Yes! For example Europe and North America are moving away from each other at a rate of around 25mm per year due to the presence of a divergent plate boundary known as the mid Atlantic ridge.
Plates often tilt where they meet or collide with one another, for example the collision between the Eurasian and Indian plates caused buckling and deformation of the crust leading to the formation of the Himalayan mountain chain. Oceanic plates also tilt downward into the Earth's mantle when they collide with the less dense material of a continental plate. This process is known as subduction and is occurring in places such as the western coast of South America.
They are geologic features because when the crustal plates move its makes cracks on earth the the mountains are one because everytime the crustal plates move it breaks the earths surface and the dirt and rocks start gathering together
Two tectonic plates move apart, allowing for geologic activity along the boundary that slowly build a ridgeline along the bottom of the ocean.
In this sense, fault is a geologic term that does not refer to blame. It is an area where two distinct rock bodies move independently from each other.
Earthquake and Tsunanmi
yes the plates can move slowly
They are geologic features because when the crustal plates move its makes cracks on earth the the mountains are one because everytime the crustal plates move it breaks the earths surface and the dirt and rocks start gathering together
Volcanoes, caused by slipping plates, and earthquakes, caused by rubbing plates.
earthquake
Two tectonic plates move apart, allowing for geologic activity along the boundary that slowly build a ridgeline along the bottom of the ocean.
In this sense, fault is a geologic term that does not refer to blame. It is an area where two distinct rock bodies move independently from each other.
Fault ... ;)
Earthquake and Tsunanmi
yes the plates can move slowly
Earthquakes
Yes. Earthquakes generally result from the movement of tectonic plates.
Mountains move by the plates under the earth moving. When plates move, often tsunamis and earthquakes happen. Mountains move 1 cm per year when the plates move!
Plates move apart on divergent plate boundaries.