Warmer material in a convection current rises upwards.
If your talking about fluid or air heat rises.
Convection currents move in upward direction
Away from the equator
No, convection currents in the upper mantle cause tectonic plates to move.
convection currents :)
volcanos and earthquakes
Currents in the Northern Hemisphere move in a clockwise direction. Currents in the Southern Hemisphere move in a counter clockwise direction.
Convection currents rotate in the Lithosphere, which causes the surface of the Earth to move.
Convection currents move in upward direction
Convection currents move in the Mantle.
Convection currents.
They both are the same because they are currents that move like waves
No, convection currents in the upper mantle cause tectonic plates to move.
convection currents!
Because the convection currents involve the Earth's crust.
The lithosphere is the continental crust, oceanic crust and upper part of the mantle. The convection currents move in the mantle mostly in the Asthenosphere layer under the lithosphere. As the convention currents move it makes the lithosphere spread and shake.
The upper mantle contains convection currents that move the tectonic plates.
Convection currents in the mantle create plate tectonics.
They move apart.
from plate tectonics