Yes, because the plates underneath the Earth's surface is made up and composed of rock that moves apart or moves closer together. Because of this when the plates move closer or farther apart earthquakes from. Sometimes the earthquake creates a mountain.
I think this is the answer but I am not 100% sure.
James 12 years old
Mountain earthquakes are not all bad. Earthquakes have created most of the mountains in Southern California, producing our beautiful scenery and trapping rain clouds to keep us from being a desert. The mountains also form underground traps for oil and natural gas, making oil wells achievable and guiding us to where we have to look for oil.
Stephany 11 years old
yes, because sometimes earthquake is the effect of two converging plate. When plates converge Mountains or volcanoes are from.
atik 9 years old
It's not
earthquakes and the formation of mountains
earthquakes and the formation of mountains
Earthquakes, volcanoes and mountains are formed via plate tectonics. When the large continental plates collide, they either cause temporary earthquakes, or more permanent features such as volcanoes and mountains.
True. Mountains are formed by the movement of tectonic plates, which involves destructive forces such as earthquakes and volcanic eruptions.
The result of plates of Earth pushing together, or convergent movement, can lead to the formation of mountains, subduction zones where one plate is forced beneath another, and seismic activity such as earthquakes. This interaction also contributes to the formation of volcanic arcs and trenches.
Mountains do not prevent earthquakes, in fact mountains were created by the occurrence of earthquakes.
they both have rock thy are very cloerfilub and almost as the same miaril as they do
The effects of diastrophism are so many on the surface of the earth and include formation of mountains, plateaus and may cause tremors and earthquakes.
Features:Fold mountainsIsland arcRift valleyMid-Ocean RidgeVolcanoEvents:EarthquakeEruptionLava flowLahar/mud flowPyroclastic flowAsh fallTsunamiBasically take your pick (and please add!!)
trenchs
Mountains are often formed at plate boundaries where tectonic plates collide. This collision can cause one plate to be forced upward, leading to the formation of mountains. The uplifted plate may undergo further geological processes, such as folding and faulting, which contribute to the mountain-building process.