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Tectonic plates are segments of the Earth's lithosphere, the hard rocky outer shell composed of the crust and the uppermost mantle. This shell is divided by lines of faults, ridges of plate creation, and zones of plate destruction. All in all, there are roughly 30 tectonic plates which cover the entire surface of the planet. Plates can be composed of oceanic crust, continental crust, or a combination of both.

The movement of the plates is caused by the convection currents of heat from the Earth's interior. This heat, rising toward the surface through the mantle causes movement of plastic like rock in the asthenosphere, the layer of Earth directly below the lithosphere. At thinner areas of the crust, such as the mid-ocean ridges, this plastic rock undergoes a transformation, or phase change, into a liquid due to the decrease of lithostatic pressure. The molten rock rises and eventually cools, forming new crust.

At the other end of the convection current, older, cooler oceanic crust is being subducted under less dense crust, falling back into the mantle. The Earth's plates are riding on top of the currents caused by these processes.

The main features of plate tectonics are:

  • The Earth's surface is covered by a series of crustal plates.
  • The plates are composed of crustal rock and solid upper mantle which is called the lithosphere. * Plates are composed of continental and oceanic crust.
  • The oceanic crusts are continually moving, spreading from the center, sinking at the edges, in a process of recycling.
  • Rising legs of convection currents beneath the plates create additional plate material at mid-ocean ridges, sinking legs of convection currents swallow old crustal plates at subduction zones.
  • The heat driving the convection currents is from radioactive decay of material within the Earth and from residual heat from accretion processes during Earth's formation.
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13y ago

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