and magma wells up from the plate boundary
- As the uprising and solidification of magma continues, old crust is gradually pushed away from the plate boundary by newly-formed crust. Parallel faults are created. This is called sea-floor spreading.
- Repeated sea-floor spreading forms a mid-oceanic ridge called the East Pacific Rise.
- When the adjacent flows of magma flow at different speeds, lateral force is created.
- The force breaks the mid-oceanic ridge and displaces the broken ridges to one another horizontally, forming transform faults.
- At the East Pacific Rise, the newly-formed ocean floor is more rigid.
- Cracks develop at the plate boundary. Tensional force causes normal faulting.
- The central block of the ridge sinks as downthrow because of gravity, forming the flat-bottomed rift valley.
- As plates move apart, cracks form. When the extend into the asthenosphere, the magma's pressure is released and magma rises to the earth's surface.
- Extrusive vulcanicity occurs. The erupted lava cools down to form volcanic rock. Over time, submarine volcanoes form.
- After repeated eruptions, some of the submarine volcanoes rise above sea level to become volcanic islands. One of them is Easter Island.
East African Rift Valley (African + Arabian)
[edit | edit source]
East African Rift Valley
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- Diverging magma currents in the mantle pull the African and Arabian Plates apart at the Red Sea by tensional forces.
- Faults are formed in the middle and the crust is split into huge blocks.
- As the two crusts move further apart, the central blocks sink as downthrow because of gravity, forming the rift valley. The two outer blocks become upthrow.
- Volcanoes can be found along the rift valley as magma rises up through lines of weakness, e.g. Mount Kilimanjaro.
- Lakes are found at deeper locations of the rift valley, e.g. Lake Victoria.