tectonic plates
The layer of the Earth that is broken into separate sections called plates is the lithosphere. These plates move due to the flow of the underlying asthenosphere, causing phenomena like earthquakes and volcanic activity at plate boundaries.
Large sections of Earth's crust and upper mantle are called tectonic plates. These plates are responsible for the movement and interactions that shape the Earth's surface, including the formation of mountains, earthquakes, and volcanoes.
Earth's crust broken into pieces is called tectonic plates. These plates float on the semi-fluid layer of the mantle and interact with each other at plate boundaries, leading to various geological activities such as earthquakes and volcanic eruptions.
The pieces of the Earth's crust are called tectonic plates. These plates float on the semi-fluid layer of the Earth's mantle and interact with each other, causing movements such as earthquakes and volcanic activity.
Large pieces of rocks on the Earth's crust are called tectonic plates. These plates float on the semi-fluid layer of the mantle beneath them and interact with each other along their boundaries, leading to phenomena like earthquakes and volcanoes.
They are called plates!
Earth's crust and upper mantle are broken into sections called tectonic plates. These plates float on the semi-fluid asthenosphere below them and interact with each other at plate boundaries, leading to geological processes like earthquakes and volcanic activity.
That would be the lithosphere. This is broken into sections known as lithospheric (or tectonic) plates.
No, the Earth's crust is broken into sections called tectonic plates, not bowls. These plates float on the semi-fluid asthenosphere below and interact with each other at their boundaries, which can lead to geological activity like earthquakes and volcanoes.
The 20 sections of the earth's crust is called plates
Plates
The earth's crust is broken into sections called tectonic plates, which slowly move around.
The layer of the Earth that is broken into separate sections called plates is the lithosphere. These plates move due to the flow of the underlying asthenosphere, causing phenomena like earthquakes and volcanic activity at plate boundaries.
TecTonic plates
The Earth's outer layer, known as the lithosphere, is broken into separate sections called tectonic plates. These plates float on top of the partially molten asthenosphere below and move in different directions, causing various geological events like earthquakes and volcanic eruptions.
Continental plates.
plates