Is the earth’s crust thick or thin?

Step 1: Go to the ArcGIS Online map, Plate Type Effect on Volcanoes, and explore the map.

Step 2: Click the pin on the Pacific Coast.

Step 3: Click the image in the pop-up to see more detail.

  • What is this ocean’s average depth?
  • What is the continent’s average elevation?

On the map, it appears that there are generally two types of the earth’s crust. That is because there is the oceanic crust and continental crust. Oceanic crust is thinner, but denser than continental crust. Continental crust is thicker, but less dense. So when the two collide, the heavier, oceanic crust subducts below the continental crust.

How else are the earth’s crust’s different?

Volcanoes form when melted crust (magma) cools at the surface (lava). Stickier, viscous, or slower-flowing lave piles up steeply before solidifying. More easily flowing, less viscous lava spreads out broadly before cooling.

Step 4: Click the button, Bookmarks, and select Mount Rainier. Click the arrow icon.

Mount Rainier’s shape implies that the magma has a high viscosity (thick), which causes the volcano to grow high with a steep peak. If the magma were less viscous (thinner), the volcano would have shallow slopes.

  • Which type of crust was melted for this volcano to form?

Step 5: Click the button, Bookmarks, and select Mauna Loa. Next, click the arrow.

  • What does the volcano’s shape imply about the viscosity of the lava?

How are other sticky solutions like lava?

Think of lava-like a sugar solution. Higher sugar content is more viscous and flows slowly. Consider an analogy between the shape of a freshly poured puddle of juice compared to a puddle of syrup or honey. Juice is thin, and runny, making a broad puddle. The syrup is thicker and makes a small peak where poured. Honey is thickest, with a steeper, higher peak when first poured. In a volcano, the amount of silicate acts like a sugar in solution. Ocean plates have little silicate, while continental crust is rich in silicate. Like honey, continental volcanoes are steeper and more localized.

Does each tectonic plate type create its own distinct pattern of volcanoes?

Step 6: Click the Default Extent button (between the Zoom In and Zoom Out buttons, the upper-left corner of the map.

Step 7: With the Details button underlined, click the button, Show Contents of Map (Content).

Step 8: Turn on the two layers, Plate Boundaries and Global Volcanoes.

Step 9: Click different tectonic plate boundaries to see a summary of graphs of the types of volcanoes that occur within 250 miles.

  • Which boundary type has the most volcanoes?
  • Which has the highest percentage of shield volcanoes (the portion in white)?
  • Which boundary type has a higher percentage of cinder cone formation?

Why do many oceans have their ridges?

  • Where do volcanoes form near convergent boundaries? Why? (Zoom in for more detail.)

Step 10: Pan to a divergent boundary (e.g., Chile or Aleutian Islands).

  • Is the same true for divergent boundaries?
  • What happens to a continent over a divergent boundary?

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