Germany Tectonic Plates

Germany is located in the middle of the very large Eurasian tectonic plate. The Eurasian plate includes most of the European continent and borders the North American plate, Philippine sea plate, Okhotsk plate, Amurian plate, African plate, Arabian plate, and Indo-Australian plate. Since Germany is not anywhere near the plate boundaries it is much less likely to experience earthquakes, volcanoes, or other natural hazards.

The western side of the the Eurasian plate is a divergent boundary with the North American plate, and is straddled by Iceland. Due to the fact that this boundary is divergent all volcanic eruptions in Iceland have been caused by this boundary. At the convergent boundary between the Eurasian plate and the Indian plate the Himalayas were formed. Around 50 million years ago this process began and the mountains continue to grow today.  

Although Germany is not always directly affected by the tectonic plates and their boundaries, it is important to understand what plate a country is on and how that plate interacts with others to create natural hazards.
Resources: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eurasian_Plate

                                                                                          https://earthhow.com/eurasian-plate/
          

Comments

  1. That's cool to know that Germany is in a nice location if your trying to get away from volcanoes and earthquakes. I had to google if Germany still experiences any earthquakes because I was curious and found out that they still have some earthquakes but only in areas of crustal weakness. Goodluck this year!

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  2. This was a good tectonic setting reflection. Looking forward to what you'll discover in the upcoming weeks!

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