Convergent
No, the two plates along the coast of South America are not a divergent boundary; they are part of a convergent boundary. The Nazca Plate is subducting beneath the South American Plate, which leads to significant geological activity, including the formation of the Andes Mountains and frequent earthquakes. Divergent boundaries, in contrast, occur where tectonic plates move apart.
It is a convergent boundary The subduction of the pacific plate underneath the west coast of South America creates the uplift and volcanoes that is still producing the Andean mountain range. A divergent boundary would create a mid-ocean ridge, or somthing akin to the great rift valley in Africa.
It is a convergent boundary The subduction of the pacific plate underneath the west coast of South America creates the uplift and volcanoes that is still producing the Andean mountain range. A divergent boundary would create a mid-ocean ridge, or somthing akin to the great rift valley in Africa.
glucise
The type of boundary that the Andes mountains are, in South America, is a convergent plate boundary. This was formed from the collision of the South American plate boundary and the Nazca plate.
The Andes Mountains were formed through subduction of the oceanic plate underneath the South American plate.
The western coast of South America is a very good example of an oceanic to continental convergent boundary where the Nazca plate is colliding (and being subducted beneath) the South American plate.
The Andes were a result of the collision of the Nazca Plate & the South American Plate.
Galeras Volcano is on the Nazca and the South American plates. It is a convergent boundary and a strato volcano.
Convergent boundaries can be found where tectonic plates collide. This collision can result in the oceanic plate subducting beneath the continental plate or two continental plates colliding and forming mountain ranges. Examples of convergent boundaries include the west coast of South America, where the Nazca Plate is subducting beneath the South American Plate, and the Himalayas, where the Indian Plate is colliding with the Eurasian Plate.
north and south america plates