Explanation:
Convection occurs in the Earth's mantle because it is the most efficient way for the Earth to cool or dispose of its deep-seated heat content. In general, heat can be transferred by conduction, radiation or convection.
Along the Juan de Fuca Ridge, volcanoes produce oceanic crust. The Juan de Fuca Plate cools, grows denser, and finally sinks beneath the less dense North American Plate at the Cascadia Trench as it wanders eastward.
<h3>Is the Juan de Fuca Plate dying?</h3>
Because the decaying Juan de Fuca plate is not sinking silently, scientists have a unique opportunity to investigate such impacts. They are intently observing the system's every tremble and burp. (We learned that a strong earthquake broke a tectonic plate in half in this way.)
<h3>How Fast Is Juan de Fuca moving?</h3>
The Farallon Plate, a much bigger oceanic plate that originally existed alongside the smaller Juan De Fuca Plate, is moving east-northeast at a rate of 4 cm (1.6 inches) each year.
<h3>What is happening between the Gorda Plate and the Pacific Plate?</h3>
At a rate of 5 cm per year, the Pacific Plate is diverging from the Gorda Plate as it moves in a northwesterly direction. At a much slower rate of 2.5 to 3 cm per year, the Juan de Fuca Plate (which includes the Gorda Plate) is subducting beneath the North America Plate.
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Consisting of Lakes<span> Superior, Michigan, Huron (or Michigan–Huron), Erie, and Ontario, they form the </span>largest group of freshwater lakes<span> on </span>Earth<span>, containing 21% of the </span>world's<span> surface </span>fresh water<span> by volume.
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