The Earth's structure and plate tectonics
The Earth is made up of different layers:
- The inner core is the hottest part of the Earth with temperatures up to 5,500掳C. It is solid.
- The outer core is a liquid layer.
- The mantle is made up of semi-molten rock called magma. There are convection currents in the mantle which move, carrying the plates above them.
- The crust is the outer layer of the Earth. It is a thin layer between 0-60 km thick. The crust is the solid rock layer upon which we live. It is either continental crustThe surface of the Earth's crust found underneath large land masses. (found under land masses or continents) or oceanic crustThe surface of the Earth's crust found underneath the oceans, forming the ocean floor. (found underneath the oceans). The Earth's crust is broken into plates.
The theory of plate tectonics
The crust is the outer layer of the Earth. It is a thin layer between 0 - 60 km thick. The crust is the solid rock layer upon which we live. It is either continental crustThe surface of the Earth's crust found underneath large land masses. or oceanic crustThe surface of the Earth's crust found underneath the oceans, forming the ocean floor.
The Earth's crust is broken into tectonic platesTectonic plates are a set of adjacent, slow-moving plates which make up the Earth's crust.. It was once believed that convection currentA movement within the Earth's mantle caused by the heat of the core. in the mantle caused the plates to move. However, it is now recognised to be more complicated than this. Mechanisms called slab pull and ridge push are believed to move the tectonic plates. Ridge push is where the new crust formed at divergent plate marginThe region where two or more tectonic plates meet. It is a zone of intense seismic activity. is less dense than the surrounding crust and so it rises to form oceanic ridges. The older seafloor either side of the ridge slides away and this moves the seafloor apart 鈥 moving the tectonic plates.
Therefore, instead of tectonic plates moving because of the convection currents, evidence suggests it is the plates that drive the convection. Slab pull occurs where older, denser tectonic plates sink into the mantle at subduction zones. As these older sections of plates sink, newer and less dense sections of plate are pulled along behind. Sinking in one place leads to plates moving apart in other places.
The movement of the plates and the activity inside the Earth, is called the theory of plate tectonics.