Short description: Overview of different types of tectonic plates
Map of sixteen of Earth's tectonic plates, showing plate boundary types: Divergent:
Spreading center
Extension zone
Convergent:
Subduction zone
Collision zone
Transform:
Dextral transform
Sinistral transform
Plate tectonics map from NASA
This is a list of tectonic plates on Earth's surface. Tectonic plates are pieces of Earth's crust and uppermost mantle, together referred to as the lithosphere. The plates are around 100 km (62 mi) thick and consist of two principal types of material: oceanic crust (also called sima from silicon and magnesium) and continental crust (sial from silicon and aluminium). The composition of the two types of crust differs markedly, with mafic basaltic rocks dominating oceanic crust, while continental crust consists principally of lower-density felsic granitic rocks.
Contents
1Current plates
1.1Major plates
1.2Minor plates
1.3Microplates
2Ancient tectonic plates
2.1African Plate
2.2Antarctic Plate
2.3Eurasian Plate
2.4Indo-Australian Plate
2.5North American Plate
2.6South American Plate
3See also
4Notes and references
4.1Notes
4.2References
4.3Bibliography
5External links
Current plates
Geologists generally agree that the following tectonic plates currently exist on Earth's surface with roughly definable boundaries. Tectonic plates are sometimes subdivided into three fairly arbitrary categories: major (or primary) plates, minor (or secondary) plates, and microplates (or tertiary plates).[1]
Major plates
Map showing Earth's principal tectonic plates and their boundaries in detail
These plates comprise the bulk of the continents and the Pacific Ocean. For purposes of this list, a major plate is any plate with an area greater than 20 million km2.
Earth:African Plate – Tectonic plate underlying Africa – 61,300,000 km2
Earth:Antarctic Plate – Major tectonic plate containing Antarctica and the surrounding ocean floor – 60,900,000 km2
Earth:Eurasian Plate – Tectonic plate which includes most of the continent of Eurasia – 67,800,000 km2
Earth:Indo-Australian Plate – A major tectonic plate formed by the fusion of the Indian and the Australian plates (sometimes considered to be two separate tectonic plates) – 58,900,000 km2
Earth:Australian Plate – Major tectonic plate separated from Indo-Australian Plate about 3 million years ago – 47,000,000 km2
Earth:Indian Plate – Minor plate that separated from Gondwana – 11,900,000 km2
Earth:North American Plate – Large tectonic plate including most of North America, Greenland and part of Siberia – 75,900,000 km2
Earth:Pacific Plate – Oceanic tectonic plate under the Pacific Ocean – 103,300,000 km2
Earth:South American Plate – Major tectonic plate which includes most of South America and a large part of the south Atlantic – 43,600,000 km2
Minor plates
These smaller plates are often not shown on major plate maps, as the majority of them do not comprise significant land area. For purposes of this list, a minor plate is any plate with an area less than 20 million km2 but greater than 1 million km2.
Earth:Amurian Plate – A minor tectonic plate in eastern Asia
Earth:Arabian Plate – Minor tectonic plate – 5,000,000 km2
Earth:Burma Plate – Minor tectonic plate in Southeast Asia – 1,100,000 km2
Earth:Caribbean Plate – A mostly oceanic tectonic plate including part of Central America and the Caribbean Sea – 3,300,000 km2
Earth:Cocos Plate – Young oceanic tectonic plate beneath the Pacific Ocean off the west coast of Central America – 2,900,000 km2
Earth:Indian Plate – Minor plate that separated from Gondwana – 11,900,000 km2
Earth:Nazca Plate – Oceanic tectonic plate in the eastern Pacific Ocean basin – 15,600,000 km2[note 1]
Earth:New Hebrides Plate – Minor tectonic plate in the Pacific Ocean near Vanuatu – 1,100,000 km2
Earth:Okhotsk Plate – Minor tectonic plate in Asia
Earth:Philippine Sea Plate – Oceanic tectonic plate to the east of the Philippines – 5,500,000 km2
Earth:Scotia Plate – Minor oceanic tectonic plate between the Antarctic and South American plates – 1,600,000 km2
Earth:Somali Plate – Minor tectonic plate including the east coast of Africa and the adjoining seabed – 16,700,000 km2
Earth:Sunda Plate – Tectonic plate including Southeast Asia
Earth:Yangtze Plate – Small tectonic plate carrying the bulk of southern China
Microplates
These plates are often grouped with an adjacent principal plate on a tectonic plate world map. For purposes of this list, a microplate is any plate with an area less than 1 million km2. Some models identify more minor plates within current orogens (events that lead to a large structural deformation of Earth's lithosphere) like the Apulian, Explorer, Gorda, and Philippine Mobile Belt plates.
