Where the weak points in the crust are.
the three types of plate boundaries are : -convergent plate boundaries -divergent plate boundaries -transformed plate boundaries
the three types of plate boundaries are : -convergent plate boundaries -divergent plate boundaries -transformed plate boundaries
a plate boundary there are constructive plate boundaries, destructive plate boundaries, conservative plate boundaries and collision plate boundaries
The types of plate boundaries found in or along the continental US are primarily transform boundaries, where the Pacific Plate and the North American Plate slide past each other, creating faults like the San Andreas Fault in California. Additionally, subduction zones are found along the west coast, where the Juan de Fuca Plate is being subducted beneath the North American Plate.
The Are Seven Primary Plates, so there cannot be only Five Boundaries, I know the tectonic Plates are The 1. African Plate 2. Antarctic Plate 3. Eurasian Plate 4. Indo-Australian Plate 5. North American Plate 6. Pacific Plate 7. South American Plate There Are Three Basic types of boundary; Divergent, Convergent and Transform boundaries Hopefull somebody can tell you all their names of the boundaires between them because these different Plates will me touching two or More Plates hence a lot of different boundaries
The two plate boundaries are the Juan de Fuca plate and the North American Plate.
Plate boundaries are places where two tectonic plates meet. There are three major types of plate boundaries. These are divergent, convergent, and transform plate boundaries.
Converging Plate Boundaries
Plate boundaries are not found in volcanoes.Volcanoes occur along plate boundaries usually along convergent boundaries
Three types of plate boundaries are spreading boundaries, colliding boundaries, and sliding boundaries. um actually they are divergent, convergent, and transform
Plate Boundaries
All of the tectonic plates have different types of plate boundaries, most having all three types of plate boundaries. Convergent, where the plate is subducting under another plate, divergent, where the plate is pulling away from another plate, and transform boundaries where the plates are sliding past each other.