no
It will stop moving in 200 million years.
They are floating on the magma below them and the magma itself is moving.
The tectonic plates moving, transform.
because of the plates moving
No. The moving of tectonic plates does.
due to textonic movement of earth and valconic erosion
a possible result of plates moving past each other is an earth quake
a possible result of plates moving past each other is an earth quake
earthquake .
Earthquake!
Moving Gelatine Plates was created in 1968.
No, plates will always keep moving because of the convection currents in the mantle under the Earth's crust, as long as the Earth's interior stays hot. This is not likely to happen before the Sun swallows up our planet far, far in the future.
moving plates
Friction causes plates to stop moving temporarily. The motion of the magma under the plates will cause the plates to move again.
No, both the continental and oceanic plates are always moving. Moving slowly, but always moving.
Divergent plates
The answer is tectonic plates floating on the lithosphere. Does that answer your question? LOL :)