[2] One study has theorized that microplates may be the basic elements of which the crust is composed.
[3]
African Plate
Earth:Lwandle Plate – Mainly oceanic tectonic microplate off the southeast coast of Africa
Earth:Rovuma Plate – One of three tectonic microplates that contribute to the Nubian Plate and the Somali Plate
Antarctic Plate
Earth:Shetland Plate – Tectonic microplate off the tip of the Antarctic Peninsula
Australian Plate
Earth:Capricorn Plate – Proposed minor tectonic plate under the Indian Ocean
Earth:Futuna Plate – Very small tectonic plate near the south Pacific island of Futuna
Earth:Kermadec Plate – Tectonic plate in the south Pacific Ocean
Earth:Maoke Plate – Small tectonic plate in western New Guinea
Earth:Niuafo'ou Plate – Small tectonic plate west of Tonga
Earth:Tonga Plate – Small tectonic plate in the southwest Pacific Ocean
Earth:Woodlark Plate – Small tectonic plate located to the east of the island of New Guinea
Caribbean Plate
Earth:Gonâve Microplate – Part of the boundary between the North American Plate and the Caribbean Plate
Earth:Panama Plate – Small tectonic plate in Central America
Cocos Plate
Earth:Rivera Plate – Small tectonic plate off the west coast of Mexico
Eurasian Plate
Earth:Adriatic Plate, also known as the Apulian Plate – A small tectonic plate in the Mediterranean
Earth:Aegean Sea Plate, also known as Hellenic Plate – A small tectonic plate in the eastern Mediterranean Sea
Earth:Anatolian Plate – Continental tectonic plate comprising most of the Anatolia (Asia Minor) peninsula
Earth:Banda Sea Plate – Minor tectonic plate underlying the Banda Sea in southeast Asia
Earth:Hreppar Microplate – Small tectonic plate in south Iceland, between the Eurasian Plate and the North American Plate
Earth:Iberian Plate – Small tectonic plate now part of the Eurasian plate
Earth:Iranian Plate – Small tectonic plate including Iran and Afghanistan, and parts of Iraq and Pakistan
Earth:Molucca Sea Plate – Small fully subducted tectonic plate near Indonesia
Earth:Halmahera Plate – Small tectonic plate in the Molucca Sea
Earth:Sangihe Plate – Microplate within eastern Indonesia
Earth:Okinawa Plate – Minor tectonic plate from the northern end of Taiwan to the southern tip of Kyūshū
Earth:Pelso Plate – Small tectonic unit in the Pannonian Basin in Europe
Earth:Timor Plate – Microplate in Southeast Asia carrying the island of Timor and surrounding islands
Earth:Tisza Plate – Tectonic microplate, in present-day Europe
Earth:Juan de Fuca Plate – Small tectonic plate in the eastern North Pacific – 250,000 km2
Earth:Explorer Plate – Oceanic tectonic plate beneath the Pacific Ocean off the west coast of Vancouver Island, Canada
Earth:Gorda Plate – One of the northern remnants of the Farallon Plate
Nazca Plate
Earth:Coiba Plate – Tectonic plate off the coast south of Panama and northwestern Colombia
Earth:Malpelo Plate – A small tectonic plate off the coast west of Ecuador and Colombia
North American Plate
Earth:Greenland Plate – Supposed tectonic microplate containing the Greenland craton[4]
Earth:Queen Elizabeth Islands Subplate – Small tectonic plate containing the Queen Elizabeth Islands of Northern Canada
Pacific Plate
Earth:Balmoral Reef Plate – Small tectonic plate in the south Pacific north of Fiji
Earth:Bird's Head Plate – Small tectonic plate in New Guinea
Earth:Conway Reef Plate – Small tectonic plate in the south Pacific west of Fiji
Earth:Easter Microplate – Very small tectonic plate to the west of Easter Island
Earth:Galápagos Microplate – Very small tectonic plate at the Galapagos Triple Junction
Earth:Manus Plate – Tiny tectonic plate northeast of New Guinea
Earth:North Bismarck Plate – Small tectonic plate in the Bismarck Sea north of New Guinea
North Galápagos Microplate – Tectonic plate off west South America
Earth:South Bismarck Plate – Small tectonic plate in the southern Bismarck Sea
Earth:Trobriand Plate – Small tectonic plate located to the east of the island of New Guinea
Philippine Sea Plate
Earth:Philippine Mobile Belt, also known as Philippine Microplate – Tectonic boundary
Scotia Plate
Earth:South Sandwich Plate – Small tectonic plate south of the South American Plate
Somali Plate
Earth:Madagascar Plate – Tectonic plate formerly part of the supercontinent Gondwana
South American Plate
Ancient tectonic plates
In the history of Earth, many tectonic plates have come into existence and have over the intervening years either accreted onto other plates to form larger plates, rifted into smaller plates, or have been crushed by or subducted under other plates.
