both plates are important to keep everything staple. with one plate moving outward your gaining land . to gain land u must loose some to equal it out that's where the other plate comes in , going in the opposite direction then the other, loosing land by ether "crunching" it up (mountain ranges) or melting it down. hope that helps
No, subduction is not common at divergent plate boundaries. Divergent plate boundaries are characterized by plates moving away from each other, which creates new oceanic crust. Subduction occurs at convergent plate boundaries where plates collide and one descends beneath the other.
Vesuvius is associated with a convergent boundary between the African Plate and the Eurasian Plate.
The three main types of plate boundaries are divergent boundaries (plates move apart), convergent boundaries (plates move toward each other), and transform boundaries (plates slide past each other horizontally). At divergent boundaries, new crust is formed as magma rises to the surface, while at convergent boundaries, crust is destroyed as one plate is subducted beneath another. Transform boundaries are characterized by earthquakes as the plates grind past each other.
There are two plate boundaries that cause volcanoes. They are the divergent and convergent plate boundaries.
The three basic kinds of plate boundaries are divergent boundaries, where plates move apart; convergent boundaries, where plates come together; and transform boundaries, where plates slide past each other horizontally.
There are divergent, convergent, and transform plate boundaries.
The four types of plate boundaries are divergent boundaries (plates moving apart), convergent boundaries (plates moving together), transform boundaries (plates sliding past each other), and subduction zones (one plate sinking beneath another).
Convergent, divergent, and transformal
divergent plate boundary- a boundary where two plates move apart from each other. convergent plate boundary- a boundary where two plates move towards each other so that one plate can sink beneath the other. transform plate boundary- a boundary where one plate slips along side another plate.
the three types of plate boundaries are : -convergent plate boundaries -divergent plate boundaries -transformed plate boundaries
the three types of plate boundaries are : -convergent plate boundaries -divergent plate boundaries -transformed plate boundaries
Convergent,Divergent, and Transform Boundaries
Earthquakes can, and do, occur at divergent, convergent, and transform plate boundaries.
No, subduction is not common at divergent plate boundaries. Divergent plate boundaries are characterized by plates moving away from each other, which creates new oceanic crust. Subduction occurs at convergent plate boundaries where plates collide and one descends beneath the other.
Convergent divergent transform,
Vesuvius is associated with a convergent boundary between the African Plate and the Eurasian Plate.
The three main types of plate boundaries are divergent boundaries (plates move apart), convergent boundaries (plates move toward each other), and transform boundaries (plates slide past each other horizontally). At divergent boundaries, new crust is formed as magma rises to the surface, while at convergent boundaries, crust is destroyed as one plate is subducted beneath another. Transform boundaries are characterized by earthquakes as the plates grind past each other.