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A brief description of plate tectonics would be the theory that parts of Earth's lithosphere are always in motion, driven by the convection currents inside the mantle.
An earth plate is a plate you equip to arceus to make its ground type moves.
No. The surface of the earth is held to the planet by gravity. However parts of the surface move relative one to another - this is called plate tectonics.
No. The only object other than Earth that shows evidence of processes similar to plate tetonics is Jupiters 4th largest moon, Europa.
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The Earth is the accumulation of many pieces of material from space. each piece with its own speed, mass, and impact angle. The Earth's spin is the net accumulation of all the contributing parts. The spin of the Earth is not invariant - it alters a little, caused by the inter-action with the Moon. And major earth movements (tectonic plate shifts, earthquakes etc) will also have a small effect as they re-distribute the mass around the Earth.
No. The moon does not have a molten core for the plates to "float" on.
A brief description of plate tectonics would be the theory that parts of Earth's lithosphere are always in motion, driven by the convection currents inside the mantle.
An earth plate is a plate you equip to arceus to make its ground type moves.
Plate tectonics make up the Earth's crust. They are very large plates of rock. There are 14 major plates: the Antarctic Plate, the African Plate, the Arabian Plate, the Caribbean Plate, the Cocos Plate, the Eurasian Plate, the Indian Plate, the Nazca Plate, the North American Plate, the Pacific Plate, the Philippine Plate, the Scotia Plate, the Australian Plate, the Juan de Fuco Plate, and the South American Plate. They only move a few centimeters a year.
The parts of the US that aren't on the North American plate are on the Pacific Plate.That would be Hawaii and parts of California.
They are similar because they both form volcanoes and earthquakes.
The plates are made of rock and are all over the world. They are constantly moving and shifting.
The Pacific Plate. At 103 to 105 million square kilometres, it is the largest tectonic plate.