字幕列表 影片播放 列印英文字幕 >> Hi, everyone. This is Keith Meldahl. We're going to review here some of the major motions that happen at the different tectonic plate boundaries. We'll start here with the divergent boundary. These are the mid-ocean ridges of the world. These are the places where the plates separate from each other, allowing hot magma to come up from the asthenosphere, the mantle underneath. The magma congeals along the mid-ocean ridges in volcanic eruptions, forming pillow lava or pillow basalt. There are lots of earthquakes. And the new ocean floor forms and spreads away from the ridges like two oppositely moving conveyor belts. So the seafloor grows and spreads from these divergent boundaries called the mid-ocean ridges. Now, the opposite process happens at the convergent boundaries of the world. These are marked by the deep ocean trenches, deep creases on the ocean floor. And these creases are formed because one plate dives down beneath another one in the process that we call subduction. One plate, the ocean floor, dives beneath the other plate. As it does that, it makes frequent earthquakes. As the plate gets to a certain depth in the mantle, it triggers melting of the mantle, which causes magma to rise and form a line of volcanoes that we call a volcanic arc: a line of volcanoes that rises and runs parallel to the ocean trench. So we call these convergent boundaries. They are the locations of subduction, and they occur at the ocean trenches of the world. The third kind of motion is called transform motion, or a transform boundary, and this is where the plates slide side by side past each other. The main thing that happens here is earthquakes. We don't have the creation of the Earth's crust; we don't have its destruction either. We simply have side by side sliding. The San Andreas Fault of California and a number of other very large faults, including on the ocean floor, are characterized by this kind of motion. In this final animation, what we can see here is that as the new ocean floor is created at the mid-ocean ridges, it spreads and slides along for a while and eventually slides down an ocean trench and is consumed in the Earth's mantle. But not before making lots of earthquakes and rising to form magma that erupts and forms volcanoes. So that's plate tectonics in a nutshell.