Subduction
It is called a subduction zone.
Drawer slides back mount onto furniture by attaching the slides to the back of the drawer and the inside of the cabinet. This allows the drawer to smoothly slide in and out of the furniture.
Techtonic plate movement forms land masses by three different movements or boundaries: 1. tranform boundaries- when plates slide BY one another 2. divergent boundaries- when plates slide APART fom one another 3.convergent boundaries- when plates slide TOWARDS one another Convergent boundaries can form a continental collision, when "plates crash or crunch together" forming a mountain range (over millions of years). a convergent boundary can also make an ocean trench when one plate slides under the other.
Stegosaurus had plates down it's back
they are less likely to happen at the center of Earth's plates because the plates collide in the front or in the back and unless a plate is the middl3e and another is moving to its center it well most likey not hit its center.
The rising and falling of the molten lava underneath the plates. The magma is always moving in a circular motion. Since the center of the earth is the hottest when the lava rises it cools off as it gets further away from the center then it becomes cool and dense and falls back down towards the center then it heats back up and rises. That circular motion moves the plates
After you collect all 6 slides, go back into the tent and talk to Jane.
Because - the Earth's crust is forced back below the surface at the edges of the tectonic plates These areas are called subduction zones.
The reason the earth split apart is because of flooding, it kept pushing it back and back til the lands broke apart. I think the reason the land mass plates are like they are because of all the flooding around the world.
yes it does it has plates on its back and spikes on its tail
The Earth is not getting bigger in diameter because the movement of tectonic plates involves both the creation and destruction of crust. While some plates may be moving apart at mid-ocean ridges, where new crust is formed, other plates are colliding and subducting, leading to the recycling of crust back into the mantle. This balance between creation and destruction keeps the Earth's size relatively constant over geological time.
Have a gunsmith examine it.