DIVERGENT BOUNDARY


In plate tectonics, a 'divergent boundary' ('divergent fault boundary' or 'divergent plate boundary'), (but also known as a 'constructive boundary' or an 'extensional boundary') is a linear feature that exists between two tectonic plates that are moving away from each other. These areas can form in the middle of continents but eventually form ocean basins. Divergent boundaries within continents initially produce rifts which produce rift valleys. If the rifting process stops, a failed rift results. Therefore, most active divergent plate boundaries exist between oceanic plates and are often called 'oceanic rifts'. Divergent boundaries are a type of stress called 'tension'. It is when two bodies of land are spread apart.
Although still an area of active research, it appears that due to complex convection within the Earth's mantle material rises to the base of the lithosphere beneath the divergent plate boundary.[1] This supplies the area with vast amounts of heat and a reduction in pressure that melts rock from the asthenosphere (or upper mantle) beneath the rift area forming large flood basalt flows. Each eruption occurs in only a part of the plate boundary at any one time, but when it does occur, it fills in the opening gap as the two opposing plates move away from each other. The average rate of movement is comparable to how fast human fingernails grow, about 2 cm a year.
Over millions of years the plates have moved many hundreds of kilometers away from both sides of the divergent plate boundary. Because of this, rock closest to the boundary is younger than rock further away on the same plate.
Continental crust is often split along divergent plate boundaries.

Contents
Divergent boundaries
Other plate boundary types
See also
References

Divergent boundaries



★ the Mid-Atlantic Ridge

★ the boundary between the African Plate and Arabian Plate (the Red Sea)

Great Rift Valley

West Antarctic Rift

East Pacific Rise

Pacific-Antarctic Ridge

Galapagos Rise

Gakkel Ridge

Other plate boundary types



Convergent boundary

Transform boundary

See also



Seafloor spreading

Plate tectonics

Continental drift

Subduction zone

References



1. http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/full/97/23/12409 Toshiro Tanimoto and Thorne Lay, ''Mantle dynamics and seismic tomography'', PNAS, November 7, 2000, vol. 97 no. 23 pp. 12409-12410



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