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Convergent Boundary

🌋 Ocean–Ocean Convergence (O–O Convergence)

aka Island Arc Convergence

We have already studied in earlier sections that at an O–O convergent boundary, two oceanic plates collide. Since both are made of oceanic crust, the denser of the two (usually older, colder, and heavier) subducts beneath the other.

🧠 Just like continental convergence forms Himalayas, oceanic convergence forms Island Arcs.

🧭 Where does this happen?

O–O convergence is responsible for the formation of:

  • 🇯🇵 Japanese Island Arc
  • 🇮🇩 Indonesian Archipelago
  • 🇵🇭 Philippine Island Arc
  • 🌴 Caribbean Islands

These are regions with:

  • Deep oceanic trenches
  • Frequent earthquakes
  • Chain of volcanic islands (called Island Arcs)

🔷 Step-by-Step Process: How Are Island Arcs Formed?

Let’s break it into simple steps:

🌀 1. Subduction Initiation

  • A denser oceanic plate begins to subduct below a less dense oceanic plate.
  • This forms a deep oceanic trench (e.g., Japan Trench, Philippine Trench, Sunda Trench).

🔥 2. Metamorphism & Magma Generation

  • At ~100 km depth, high pressure and temperature cause:
    • Metamorphism of rocks
    • Melting of sediments + plate material
  • This generates andesitic magma (intermediate in silica content).

🎈 3. Magma Ascent & Volcanism

  • The magma is hot and less dense, so it rises through the crust.
  • It erupts on the ocean floor → layer upon layer → volcanic mountains.

🏝️ 4. Formation of Island Arc

  • These volcanic peaks emerge above sea level, forming a chain of volcanic islands.
  • This curved chain is called an Island Arc.

🧱 5. Orogenesis (Mountain Building)

  • Over time, the islands merge, and oceanic crust slowly transforms into continental crust.
  • This begins the process of continent building in the long run.

📌 UPSC Note:
Island Arcs are the oceanic equivalents of Fold Mountains in continent–continent convergence.

🌍 Key Island Arcs Formed by O–O Convergence

Let’s understand the important cases with involved tectonic plates and trenches:

🇵🇭 Philippine Island Arc

FeatureDescription
Converging PlatesPhilippine Sea Plate subducts beneath Sunda Plate (Eurasian)
TrenchPhilippine Trench
TypeClassic Island Arc with volcanic origin

📝 Sunda Shelf = A shallow, submerged part of the Eurasian Plate covering Java, Sumatra, Borneo, etc.

🇮🇩 Indonesian Archipelago

FeatureDescription
Converging PlatesIndo-Australian Plate subducts beneath Sunda Plate
TrenchSunda Trench (includes Java Trench)

🇯🇵 Japanese Island Arc

Japan is formed by three arcs; each linked to a different plate boundary:

ArcSubduction InteractionTrench
NorthernPacific Plate under Eurasian PlateJapan Trench
CentralPacific Plate under Philippine PlateIzu Trench
SouthernPhilippine Plate under Eurasian PlateRyukyu Trench
  • These arcs meet at a triple junction on Honshu Island.
  • The eastward tilt of the arc system created the Sea of Japan.

🌴 Caribbean Islands

FeatureDescription
Converging PlatesSouth American Plate subducts under Caribbean Plate (eastern margin)
ResultVolcanic islands of the Lesser Antilles (e.g., Mount Pelée)
Mount PeléeDeadliest Caribbean volcano (killed ~30,000 in 1902)

🌉 Formation of the Isthmus of Panama

  • Caused by subduction of the Pacific–Farallon Plate beneath Caribbean and South American Plates
  • Led to:
    • Panama Arc (volcanic origin)
    • Collision with South America → uplift → Isthmus of Panama
  • Result: Connection between North and South America formed; major biogeographic event.

🧠 Interesting: The Farallon Plate has since broken into smaller plates:

  • Cocos Plate
  • Nazca Plate
  • Juan de Fuca Plate

The Mariana Trench

FeatureDescription
Plates InvolvedPacific Plate subducting beneath Mariana Plate
Depth~11,000 metres (deepest known point: Challenger Deep)
Fun FactNot the point closest to Earth’s center — due to Earth’s geoid shape!
The Pacific plate is subducted beneath the Mariana plate, creating the Mariana trench, and (further on) the arc of the Mariana Islands, as water trapped in the plate is released and explodes upward to form island volcanoes and earthquakes. By Hussong, Fryer (1981), CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia commons

Difference Between Island Arc and Archipelago

TermMeaningExample
Island ArcCurved chain of volcanic islands along O–O subduction zoneJapanese Islands, Philippines
ArchipelagoLarge group of islands (not always volcanic)Malay Archipelago, Indonesia

🌄 Continent–Ocean Convergence (C–O Convergence)

Also called Cordilleran Convergence

Why is it called Cordilleran?

