A fault line, or plate boundary.
A crevice is a fissure or narrow opening, typically found in rocks or ice.
Badly worded question, but I think you're talking about a fault?
rocks
if the plates are being pushed together, there can't be a crack.... but there is a fault that could be the answer to your question
Rocks in the sea are typically referred to as "seabed rocks" or simply "underwater rocks." They can also be called "reef formations" or "marine rocks."
A fault is a break or crack along which rocks move. This movement can result in earthquakes when the accumulated stress is released.
A fissure.
When plate movement causes rocks to break it is call an earthquake.
Badly worded question, but I think you're talking about a fault?
A crevice is a fissure or narrow opening, typically found in rocks or ice.
At the region between the two plates, called a transform boundary, pent-up energy builds in the rock. A fault line, a break in the Earth's crust where blocks of crust are moving in different directions, will form. Most, though not all, earthquakes happen along transform boundary fault lines.
a crack head use crack
The idiom "a nut to crack" has the basic meaning of "a problem to solve." Some "nuts" are hard to "crack," while others are easy, but this can only be determined by context.
rocks
A fault.
It causes what we call "sea-floor spreading." Sea-floor spreading is the process in which the ocean floor is extended when two plates move apart. As the plates move apart, the rocks break and form a crack between the plates. Earthquakes occur along the plate boundary. Magma rises through the cracks and seeps out onto the ocean floor like a long, thin, undersea volcano.
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