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Pacific Northwest Earthquakes
Figure 9.
Cutaway view of the Earth
showing the rocky mantle and iron
core. The outermost layer consists of
tectonic plates that are commonly
about 100 km thick. Earthquakes occur
within or at the boundaries of these
plates. Although the mantle is solid,
the rocks that comprise it act like a
very viscous liquid and may move a
few centimeters a year in great convection cells driven by temperature differences in the Earth. The plates move
slowly with these currents. Spreading
plate boundaries are thought to lie
above areas of upwelling currents, and
converging plate boundaries above
areas where the currents move towards
the center of the Earth. (See also
Figure 10.)
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