This image shows the topography, or shape, of the Earth's surface, on land and below the oceans. Mountain ranges, subduction trenches, tectonic plates, and mid-ocean ridges are all visible in the image.
Click on image for full size
Image from: U.S. Geological Survey

Surface Features

The Earth's surface is composed of rigid plates that move relative to each other. The plates have three main motions, and each one has different results.
1) When two plates collide, one may be forced under the other causing ocean trenches, volcanic islands, and mountain ranges.
2) When two plates move away from each other, rifts occur. In the ocean, this process is called sea floor spreading, and on land rift valleys are formed.
3) When two plates slide past each other, there are faults.
Features such as volcanoes and earthquakes exist mainly along the plate boundaries. Most moons and some planets have many impact craters, however these are rare features on Earth.


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