Pangea hope this helps.
The earth's crust is divided up into big chunks, and these chunks are essentially what we live on today. in between the chunks, where one meets another, there are lines running through the ground. These are called fault lines. Now, because the mantle is just molten lava, the crust just moves along as it pleases. When two chunks float around and rub up against one another, this causes vibrations on the fault lines. This also causes the ground to move and shake, what we call an earthquake :) Hope this helped
Volcanic bombs.
Ice in Antarctica isn't counted in 'chunks'. The ice sheet that covers 98% of Antarctica stores 90% of the earth's ice and 70% of the earth's fresh water.
Another name for chunks of lithosphere is "tectonic plates." These plates are large sections of the Earth's lithosphere that move and interact with one another, leading to geological events like earthquakes and volcanic activity. The movement of these plates is driven by forces such as mantle convection and gravity.
you move entire chunks of writing around in your essay.
There is only one moon in orbit around the Earth. We call it the Moon.
Sand Bending is a variation of Earth Bending, as sand is simply "little chunks of earth".
Popular theory suggests the moon was caused by a giant asteroid or comet colliding with the earth while it was still being formed - throwing thousands of chunks of molten earth into space. The Earth's gravity 'caprured' those chunks which congealed into a solid mass.
In the UK we call it 'blockboard'
call a massive chunls of ice that breaks away from glaciers
Asteroids and meteoroids are large chunks of rock and debris that resemble large chunks of rock in space. When they enter the Earth's atmosphere, they are called meteors or meteorites depending on whether they burn up or make contact with the surface.
the hemisphere divides the earth into four different chunks