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Unit 1 Physical Geography: The Restless Earth Unit Lessons • Why is the earth’s crust so unstable? • What happens at plate margins? • How are our highest and deepest places created? • How do people use an area of fold mountains? • How and where are volcanoes created? • How do volcanoes affect people? • How can we monitor volcanoes and predict eruptions? • What is a supervolcano? • What are earthquakes and where do they occur? • What were the causes, effects and responses to the Kobe earthquake? • What were the causes, effects and responses to the Port au Prince earthquake? • Why is a tsunami hazardous? Independent study • An account of the uses of fold mountains and adapting to life in Livigno, The Alps • A report of the eruption of Mount St Helens, USA on 18th May 1980 • A comparison of the earthquakes in Kobe, Japan and Port au Prince, Haiti L What happens at plate margins? Learning Objectives • To know what happens at a destructive-subduction, constructive and conservative margins • To understand how plate margins create different types of tectonic activity Key terms: Subduction, ocean trench, mid-ocean ridge, volcanic islands, collision, fault, friction Starter How is the structure of the earth like an apple? Recap Questions • Which layer do convection currents occur in? • Which is the thinnest layer? • What are the two types of crust? Give a difference between them. Distribution of plate margins and tectonic activity • Plate margins are unstable parts of the crust. • This is where most tectonic activity occurs. • The direction of plate movement determines the type of plate margin and the The Where three types ofmost plate of margin we will look at in is the the world’s tectonic type of tectonic more detail are: activity? Why is this? activity 1. Destructive – subduction Remember tectonic activity means volcanoes 2. Constructive and3.earthquakes Conservative Plate Margins • Plate margins (sometimes called boundaries) are where two plates meet. • Remember plates are just huge slabs of rock. But they move in different directions. • If they crash into each other then it will be quite disastrous. This is called a destructive boundary. • If they slide past each other then they will shake each other. This is called a conservative boundary. • But if they move away from each other, then they will form new land. This is called a constructive boundary. Destructive boundary Conservative boundary Constructive boundary Types of plate margin Destructive (subduction) plate margins Violent volcanic eruptions Continental plate (North American Plate) Pacific Ocean Hot liquid rock (magma) rises Oceanic plate (Juan de Fuca Plate) Oceanic plate subducted beneath continental plate Earthquakes caused by subducting plate Mantle Friction and heat from mantle melts plate Types of plate margin Constructive plate margins Over years volcanic islands may form as the mid-ocean ridge breaks through the surface of the water (e.g. Iceland) Magma forms underwater volcanoes and the lava creates a midocean ridge (e.g. Mid-Atlantic Ridge) Oceanic plates are forced apart Rising less dense magma Convection currents in mantle Types of plate margin Conservative plate margins Ocean Pacific Plate Crust is neither made nor destroyed North American Plate San Andreas Fault Plates are sliding past one another, yet at different angles and different speeds. Friction means they get caught on each other, the pressure builds and then is suddenly released as they jolt into a new position. This is an earthquake. No volcanoes at this margin. Exam Technique Explanation Explanation is an important technique. It is done best using clear, ordered sentences. Higher level explanation will include key terms and diagrams. 1. Explain how volcanoes occur at destructive margins? (4 marks) The oceanic plate is subducted beneath the continental plate, as it is denser. As it moves into the mantle it melts. The magma rises and breaks through the continental plate, forming a violent volcanic eruption. Continental plate Oceanic plate Mantle Plate subducts and melts Volcano Magma rises Exam Technique Explanation Explanation is an important technique. It is done best using clear, ordered sentences. Higher level explanation will include key terms and diagrams. 2. Explain how volcanoes occur at constructive margins? (4 marks) Two oceanic plates are pulled apart, magma from the mantle rises and reaches the ocean bed. It cools and forms underwater volcanoes (known as shield volcanoes). These volcanoes may reach the surface of the sea, becoming volcanic islands (e.g. Iceland). Sea Oceanic plate Mantle Lava cools to form shield volcanoes Oceanic plate Magma rises and reaches the sea bed Exam Technique Explanation Explanation is an important technique. It is done best using clear, ordered sentences. Higher level explanation will include key terms and diagrams. 3. Explain how earthquakes occur at conservative margins? (4 marks) Two plates slide past one another. Friction means they get caught on each other, the pressure builds and then is suddenly released as they jolt into a new position. This is an earthquake. Friction causes pressure to build up between the plates Plates slide past in opposite directions.