The word Cordillera refers to a chain of mountains or a system of parallel mountain ranges near continental margins.

So, whenever a continent and an oceanic plate converge, and this collision creates massive coastal mountain systems, we call it Cordilleran Convergence.

🗻 Examples of such mountains:

Diagrammatic cross-section of a convergent plate boundary showing the subduction of the oceanic plate at the continental margin producing a deep-sea trench and a volcanic belt close to the continental margin.

What Happens During C–O Convergence?

🌊 1. Subduction Begins

  • When an oceanic plate collides with a continental plate, the denser oceanic plate subducts beneath the lighter continental plate.
  • This creates a subduction zone, often marked by a trench near the continental margin.

🧠 Example: Nazca Plate subducts below South American PlatePeru-Chile Trench

🔥 2. Formation of Magma and Volcanism

  • As the subducting oceanic plate sinks, it heats up and undergoes partial melting.
  • This produces andesitic magma (silica-rich), which rises through the continental crust.
  • The magma erupts, forming volcanic mountains on the continent (not in the ocean like O–O convergence).

This linear chain of volcanoes formed on the continental edge is called a Continental Arc.

🧨 Examples:
  • Cascade Range (USA, west of the Rockies)
  • Western Chile Range (parallel to Andes)

🪨 3. Formation of Accretionary Wedge

  • The subducting oceanic plate carries sediments scraped from the ocean floor.
  • These sediments accumulate at the trench and compress into a wedge-shaped mass called the Accretionary Wedge/Prism.
  • This wedge adds compressive force and thickens the continental margin.
Illustration of Accretionary Wedge during Subduction; By KDS4444, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

📌 Concept:
👉 Crustal Shortening at convergence = Crustal Widening at divergence (a tectonic balance)

🏔️ 4. Formation of Fold Mountains — Orogeny

Here’s where things get really interesting from a UPSC Mains perspective:

  • Orogeny = Mountain building process due to lateral compression.
  • As the accretionary wedge and crustal sediments are compressed, they fold, fault, and metamorphose.
  • The continental edge rises, creating Fold Mountains (Orogenic belts).

🧠 Why near the coast? Because that’s where the continental plate meets the subducting oceanic plate.

✳️ Key Landforms from C–O Convergence

🇨🇱 The Andes Mountains

FeatureDescription
Plates InvolvedNazca Plate (oceanic) + South American Plate (continental)
TrenchPeru-Chile Trench
ResultContinental Arc + Fold Mountains
Notable VolcanoOjos del Salado (6,893 m, highest active volcano on Earth)
Highest PeakMount Aconcagua (6,960 m, extinct volcano)
  • Western Chile Range was separated from the Andes due to a depression called Intermediate Depression.
  • Volcanism is still active, indicating that orogeny is ongoing.

🇺🇸 The Rocky Mountains

FeatureDescription
Plates InvolvedPacific & Juan de Fuca Plates (oceanic) + North American Plate
ResultFold mountains at a distance from coast (unlike Andes)
ReasonShallow subduction angle + presence of fault zones like San Andreas
  • Formed inland, not along the exact coastal edge.
  • Subduction is not steep, hence magma doesn’t erupt easily, and trenching is less obvious.

🔁 Final Stage: Isostatic Adjustment

After orogeny, what happens?

  • With time, erosion wears down mountain peaks.
  • The earth’s crust undergoes isostatic rebound:
    • Heavier/denser regions sink
    • Lighter ones rise

This exposes the roots of the mountain belt, as seen in ancient ranges like the Rockies.

🧠 Important UPSC Concepts

Arc vs Fold Mountain

TermMeaningExample
Island ArcVolcanic islands in oceanic regionJapan, Indonesia
Continental ArcVolcanic mountains on continentsAndes, Cascade Range
Fold MountainsCompressed, folded sedimentary layersHimalayas, Rockies, Andes

✅ Terminologies

TermMeaning
Accretionary WedgeAccumulated oceanic sediments at trench compressed onto continental plate
Crustal ShorteningHorizontal compression at convergence zones
IsostasyVertical adjustment of crust based on load balance (e.g., erosion, uplift)

🏔️ Continent–Continent Convergence (C–C Convergence)

Also known as the Himalayan Convergence type

Why subduction fails in C–C convergence?

