How many tectonic plates does Earth have?

The number varies from a dozen to almost 100 — and most of these don't even appear on official maps.

Map of Earth's principal tectonic plates. Earth's lithosphere. Major and minor plates. arrows indicate direction of movement at plate boundaries. Vector illustration.
Here we see some of the major and minor tectonic plates on Earth today.
(Image credit: iStock / Getty Images Plus)

Billions of years ago, Earth's surface was a sea of molten rock. As this simmering magma gradually cooled, it formed a continuous, rocky shell, with the denser minerals coalescing toward the planet's interior and the less-dense minerals rising to the surface.

"That is how the plates formed at the surface of the Earth," Catherine Rychert, a geophysicist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts, told Live Science. "The plate is the crust, then a bit of the mantle beneath it …. Beneath that you have weaker material."

Emma Bryce
Live Science Contributor

Emma Bryce is a London-based freelance journalist who writes primarily about the environment, conservation and climate change. She has written for The Guardian, Wired Magazine, TED Ed, Anthropocene, China Dialogue, and Yale e360 among others, and has masters degree in science, health, and environmental reporting from New York University. Emma has been awarded reporting grants from the European Journalism Centre, and in 2016 received an International Reporting Project fellowship to attend the COP22 climate conference in Morocco.