Divergent boundaries occur along spreading centers where plates are moving
apart and new crust is created by magma pushing up from the mantle.
Picture two giant conveyor belts, facing each other but slowly moving in
opposite directions as they transport newly formed oceanic crust away from
the ridge crest.
Perhaps the best known of the divergent
boundaries is the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. This submerged mountain range, which
extends from the Arctic Ocean to beyond the southern tip of Africa, is but
one segment of the global mid-ocean ridge system that encircles the Earth.
The rate of spreading along the Mid-Atlantic Ridge averages about 2.5
centimeters per year (cm/yr), or 25 km in a million years. This rate may
seem slow by human standards, but because this process has been going on
for millions of years, it has resulted in plate movement of thousands of
kilometers. Seafloor spreading over the past 100 to 200 million years has
caused the Atlantic Ocean to grow from a tiny inlet of water between the
continents of Europe, Africa, and the Americas into the vast ocean that
exists today.
The volcanic country of Iceland, which
straddles the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, offers scientists a natural laboratory
for studying on land the processes also occurring along the submerged
parts of a spreading ridge. Iceland is splitting along the spreading
center between the North American and Eurasian Plates, as North America
moves westward relative to Eurasia.
Map showing the Mid-Atlantic Ridge
splitting Iceland and separating the North American and Eurasian Plates.
The map also shows Reykjavik, the capital of Iceland, the Thingvellir
area, and the locations of some of Iceland's active volcanoes (red
triangles), including Krafla.
The consequences of plate movement are easy
to see around Krafla Volcano, in the northeastern part of Iceland. Here,
existing ground cracks have widened and new ones appear every few months.
From 1975 to 1984, numerous episodes of rifting (surface cracking)
took place along the Krafla fissure zone. Some of these rifting events
were accompanied by volcanic activity; the ground would gradually rise 1-2
m before abruptly dropping, signalling an impending eruption. Between 1975
and 1984, the displacements caused by rifting totalled about 7 m.
In East Africa, spreading processes have
already torn Saudi Arabia away from the rest of the African continent,
forming the Red Sea. The actively splitting African Plate and the Arabian
Plate meet in what geologists call a triple junction, where the Red
Sea meets the Gulf of Aden. A new spreading center may be developing under
Africa along the East African Rift Zone. When the continental crust
stretches beyond its limits, tension cracks begin to appear on the Earth's
surface. Magma rises and squeezes through the widening cracks, sometimes
to erupt and form volcanoes. The rising magma, whether or not it erupts,
puts more pressure on the crust to produce additional fractures and,
ultimately, the rift zone.
East Africa may be the site of the Earth's
next major ocean. Plate interactions in the region provide scientists an
opportunity to study first hand how the Atlantic may have begun to form
about 200 million years ago. Geologists believe that, if spreading
continues, the three plates that meet at the edge of the present-day
African continent will separate completely, allowing the Indian Ocean to
flood the area and making the easternmost corner of Africa (the Horn of
Africa) a large island.
|