The following is a list of ancient cratons, microplates, plates, and terranes which no longer exist as separate plates. Cratons are the oldest and most stable parts of the continental lithosphere, and shields are exposed parts of them. Terranes are fragments of crustal material formed on one tectonic plate and accreted to crust lying on another plate, which may or may not have originated as independent microplates: a terrane may not contain the full thickness of the lithosphere.
African Plate
Earth:Atlantica – Ancient continent formed during the Proterozoic about 2 billion years ago
Earth:Congo Craton – Precambrian craton that with four others makes up the modern continent of Africa (Angola, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of Congo, Gabon, Sudan, and Zambia)
Earth:Kalahari Craton – African geological area (South Africa)
Earth:Saharan Metacraton – Large area of continental crust in the north-central part of Africa (Algeria)
Earth:Tanzania Craton – Old and stable part of the continental lithosphere in central Tanzania (Tanzania)
Earth:West African Craton – One of the five cratons of the Precambrian basement rock of Africa that make up the African Plate (Algeria, Benin, Burkina Faso, Côte d'Ivoire, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea Bissau, Liberia, Mali, Mauritania, Morocco, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone, and Togo)
Zaire Craton (Congo)
Antarctic Plate
Earth:Bellingshausen Plate – Ancient tectonic plate that fused onto the Antarctic Plate
Earth:Charcot Plate – Fragment of the Phoenix tectonic plate fused to the Antarctic Peninsula
Earth:East Antarctic Shield, also known as East Antarctic Craton – Cratonic rock body which makes up most of the continent Antarctica
Eurasian Plate
Armorica – Microcontinent or group of continental fragments rifted away from Gondwana (France, Germany, Spain and Portugal)
Earth:Avalonia – Microcontinent in the Paleozoic era (Canada , Great Britain, and United States )
Earth:Baltic Plate – Ancient tectonic plate from the Cambrian to the Carboniferous Period
Belomorian Craton
Central Iberian Plate
Cimmerian Plate – Ancient string of microcontinents that rifted from Gondwana (Anatolia, Iran, Afghanistan, Tibet, Indochina and Malaya)
East China Craton[citation needed]
Earth:East European Craton – Geology of Europe
Place:Baltic Shield, also known as Fennoscandian Shield – Ancient segment of Earth's crust
Junggar Plate – Geographical subregion in Northwest China and Eastern Kazakhstan
Earth:Kazakhstania – Geological region in Central Asia and the Junngar Basin in China
Earth:Lhasa terrane – Fragment of crustal material that forms present-day southern Tibet
Earth:Massif Central – A highland region in the middle of Southern France
Moravo Silesian Plate
Earth:Midlands Microcraton – Block of late Neoproterozoic crust which underlies the English Midlands
Earth:North China Craton – Continental crustal block in northeast China, Inner Mongolia, the Yellow Sea, and North Korea
Ossa-Morena Plate
Piemont-Liguria Plate – Former piece of oceanic crust that is seen as part of the Tethys Ocean
Proto-Alps Terrane
Rhenohercynian Plate
Siberian Craton – Ancient craton forming the Central Siberian Plateau
South Portuguese Plate
Tarim Craton
Teplá-Barrandian Terrane
Earth:Ukrainian Shield – The southwest shield of the East European craton
Valais Plate – Subducted ocean basin. Remnants found in the Alps in the North Penninic nappes.
