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Ridge push is the result of gravitational forces acting on the young, raised oceanic lithosphere around mid-ocean ridges, causing it to slide down the similarly raised but weaker asthenosphere and push on lithospheric material farther from the ridges.
28 sie 2017 · The main purpose of this study is twofold: (1) to develop detailed models of lithospheric strength of oceanic plates and ridge-push force, and (2) to determine the rheological and tectonic conditions for ridge-push force transmission in the interior of oceanic plates.
23 sie 2020 · Ridge push – magma rises as the plates move apart. The magma cools to form new plate material. As it cools It becomes denser and slides down away from the ridge. This causes other plates to move away from each other. Slab pull – The denser plate sinks back into the mantle under the influence of gravity. It pulls the rest of the plate along ...
29 gru 2014 · Definition. Plate Driving Forces: The forces that drive the motions of tectonic plates at the surface. Slab Pull: The force exerted by the weight of the subducted slab on the plate it is attached to. Ridge Push: The pressure exerted by the excess height of the mid-ocean ridge.
One side in the argument holds that the plates are only moved by the traction caused by mantle convection. The other side holds that traction plays only a minor role and that two other forces, ridge push and slab pull, are more important. Some argue that the real answer lies somewhere in between.
Ridge-Push Force. Let's cover a final force a subducting plate would experience, the ridge-push force. This force results from the elevation of oceanic ridges above the seafloor. This difference in height leads to pressure that 'pushes' the plate away from the ridge.
1 sty 2021 · These sublithospheric buoyancy forces generate the plate-driving forces F sp (slab pull) and F rp (ridge push). Whether the force F bs (basal shear) is a plate-driving or plate-resisting force depends on the relationship of the surface plate velocity v p to the underlying mantle flow velocity v m (see main text for discussion).