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2,000 centimeters or 20 meters.
They move at centimeters per year.
Centimeters are the proper measuring unit to describe the movement of Earth's plates known as continental drift. The tectonic plates move on average of 2.5 centimeters per year.
The average rate of movement of tectonic plates per year is roughly one to two inches. Individual parts of interacting plates can move more than several feet during earthquakes. Over large time spans, tectonic plates can move to all parts of the globe.
Some plates move at a rate of several centimeters each year. Other move only a millimeters per day.
2,000 centimeters or 20 meters.
Plates move from a fraction of an inch (a few millimeters) to about 5 inches (13 centimeters) a year. No one doesn't really know how much a day though!
relatively very slow but a continuous rate that averages about 5 centimeters per year
They move at centimeters per year.
Tectonic plates are actually constantly moving, albeit very slowly. On an average the plates move only two and a half inches per year.
you measure it i centimeters
The continents are always moving on top of vast tectonic plates. They move at a rate similar to how fast a human's fingernails grow. Every year they move a few centimeters more.
The plates move slowly. Three centimeters a year.
They are constantly moving and shifting around each other. The effect of too much shifting over a period of time is an earthquake. The plates never stopo moving so it means it is moving every year
All of the tectonic plates move, but they move at different speeds depending on which plates are involved. The Pacific plate moves slightly more than four centimeters annually.
Centimeters are the proper measuring unit to describe the movement of Earth's plates known as continental drift. The tectonic plates move on average of 2.5 centimeters per year.
The earth's plates move slowly because how big the earthquake is he bigger the amount the plates will move and the slower the earthquake is the less it moves.