Topic Summaries

Destructive margins

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Glacial landform processes

  • Destructive margins or convergent boundaries occur when two tectonic plates move towards each other. This can be: 
    • Oceanic plate + oceanic plate (e.g. Pacific plate and Philippine plate)
      • One oceanic plate subducts beneath another.
      • This creates deep ocean trenches and island arcs (chains of volcanic islands) as well as earthquakes and volcanic eruptions.
    • Oceanic plate + continental plate (e.g. Nazca plate and South American plate)
      • This happens when the oceanic plate is denser than the continental plate and subducts beneath it.
      • As the oceanic plate subducts, it melts due to heat/pressure in the mantle.
      • Magma can rise through cracks, forming volcanoes and fold mountains. 
    • Continental plate + continental plate (e.g. Indian plate and Eurasian plate)
      • Neither plate is subducted. Instead they crumple and fold, creating fold mountains and powerful earthquakes.
      • No volcanoes can form as there is no subduction/magma

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