Thursday, May 29, 2014

First Stop- Hawaii (not)

I was hoping to be looking at volcanoes in Hawaii by now, but instead I'm sitting in an airport lounge drinking horrible coffee while obscure banjo music serenades us in the background. I've been on the phone for the last hour trying to figure out what's going on- first my ticket got messed up and I couldn't get on my flight, and now the one I'm supposed to catch is hours late, with the expected arrival time getting pushed further and further back. So since I can't observe any foreign places for this first blog post, I decided to talk about what's here, in Seattle.
Along the Pacific Coast, we are in what's called a subduction zone. On a destructive plate boundary or a convergent boundary, two tectonic plates move towards each other and one of them is forced under the other. Unfortunately for us living here, that means that earthquakes are frequent here. Another thing that happens as a result of subduction is the movement of trapped lava, ash and other substances up towards the surface; when a plate sinks below another plate, it goes far into the asthenosphere, shown in the picture below, where it heats up, releasing water, gas and lava.

Update:
I'm on the plane! Hawaii, here I come! 

Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Introduction

Hi! I’m Felicia Harmon, a fact-checker for financial journal. Correction: a bored fact-checker for a financial journal. So while I’m waiting for a promotion, this blog is my outlet for my true passion- plate tectonics. 
No one else seems to see the beauty in them that I do. First of all, we can’t usually see them. What is more exciting than something invisible? And they can wreak havoc and completely change the planet, but their one of the things in this world that we humans can’t control, no matter how hard they try.
So thus, I embark on my mission: to inform the world about plate tectonics through my own personal findings, in hopes that they will discover the beauty in them like I have already.


(Everything written in this blog is completely fictitious)