Plate Tectonics
Overview
The theory of plate tectonics explains that the majority of Earth's geological features—from mountain ranges to ocean trenches—result from interactions between slabs of rock that make up Earth's outer shell. The slabs—collectively called tectonic plates—vary in size, composition, and movement, and have been dragged by convection currents, or continuous circular flows of material, in Earth's mantle for at least 3 billion years.
The theory began with rock, fossil, and climatic records suggesting that all land was once part of a single, interconnected supercontinent that broke apart. Decades later, measurements of the seafloor suggested that it steadily moved away from mid-ocean ridges—vast underwater mountain ranges with near-continuous volcanic activity. These movements cause oceanic plates to push into continental plates, resulting in earthquakes and volcanoes as the denser oceanic plate sinks beneath the continental plate and forms ocean trenches.
Mapping the locations of these and other geological features has enabled scientists to outline tectonic plates, identify types of plate boundaries, and model Earth's surface history.
1440 Findings
Hours of research by our editors, distilled into minutes of clarity.
Explore Science & Technology
Dive into the dynamic world of science and technology, where curiosity has brought about extraordinary understandings of the universe and creativity has led to the breakthroughs and innovations that have transformed our world. Explore a wide range of topics, from the natural and physical sciences to cutting-edge technologies and the people who shaped them, each of which is accompanied by carefully curated resources meant to inform, engage, and inspire those eager to uncover the nature of reality.
Featured Topics
- 3D Printing
- Algae
- Algorithms
- Asteroids
- Atoms
- Auroras
- Batteries
- Big Bang
- Bill Nye
- Biological Cells
- Bioluminescence
- Bioremediation
- Biosphere 2
- Black Holes
- Chaos Theory
- Climatology
- Comets
- Computer Viruses
- Coral Reefs
- Critical Minerals
- Crude Oil
- Cryptography
- Dark Energy
- Dark Matter
- Dark Web
- Data Centers
- David Attenborough
- Deep-Sea Mining
- Deepfakes
- Dinosaurs
- DNA
- Earth
- Earth's Atmosphere
- Earthquakes
- El Niño-Southern Oscillation
- Electric Grids
- Electric Vehicles
- Electricity
- Environmental Protection Agency
- Extremophiles
- Fireworks
- Fracking
- General Relativity
- Generative AI
- Geothermal Power
- Grace Hopper
- Graphics Processing Unit
- Greenhouse Gases
- Helium
- Hubble Space Telescope
- Hurricanes
- International Space Station
- Internet
- Invasive Species
- James Webb Space Telescope
- Jupiter
- Large Hadron Collider
- Large Language Models
- Lasers
- Light
- Lightning
- LIGO
- Marie Curie
- Mars
- Memory
- Microchips
- Microplastics
- Mixed Reality
- Molecular Gastronomy
- NASA
- National Science Foundation
- Neutron Stars
- Nikola Tesla
- Nobel Prize
- Nuclear Power
- Particle Accelerators
- Photosynthesis
- Plate Tectonics
- Pollinators
- Pontifical Academy of Sciences
- Quantum Computing
- Quantum Mechanics
- Radioactivity
- Rosalind Franklin
- Scientific Theory
- Self-Driving Cars
- Smart Cities
- Solar Power
- Space Tourism
- Space Trash
- Standard Model
- Stephen Hawking
- Sun
- Tardigrades
- Tesla
- Time
- Tornadoes
- Turbulence
- Viking Project
- Volcanoes
- Voyager Mission
- Water
- Wikipedia
- Wind Power




