Divergent Plate Boundary. (Seafloor Spreading).
convergent
Here's the thing: you know how Manhattan is shaped a little bit like a hand that is pointing upwards? There's that long, skinny finger sticking up at the north end?Westchester is north of Manhattan. The two are separated by the borough of the Bronx, and the skinny river that separates Manhattan from the Bronx, which is called the Harlem River. Actually, you can even take the subway to Westchester, kind of. You take the Uptown 2 or 5 trains to the last stop in the Bronx, which is Wakefield 241st Street on the 2 train, and Nereid Avenue on the 5 train. Then you keep walking north for a couple of miles, and you'll be in Westchester.But if you travel straight north from Manhattan on the east side (the side that doesn't have the finger-shaped extension) the distance will be much longer than if you travel straight north from the tip of the finger, on the west side (the Inwood neighborhood).So, from the east side of Manhattan, the distance between Manhattan and Westchester is about 6 miles. From the Inwood neighborhood on the west side, the distance is a little over 1 mile.Actually, the distance between the west side of Manhattan and the Bronx can technically be called 0 miles. The neighborhood directly north of the Inwood neighborhood, (the stretch of land that separates the west tip of Manhattan from Westchester) is geographically part of the Bronx, but it is considered to be part of Manhattan, because it actually once was! It's called the Marble Hill neighborhood, and the history of how the whole neighborhood was physically moved from Manhattan to the Bronx is very interesting. See the Related Question below.Since Marble Hill is still officially a part of Manhattan, it can be said that Westchester and Manhattan share a border with each other, on the west side.See the Related Link below for a New York City subway map, which shows you all the five boroughs, as well as the southern tip of Westchester. The rivers, including the Harlem River, are also labeled.
El Capitan is a vertical granite rock formation located in Yosemite National Park in the United States. It is a natural boundary that separates Yosemite Valley from the higher elevations of the Sierra Nevada mountains.
All animals are at the bronx zoo god!!
Its a divergent boundary
The South American Plate and the Nazca Plate are separated by a convergent boundary, specifically a subduction zone. This is where the Nazca Plate is forced under the South American Plate, creating the Andes mountain range and causing volcanic activity.
convergent boundary.
a subduction boundry, this is where one plate gets pushed under the other. in this case the pacific plate is being pushed under the eurasion!
Kind of...but no, not really. The Bronx is the only New York City borough that is attached to the mainland of New York State. Manhattan is an island that is located directly below The Bronx. The two boroughs are separated by the Harlem River, which flows from the Hudson River, down over the top of Manhattan and the bottom of The Bronx, and into the East River. Brooklyn, along with Queens, is located across the East River from Manhattan. The East River flows from the bay known as the Long Island Sound, down the east side of Manhattan and the west side of Queens and Brooklyn, and into the Atlantic Ocean. Queens is located on top of Brooklyn; the northern border of Brooklyn is the southern border of Queens. Queens and Brooklyn both occupy the western end of Long Island. Long Island is huge; you can't miss it on the map. It's the largest island in the continental United States. It's located just below, and directly to the east of, the bottom point of New York State. The bottom point of New York State is where The Bronx is. So, Queens (and below it, Brooklyn) are located directly below and to the east of The Bronx. The northwest side of Queens is across the Long Island Sound from the south side of The Bronx. If this answer is too confusing for you, then see the Related Link below for a complete New York City subway map. The five boroughs, plus the Hudson, Harlem and East Rivers, and the Long Island Sound, are all visible and clearly labeled. Note that the borough of Staten Island is not on the map. The tip of it is visible, in the lower left-hand corner of the map, but the entire island is not shown, since the subway doesn't go there.
An invisible boundary, probably.An invisible boundary, probably.An invisible boundary, probably.An invisible boundary, probably.
It's a divergent plate boundary.