Volgo-Uralian Craton
Yakutai Craton
Yangtze Craton – An ancient continent that contained today's South and Southeast China, Indochina, and parts of Southeast Asia
Indo-Australian Plate
Basic geological regions of Australia, by age
Map of chronostratigraphic divisions of India
Altjawarra Craton (Australia)
Bhandara Craton, (India)
Bundelkhand Craton, (India)
Central Craton (Australia)
Curnamona Craton (Australia)
Earth:Gawler Craton – Province of the larger West Australian Shield in central South Australia
Earth:Pilbara Craton – Old and stable part of the continental lithosphere located in Pilbara, Western Australia
Singhbhum Craton (India)
Earth:Yilgarn Craton – Large craton in Western Australia
Earth:Australian Shield, also known as Western Australian Shield – Large part of the continent of Australia
Earth:Zealandia – Mostly submerged continental crust area in Oceania. See Moa Plate and Lord Howe Rise
North American Plate
North American cratons and basement rocks
Earth:Avalonia – Microcontinent in the Paleozoic era (Canada, Great Britain, and United States)
Earth:Churchill Craton – Northwest section of the Canadian Shield from southern Saskatchewan and Alberta to northern Nunavut (Canada)
Earth:Farallon Plate – Ancient oceanic plate that has mostly subducted under the North American Plate (split into the Cocos, Explorer, Juan de Fuca, Gorda Plates, Nazca Plate, and Rivera Plates)
Earth:Hearne Craton – Craton in northern Canada (Canada)
Laurentian Craton, also known as North American Craton – A large continental craton that forms the ancient geological core of the North American continent (Canada and United States)
Earth:Insular Plate – Ancient oceanic plate
Earth:Intermontane Plate – Ancient oceanic tectonic plate on the west coast of North America about 195 million years ago
Earth:Izanagi Plate – Ancient tectonic plate, which was subducted beneath the Okhotsk Plate
Mexican Plate
Earth:Nain Province – Part of the North Atlantic Craton in Labrador, Canada (Canada)
Newfoundland Plate
Nova Scotia Plate
Earth:Rae Craton – Archean craton in northern Canada north of the Superior Craton (Canada)
Sask Craton (Canada)
Earth:Sclavia Craton – Late Archean supercraton (Canada)
Earth:Slave Craton – Archaean craton in the north-western Canadian Shield, in Northwest Territories and Nunavut (Canada)
Earth:Superior Craton – Large crustal block in North America (Canada)
South American Plate
Earth:Amazonian Craton – Geologic province in South America (Brazil )
Earth:Río de la Plata Craton – Medium-sized continental block in Uruguay, eastern Argentina and southern Brazil (Argentina and Uruguay)
Earth:São Francisco Craton – Ancient craton in eastern South America (Brazil)
See also
Earth:Asthenosphere – Highly viscous, mechanically weak, and ductile region of Earth's mantle
Earth:Continent – Large geographical region identified by convention
Earth:Craton – Old and stable part of the continental lithosphere
Platform – A continental area covered by relatively flat or gently tilted, mainly sedimentary strata
Shield – Large stable area of exposed Precambrian crystalline rock
Earth:Earth's crust – Earth's outer shell of rock
Earth:Continental crust – Layer of rock that forms the continents and continental shelves
Earth:Oceanic crust – Uppermost layer of the oceanic portion of a tectonic plate
Earth:Earth's mantle – A layer of silicate rock between Earth's crust and its outer core
Lower mantle – The region from 660 to 2900 km below Earth's surface
Chemistry:Geochemistry – Science that applies chemistry to analyze geological systems
Earth:Sial – Rocks rich in aluminium silicate minerals
Sima – Rocks rich in magnesium silicate minerals
Earth:Hydrosphere – Total amount of water on a planet
Earth:Lithosphere – Outermost shell of a terrestrial-type planet or natural satellite
Earth:Ocean – Body of salt water covering the majority of Earth
Earth:Plate tectonics – Movement of Earth's lithosphere
List of tectonic plate interactions – Types of plate boundaries
Earth:Supercontinent – Landmass comprising more than one continental core, or craton
Notes and references
Notes
↑15,600,000 km2 is the original size before the 2017 split of the Coiba and Malpelo plates.
