Oceanic plate
Oceanic plates diverge at mid-ocean ridges, creating new ocean floor as magma rises to the surface and solidifies. This process is called seafloor spreading, and it results in the formation of new oceanic crust.
The Pacific Plate is the largest minor plate. It covers a large area in the Pacific Ocean and is estimated to make up about 15% of the Earth's surface.
Volcanoes typically do not occur at transform plate boundaries where two plates slide past each other horizontally. These boundaries are characterized by intense tectonic forces that do not provide the conditions necessary for magma to rise to the surface and form volcanoes.
A plate boundary in the ocean where tectonic plates move apart is called a divergent boundary. At these boundaries, magma rises from the mantle to create new crust as the plates separate. An example of a divergent boundary is the Mid-Atlantic Ridge.
Underwater volcanoes are called submarine volcanoes. They form in a similar way as their continental counterparts, that is close to plate boundaries.
The rising of the deep cold currents to the ocean surface is called
Oceanic plates diverge at mid-ocean ridges, creating new ocean floor as magma rises to the surface and solidifies. This process is called seafloor spreading, and it results in the formation of new oceanic crust.
the ocean-bottom
Plate Tectonics, to put it simply.
The countryies
temperature
The process of an ocean plate meeting and pushing under a land plate is called subduction. This occurs at convergent plate boundaries, where the denser oceanic plate sinks beneath the less dense continental plate. Subduction can cause earthquakes, volcanic activity, and the formation of mountain ranges.
The water that forms far below the surface is called a Deep Current.
This section of the ocean from floor to surface is called the water column.
Stream like movements of water that occur near the surface of the ocean are called surface currents. Stream like movements of ocean water far below the surface are known as a deep current.
The Pacific Plate is the largest minor plate. It covers a large area in the Pacific Ocean and is estimated to make up about 15% of the Earth's surface.
surface current