Tectonics plates
The plates consist of an outer layer of the Earth, the
lithosphere, which is cool enough to behave as a more or less rigid shell. Occasionally
the hot asthenosphere of the Earth finds a weak place in the lithosphere to rise buoyantly
as a plume, or hotspot. Only lithosphere has the strength and the brittle behavior to
fracture in an earthquake.
In cross section, the Earth releases its internal heat by convecting, or boiling much like
a pot of pudding on the stove. Hot asthenospheric mantle rises to the surface and spreads
laterally, transporting oceans and continents as on a slow conveyor belt. The speed of
this motion is a few centimeters per year, about as fast as your fingernails grow. The new
lithosphere, created at the ocean spreading centers, cools as it ages and eventually
becomes dense enough to sink back into the mantle. The subducted crust releases water to
form volcanic island chains above, and after a few hundred million years will be heated
and recycled back to the spreading centers.