In plate tectonics, a convergent boundary – also known as a convergent plate boundary, active margin, compression boundary or a destructive boundary – is a region of the Earth's crust where two tectonic plates are in motion toward one another.
The motion of two plates toward one another forms either a subduction zone or a continental collision. This depends on the nature of the plates involved.
When one plate is composed of oceanic crust and the other is composed of continental crust, the oceanic plate is subducted, forming an orogenic belt and associated mountain range, often with an oceanic trench offshore. This type of convergent boundary is similar to the Andes or the Cascade Ranges in North America.
When two plates containing continental crust collide, both are too light to subduct. In this case, a continent-continent collision occurs, creating especially large mountain ranges. The typical example of this is the Himalayas. Occasionally plate convergent boundaries are involved with complex faulting and can form transform plate boundaries, where some component of strike-slip faulting is involved at a zig-zag section of the plate boundary. The best example of this is the New Zealand convergent margin, where convergent action is occurring intermixed with a strike-slip boundary.
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"Convergent boundary".
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