It is a transform boundary.
For the most part, the boundary between the North American and Pacific Plates is a transform boundary, where two plates are sliding and grinding past each other.
They are convergent/destructive and transform plate boundaries.
Constructive, forming the Mid-Atlantic Ridge
The North American and Eurasian plates meet at a divergent boundary in the Atlantic Ocean, and at a transform boundary in Siberia.
The Mid-Atlantic Ridge is a divergent plate boundary.
A constructive boundary - The Mid-Atlantic Ridge
A divergent plate boundary.
San Andreas Fault.
For the most part, the boundary between the North American and Pacific Plates is a transform boundary, where two plates are sliding and grinding past each other. by pm of 10 d 33
They are a convergent boundary between the North American and Pacific Plates.
conservative. but sanfrancisco is actually on a transform fault not a boundary. the fault is a result of the boundary between the north American and pacific plates.
Yes. An example is the San Andreas Fault, a transform boundary between the Pacific (oceanic) and the North American (continental) plates.
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San Andreas Fault.
For the most part, the boundary between the North American and Pacific Plates is a transform boundary, where two plates are sliding and grinding past each other. by pm of 10 d 33
They are a convergent boundary between the North American and Pacific Plates.
It is the boundary between the North American and Pacific lithospheric plates.
San andreas.
conservative. but sanfrancisco is actually on a transform fault not a boundary. the fault is a result of the boundary between the north American and pacific plates.
Yes. An example is the San Andreas Fault, a transform boundary between the Pacific (oceanic) and the North American (continental) plates.
A transform boundary.
Faults occur.
The San Andreas fault is not connected to the North American or Pacific Plates but is merely the boundary between the two where they make contact. As such, it is a fault as well as a plate boundary.
San Francisco is located on the boundary between the Pacific Plate and the North American Plate, known as the San Andreas Fault. This is a transform plate boundary, where the two plates are sliding past each other horizontally.