They can be either continental or oceanic crust.
Thickness - continental = much thickerDensity - oceanic crust is denser than continental, which is why the oceanic crust subducts under the continental at destructive plates boundaries.
It is possible to have continental and oceanic crust on the same plate. The only to this exception is with the Pacific plate which exists independently.
Tectonic plates (or continental plates) are pieces of Earth's crust and uppermost mantle, together referred to as the lithosphere.
Tectonic plates may be made of continental crust, oceanic crust, or both.
Continental crust and continental crust are made of different types of rock. The rocks in the continental crust do not contain as many of the heavier elements as the ones in the oceanic crust do.
They can be either continental or oceanic crust.
Oceanic crust is denser than continental crust, dense enough to sink into the mantle. Continental crust is not dense enough to do this.
No!
The crust.
Thickness - continental = much thickerDensity - oceanic crust is denser than continental, which is why the oceanic crust subducts under the continental at destructive plates boundaries.
It is possible to have continental and oceanic crust on the same plate. The only to this exception is with the Pacific plate which exists independently.
Tectonic plates are also "Continental Crust" and "Oceanic Crust". Also lithospheric plates.
Tectonic plates (or continental plates) are pieces of Earth's crust and uppermost mantle, together referred to as the lithosphere.
Continental crust is thicker and less dense while oceanic crust is thinner and more dense, so essentially continental crust takes a higher position than oceanic crust. When oceanic and continental plates collide, oceanic plates slide underneath continental plates(if this makes what I said any clearer).
yes
the tectonic plates