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Plate Boundaries

 
Geography Starter

Starter

 
Can you label the following diagrams with what you think is going on?
 

Click here for full screen version

Click here for full screen version

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Click here for full screen version

 
Geography Activities

Activities

 
Plate Margins
 

 
Constructive Plate Margin
Destructive Plate Margin
View AnimationView Constructive Margin Animation
View AnimationView Destructive Margin Animation
   
Conservative Plate Margin
View AnimationView Conservative Margin Animation
View AnimationView Collision Margin Animation
Image Sources

Task

Download a copy of each of the diagrams above, by clicking on them and then right-clicking > Save Picture/Image as.

Paste the images into an application such as PowerPoint which allows you to easily label a diagram.

  1. Label 'plate' and 'mantle' onto each of the diagrams.
  2. Label the following onto the correct diagrams:
  • Plates get locked together and pressure builds up.
  • Example: Mid Atlantic Ridge.
  • Example: When the Indian plate hit the Eurasian plate and formed the Himalayan mountains.
  • New plate being made.
  • No volcanoes.
  • Generally explosive volcanic eruptions.
  • Plate being forced into the mantle.
  • Magma rising to form volcanoes.
  • Deep earthquakes.
  • Example: When the Nazca plate meets the South American plate to form the Andes Mountains.
  • No volcanoes.
  • Generally gentle volcanic eruptions.
  • Lots of earthquakes.
  • Example: The San Andreas Fault, near San Francisco, USA.
  • One plate is denser than the other so sinks.
  • Shallow earthquakes.
  • Plates moving past each other.
  • Two plates collide with each other.
  • Mountains are formed.
  • Some earthquakes.
  • Plate melting.
  • Plate being pulled apart.
 
Geography Review
Homework

Review and Homework Task

 
Learn the name of the tectonic plates named on the map below. Test next lesson ...
 
 
Blank Plate Tectonics Map
 

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