transform fault boundary
transform fault boundary
When two plates grind past each other without creating or destroying lithosphere, they form a transform plate boundary. This type of boundary can result in earthquakes due to the build-up of stress along the fault line where the two plates are in contact. One well-known example of a transform plate boundary is the San Andreas Fault in California.
At a transform plate boundary, plates slide past each other horizontally in opposite directions without creating or destroying lithosphere. This movement is characterized by lateral shearing, where the plates grind against each other, causing earthquakes.
A conservative plate boundary is where tectonic plates slide past each other horizontally without creating or destroying lithosphere. The movement can be in the same direction (transform fault) or in opposite directions (strike-slip fault) resulting in earthquakes.
The boundary where the Earth's crust is neither created nor destroyed is known as a conservative plate boundary. At these boundaries, tectonic plates slide past each other horizontally without forming or destroying crust. This type of boundary is associated with transform faults.
The lithosphere has effect on people because without the lithosphere there wouldn't be any trees and without the trees we wouldn't have any oxygen. So we wouldn't be able to breath fresh air.
yes, definitely possible without destroying nature.. but question is not clear in what kind of progress
No,any marker does come off poster board without destroying it.
Because,without lithosphere any organism cannot exist without that so,we can consider that as a important progress for all humans
The term for producing light without heat is luminescence.
latent
latent