  • Continental crust is too buoyant (lower density) to be subducted into the mantle like oceanic crust.
  • Even if one of the plates starts to descend, subduction stops around 40–50 km depth.
  • Instead of deep trenches, the crust buckles, folds, and faults, creating massive fold mountain systems.

🧠 Key Concept: Instead of “subduction → volcanism” (as in O–O or C–O), here we have “compression → uplift → folding”.

🪨 What happens during C–C convergence?

🧱 1. Collision and Suture Formation

  • The two continental plates meet and collide.
  • Any oceanic crust between them (e.g., Tethys Sea) is consumed.
  • Fragments of this oceanic crust are welded between the plates — this weld is called the Suture Zone.

🧠 Example:
Indus–Tsangpo Suture Zone in the Himalayas.

🌊 2. Squeezing of Sedimentary Basin

  • Geosynclinal sediments (accumulated over millions of years in the Tethys) are trapped between the converging plates.
  • They get compressed, folded, and faulted, forming a towering fold mountain belt.

📌 Important: These sediments include marine fossils — for example, marine limestone found at the summit of Mount Everest!

🏞️ 3. Formation of Fold Mountains and Uplifted Plateau

  • Massive compression causes uplift of crust, creating:
    • A fold mountain chain (Himalayas)
    • An uplifted plateau behind the collision zone (Tibetan Plateau)

🧠 Why is the Tibetan Plateau higher than the Indian side?
Because India’s crust was more firmly attached to the oceanic base, while Asia’s block was more flexible and got pushed upward.

⛰️ 4. Crustal Shortening & Isostatic Adjustment

  • Collision causes crustal shortening (500 km in Himalayas!).
  • This shortening is compensated by crustal widening elsewhere (e.g., sea-floor spreading in the Indian Ocean).
  • Erosion of mountains leads to isostatic uplift (like floating icebergs — lighter areas rise).

🌏 Case Study: Formation of the Himalayas

📚 Geological Timeline:

Time PeriodEvent
~250 myaExistence of Pangaea with Laurasia in the north and Gondwanaland in the south
200–140 myaIndian Plate breaks from Gondwanaland, drifts north
60 myaDeccan Traps erupt (volcanic activity due to mantle plumes)
50–40 myaIndia collides with Asia → Initial formation of the Himalayas
30 myaMajor uplift of Greater Himalayas
25–20 myaFormation of Middle Himalayas
2–20 myaFormation of Shiwalik Hills (youngest part of Himalayas)
Diagrammatic cross-section showing the type of plate boundary that is formed when two continental plates collide.

🧠 Additional Notes:

  • India’s speed: Moving northward at ~5–6 cm/year (still ongoing).
  • Earthquakes in Himalayan and North Indian regions are proof that orogeny is active.
  • Himalayan rivers are rejuvenated and in their youthful stage because uplift is ongoing.

🧭 What is the Suture Zone?

  • A suture is where two continental plates have fused.
  • It includes remnants of oceanic crust, trapped sediments, and metamorphosed rocks.
  • E.g., the Indus–Tsangpo Suture Zone is a crucial marker of the India–Asia collision.

🧬 Tibetan Plateau: The Roof of the World

  • Formed due to upthrusting of the Eurasian Plate.
  • Today, it’s the highest and largest plateau in the world.
  • Evidence like terraced lakes and gravel deposits shows it is still rising.

📈 Evidence of Ongoing Himalayan Uplift

EvidenceExplanation
Satellite measurementsHimalayas rising 5–10 cm/year
Lake desiccation in TibetRaised lakebeds above current water levels
Youthful river profilesRejuvenation due to land uplift
Frequent earthquakesIndicates continuing crustal compression

🌍 Other Fold Mountains Formed by C–C Convergence

Mountain RangePlates InvolvedTypeNotes
HimalayasIndian Plate ↗ Eurasian PlateYoung FoldActive, highest mountain range
AlpsAfrican Plate ↗ Eurasian PlateYoung FoldActive, in Europe
AtlasAfrican Plate ↗ Eurasian PlateYoung FoldIn North Africa, still rising
UralsEurope ↗ Asia (ancient plates)Old Fold~300 mya, very weathered
AppalachiansNorth America ↔ Europe (before Pangaea breakup)Old FoldAncient, heavily eroded

🌋 Why No Volcanoes in C–C Convergence?

ReasonExplanation
Thick continental crust (50–70 km)Magma cannot pierce this thick, buoyant crust
Lack of subduction beyond 40–50 kmNo melting zone like in O–O or C–O convergence
ResultNo active volcanoes, but frequent earthquakes
Common Rock TypeMetamorphic rocks (formed under pressure)

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