Yes. The Mid Atlantic Ridge is an example of a plate boundary. Where it crosses Iceland, you can stand with one foot in Europe and one foot in North America. Other such boundaries exist. At the San Andreas Fault in California, You can stand with one foot on the North American Plate and the other foot on the Pacific Plate.
A constructive/divergent plate boundary
Divergent plate boundary: Mid-Atlantic Ridge. Transform plate boundary: San Andreas Fault.
convergent boundary. cuz it is ridge
The Mid-Atlantic Ridge is an example of a divergent plate margin, where two plates are moving in opposite directions, and the gap is infilled with solidifying magma from the mantle.
The Mid-Atlantic Ridge is a classic example of an oceanic divergent plate boundary.
A constructive/divergent plate boundary
Divergent plate boundary: Mid-Atlantic Ridge. Transform plate boundary: San Andreas Fault.
A divergent plate boundary.
The North American-Eurasian Plate boundary.
The Mid-Atlantic Ridge is a divergent plate boundary, also known as a spreading center.
convergent boundary. cuz it is ridge
no the mid- Atlantic ridge is a transform boundary
The Mid-Atlantic Ridge is an example of a divergent plate margin, where two plates are moving in opposite directions, and the gap is infilled with solidifying magma from the mantle.
The Mid-Atlantic Ridge is a classic example of an oceanic divergent plate boundary.
The Mid-Atlantic Ridge represents a divergent plate boundary.
the Mid-Atlantic Ridge is a divergent plate boundary, meaning the two plates are moving away from each other.
The Mid-Atlantic Ridge is not actually a tectonic plate, but a divergent boundary between plates where new oceanic crust is being created on the floor of the Atlantic Ocean. To the north, it marks the boundary between the Eurasian Plate and the North American Plate. To the south, it separates the African Plate from the South American Plate.