The science of plate tectonics explains the movement and interaction of Earth's lithospheric plates, which float on the semi-fluid asthenosphere beneath. **Plate tectonics** involves the study of how these plates move and interact at their boundaries—divergent (moving apart), convergent (colliding), and transform (sliding past each other). **Continental drift**, a related concept proposed by **Alfred Wegener**, suggests that continents were once part of a single supercontinent, **Pangaea**, and have drifted to their current positions. Evidence from fossil distribution, geological formations, and seismic activity supports these theories. Understanding plate tectonics and continental drift helps explain earthquakes, volcanic activity, and mountain formation.
The Science of Plate Tectonics and Continental Drift
Posted 2024-09-09 12:12:49
Most Recent
Top Comments
Record
Recording 00:00
Commenting has been turned off for this post.
- Atharv Sharma👍🏻👍🏻
- Like
- Reply
- 2024-09-09 12:15:57
- 1
-
Categories
- Sustainability
- Home
- Wellness
- Theater
- Sports
- Shopping
- Religion
- Party
- Other
- Networking
- Music
- Literature
- Art
- Health
- Gardening
- Games
- Food
- Fitness
- Film
- Drinks
- Dance
- Crafts
- Causes
Read More
Balanced Diet
We have grown up listening to the term ‘balanced diet’ in science. It refers to a...
Vancouver Island Marrot
These species of marries live on an island off the south coast off Canada. There only 90 mature...
Happy EV day
September 9th marks EV Day, a global celebration promoting sustainable transportation and...
Save water
"Water Water everywhere not a drop to drink
Keep in mind:
To close the taps after use
To...
India Under British Rule
India came under British rule in the mid-18th century, when the British East India Company...
×
Your daily access limit has been reached. Please try again tomorrow.
© 2025 GoSharpener Pvt.Ltd.
Refund and Cancellation policy - We do not entertain any refunds and cancellation
Refund and Cancellation policy - We do not entertain any refunds and cancellation