Figure 18.2: Plate Tectonics and Continental Drift (A) The heat of Earth’s core generates convection currents in the viscous magma (the hot, molten rock of the mantle) underlying the oceanic and continental plates. Those currents push the continental plates, along with the land masses they carry, together or apart. Where plates collide, one may slide under the other, creating mountain ranges and often volcanoes. (B) The Cascade Range of the Pacific Northwest of North America is an example of a mountain range produced by subduction of an oceanic plate under a continental plate.