References
↑Madaan, About Sonia (2020-08-18). "7 Major Tectonic Plates (Pacific, African, Eurasian, Antarctic and more)". How Many Tectonic Plates Are on Earth?. https://eartheclipse.com/geology/tectonic-plates.html#How_Many_Tectonic_Plates_Are_on_Earth.
↑Bird, P. (2003). "An updated digital model of plate boundaries". Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems 4 (3): 1027. doi:10.1029/2001GC000252. http://peterbird.name/publications/2003_PB2002/2003_PB2002.htm.
↑ van Dijk, J.P. (2023); The New Global Tectonic Map - Analyses and Implications. Terra Nova, 2023, 27 pp. DOI 10.1111/TER.12662
↑Niels Henriksen; A.K. Higgins; Feiko Kalsbeek; T. Christopher R. Pulvertaft (2000). "Greenland from Archaean to Quaternary". Greenland Survey Bulletin (185). http://www.geus.dk/publications/bull-gl/nr185/nr185_p12-24.pdf.
Bibliography
North Andes Plate
Restrepo, Jorge Julián; Ordóñez Carmona, Oswaldo; Martens, Uwe; Correa, Ana María (2009). "Terrenos, complejos y provincias en la Cordillera Central de Colombia (Terrains, complexes and provinces in the central cordillera of Colombia)". Ingeniería Investigación y Desarrollo9: 49–56. https://revistas.uptc.edu.co/index.php/ingenieria_sogamoso/article/view/908. Retrieved 2019-10-31.
Fuck, Reinhardt A.; Brito Neves, Benjamim Bley; Schobbenhaus, Carlos (2008). "Rodinia descendants in South America". Precambrian Research160: 108–126. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/287701535_From_Rodinia_to_Western_Gondwana_An_approach_to_the_Brasiliano-Pan_African_Cycle_and_orogenic_collage. Retrieved 2019-10-29.
Cordani, U.G.; Cardona, A.; Jiménez, D.M.; Dunyl, L.; Nutman, A.P. (2003). "Geochronology of Proterozoic basement from the Colombian Andes: Tectonic history of remnants from a fragmented Grenville Belt". 10o Congreso Geológico Chileno. pp. 1–10.
Restrepo, Jorge Julian; Toussaint, Jean F. (1988). "Terranes and continental accretion in the Colombian Andes". Episodes11: 189–193. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/279701945_Terranes_and_Continental_Accretion_in_the_Colombian_Andes. Retrieved 2019-10-31.
External links
Bird, Peter (2003) An updated digital model of plate boundaries also available as a large (13 Mb) PDF file
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Tectonic plates
Major
African
Indo-Australian Plate
Australian
Indian
Antarctic
Eurasian
North American
Pacific
South American
Minor
Amurian
Arabian
Caribbean
Caroline
Cocos
Juan de Fuca
Nazca
Okhotsk
Philippine
Scotia
Somali
Yangtze
Other
Adriatic
Aegean Sea
Anatolian
Balmoral Reef
Banda Sea
Bird's Head
Burma
Capricorn
Coiba
Conway Reef
Easter
Explorer
Futuna
Galapagos
Gonâve
Gorda
Greenland
Halmahera
Iberian
Iranian
Juan Fernández
Kerguelen
Kermadec
Madagascar
Malpelo
Manus
Maoke
Mariana
Molucca Sea
New Hebrides
Niuafo’ou
North Andes
North Bismarck
North Galapagos
Nubian
Okinawa
Panama
Pelso
Philippine Mobile Belt
Rivera
Sangihe
Seychelles
Shetland
Solomon Sea
South Bismarck
South Sandwich
Sunda
Timor
Tisza
Tonga
Woodlark
Historical
Baltic
Bellingshausen
Charcot
Cimmeria
Farallon
Insular
Intermontane
Izanagi
Kula
Lhasa
Malvinas
Moa
Phoenix
List
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Earth science
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