The Nazca and the S.American plate form a destructive plate boundary, forming the Andes.
The South American Plate and the Nazca Plate are responsible for the creation of the Andes mountain ranges. The Nazca Plate is subducting beneath the South American Plate, causing the formation of the Andes through tectonic activity and volcanic processes.
Convergent boundaries are responsible for creating mountain ranges. When two tectonic plates collide, the land is forced upwards, creating intense pressure that results in the formation of mountain ranges. Examples of mountain ranges formed by convergent boundaries include the Himalayas and the Andes.
two continential plates
folding of the plates
When plates converge, a fold mountain is formed. This happens when the edges of two tectonic plates push against each other, causing the land to buckle and fold, creating mountain ranges like the Himalayas or the Andes.
The Andes mountains are moving because of the plate boundaries it is placed on, and as the plates moves the mountain must move with it.
The Andes Mountains formed because two tectonic plates (a tectonic plate is a piece of the Earth's crust), the Nazca Plate and the Antarctic Plate, pushed into the western edge of South America. This compressed the western edge of the South American plate, and folded it, creating the Andes Mountains. A few of the mountains were formed by volcanic activity. which is also the result of the collision between this plates.
The Andes were a result of the collision of the Nazca Plate & the South American Plate.
by tectonic plates colliding
The Nazca plate and the Pacific plate
The Andes Mountains
The Andes Mountain Chain is formed as a result of a convergent plate boundary, the collision of the South American Plate with the Nazca Plate.