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Convergent boundary

Holt Earth Science Chapter 9, Section 9.3

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A. Oceanic-Continental Convergence When a plate capped with continental crust converges with a slab of oceanic lithosphere, the buoyant continental block remains ?floating?; denser oceanic crust sinks into the mantle. When oceanic slab goes down about 100km, melting is triggered in the asthenosphere above it. This is because the ?wet? oceanic rock in a high-pressure place melts at a much lower temperature than ?dry? rock of the same material does. Sediments and oceanic crusts have lots of H2O, which is carried down much depth by a subducting plate. As the plate moves down, heat + pressure drive water from voids in the rock. At a depth of 100km, the wedge of rock is hot enough so that H2O from slab, when exposed, causes some melting.

Plate Tectonics

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Plate Tectonics .? Theory of how the continents moved apart ( Continental Drift) driven bySeafloor Spreading? .? Tectonics - important motions of Earth?s Crust .? Plates- Make up the crust Tectonic Plates . Crust made up of 12 or so plates study of movement/ formation of these plates Continental Drift .? Theory that all continents are moving across Earth?s surface Evidence: Fossils Glacial Striations/Grooves Rock deposits Jigsaw puzzle of Modern Continents Creation Of Continental Drift .? Alfred Wegener - 1912 .? Continents were together at one point ---> ? Pangea? -- ?All Earth? .? Over millions of years ---> continents split apart .? Wegener discredited because he was a? meteorologist and he could not explain a force for moving plates
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