A mountain range.
The density of the tectonic plates involved determines whether a subduction zone or collision zone is formed at a destructive plate margin. If one plate is denser than the other, it will subduct beneath the other plate, forming a subduction zone. If the plates have similar densities, they will collide and form a collision zone.
At a collision zone, two tectonic plates can form features such as mountains, earthquakes, and volcanic activity. The collision forces the plates to either converge, where one plate subducts below the other, or crumple and fold to create mountain ranges.
By the means of plate tectonics at a zone of collision fold mountains are formed. At a zone of collision two continental plates collide and since they are of equal densities no subduction will take place but the two will collide and crumble and fold to form fold mountains.
collision
the himalaya mountains were formed in a collision at a convergent boundary
A subductive collision.
Examples of collision mountain ranges include the Himalayas (formed by the collision of the Indian Plate with the Eurasian Plate), the Alps (formed by the collision of the African Plate with the Eurasian Plate), and the Andes (formed by the collision of the South American Plate with the Nazca Plate).
The Dead Zone - 2002 Collision 3-3 is rated/received certificates of: USA:TV-14
The Himalaya mountains were formed in a collision of the Indian Plate pushing into the Eurasian Plate, in a convergent boundary known as a continental collision.
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One example of a collision zone is the San Andreas Fault in California, where the Pacific Plate slides past the North American Plate. This interaction results in frequent earthquakes and the potential for significant seismic activity.
A string of islands formed from a collision of two oceanic plates is called an island arc.