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A tectonic plate is a piece of the Earth's lithosphere that is distinguished from other neighbouring plates by relative displacement across the boundaries between them. Tectonic plates are the basis of the theory of plate tectonics and have been created, destroyed, merged, split and modified throughout the history of the Earth since at the least the end of the Archean.
There are three types of plate boundary; convergent, divergent and conservative depending on whether the adjacent plates are moving together, apart or sliding past each other. These are also known as trench, ridge and transform fault, shortened to T,R and F. [1]
The base of all tectonic plates is the boundary between the lithosphere and the underlying asthenosphere.
In some cases existing plates appear to be breaking up into two or more new plates and these are known as protoplates.
![]() | This is not a Wikipedia article: It is an individual user's work-in-progress page, and may be incomplete and/or unreliable. For guidance on developing this draft, see
Wikipedia:So you made a userspace draft. Find sources:
Google (
books ·
news ·
scholar ·
free images ·
WP refs) ·
FENS ·
JSTOR ·
TWL |
A tectonic plate is a piece of the Earth's lithosphere that is distinguished from other neighbouring plates by relative displacement across the boundaries between them. Tectonic plates are the basis of the theory of plate tectonics and have been created, destroyed, merged, split and modified throughout the history of the Earth since at the least the end of the Archean.
There are three types of plate boundary; convergent, divergent and conservative depending on whether the adjacent plates are moving together, apart or sliding past each other. These are also known as trench, ridge and transform fault, shortened to T,R and F. [1]
The base of all tectonic plates is the boundary between the lithosphere and the underlying asthenosphere.
In some cases existing plates appear to be breaking up into two or more new plates and these are known as protoplates.