A DESTRUCTIVE or CONVERGENT plate boundary. e.g. Japan and the Pacific Ocean
A DIVERGENT plate boundary is one in which the tectonic plates are separating/. e.g. The Mid-Atlantic ridge.
A TRANSFORM plate boundary is one were the plates slide past each other. e.g. part of the San Andreas fault in California.
These are zones/areas where two lithospheric plates, involving an oceanic and a continental plate collide.
A convergent boundary that does not have a subduction zone is a continental-continental convergent boundary. At this type of boundary, two continental plates collide and crumple, leading to the formation of mountain ranges, such as the Himalayas. Since both plates are buoyant and primarily composed of continental crust, neither plate is forced beneath the other, unlike in oceanic-continental or oceanic-oceanic boundaries.
When oceanic and continental plates collide, the oceanic plate is usually forced under the continental plate in a process called subduction. This can result in the formation of mountain ranges on the continental plate and can lead to the creation of volcanic arcs. The collision can also cause earthquakes and tsunamis.
Convergent boundary
When tectonic plates collide with oceanic plates, the denser oceanic plate is usually forced beneath the less dense continental plate in a process called subduction. This can lead to the formation of volcanic arcs and deep ocean trenches. The collision can also cause earthquakes and crustal deformation.
These are zones/areas where two lithospheric plates, involving an oceanic and a continental plate collide.
These are zones/areas where two lithospheric plates, involving an oceanic and a continental plate collide.
convergent
When plates collide it is called a convergent boundary.newtest3
A convergent boundary that does not have a subduction zone is a continental-continental convergent boundary. At this type of boundary, two continental plates collide and crumple, leading to the formation of mountain ranges, such as the Himalayas. Since both plates are buoyant and primarily composed of continental crust, neither plate is forced beneath the other, unlike in oceanic-continental or oceanic-oceanic boundaries.
A convergent boundary is where two plates collide. This can lead to the formation of mountains, earthquakes, and volcanic activity.
The answer is the Convergent Boundary.
convergent boundary
Convergent boundary
1. Oceanic-oceanic convergent plate boundary. 2. Continental-continental convergent plate boundary. and 3. Oceanic-continental convergent plate boundary.
When two continental plates collide or a continental plate collides with an oceanic plate.
Convergent Boundary