An army established by the Continental Congress to fight against Great Britain.
The continental shelf, continental slope, and continental rise combine to form the continental margin.
If my sources are correct, it was made by continental-continental. :)
A continental margin is NOT a part of a continent. It is the submerged outer edge of a continent that includes the continental shelf, continental slope, and continental rise.
The three parts of the continental margins are the Continental shelf, the Continental slope, and the Continental rise.
continental margin
The three parts of the continental margins are the Continental shelf, the Continental slope, and the Continental rise.
The continental shelf, continental slope, and continental rise combine to form the continental margin. The continental margin is the transition zone between the continent and the deep ocean basin.
Andes - continental oceanic aleutians - oceanic oceanic North American cordillera - arc continent Appalachians - continental continental
The continental shelf, continental slope, and continental rise together form the continental margin. The continental margin is the submerged edge of a continent that consists of these three distinct but connected features.
The Himalayas and the Tibetan Plateau are formed by a continental-continental boundary where the Indian continental plate is moving north against the Eurasian continental plate.
The continental shelf is basically an extension of a continent into an ocean. It is underwater during interglacial periods (such as today) but dry during glacial periods. The continental slope is the sloping area between the continental shelf and the continental rise (where the continental plate meets the oceanic plate). The continental shelf and the continental slope together are called the continental margin. The continental rise is located at the bottom of the continental slope and is formed by the accumulation of sediment from the continent. Past the continental rise lies the abyssal plain which is the flat ocean floor.
The continental shelf, continental slope, and continental rise together form the continental margin. This is the outer edge of a continent where it transitions to the ocean basin. The continental margin is characterized by these three distinct topographical features.