The Geologic History and Geomorphology of the Green Mountains of Vermont By Alyson Churchill.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Geological History of Connecticut
Advertisements

Continental Drift Alfred Wegener (1912) First serious proponent First serious proponent Alfred manning the weather station, Greenland
Geology of the Thaumasia region, Mars: plateau development, valley origins, and magmatic evolution by James M. Dohm, Kenneth L. Tanaka.
Amy Lombari Zoe Gentes Andew Infante Jennifer Sullivan Dennis Titterton.
Ch. 20 Sec. 2 Orogeny.
Tectonic History of Long Island Glenn Richard Stony Brook University Map from:
California Geologic History
Prepared By Mustafa Al Ramadan Mohammed Darwish Mohammad Al Mohanna General info. & Geology.
GEOS 112 Lecture Topics 4/28/03 Read Chapter 12 (Glaciers) Final Exam – Monday, May 5 1:00pm 1.Types of Glaciers; 2.Glacier Formation, Mass Balance, and.
Section 3: The Changing Continents
Landform Regions of Canada
Mountain building & the evolution of continents
Voyageurs National Park by Megan Saunders
Announcements: Final Exam Monday, Dec. 16, 11-1 this room.
The Geological History of British Columbia. Geology of Canada.
Cenozoic -The development of the Earth as we know it today
Formation  Snow accumulation  More winter snowfall than summer melt  Glacier formation is similar to sedimentary rock formation.
Climates of Geologic Time Current Weather Finish Ice Core Research Overview and Historical Perspective The Pleistocene and Holocene For Next Class: Read.
Geology Students Name Geology Dr. Houghton April 16, 2013
mountains, mountain building, & growth of continents
Lecture 4 Outline: Plate Tectonics – Mechanisms and Margins Learning Objectives: What are the types of plate boundaries? What processes occur at different.
Glaciers, Deserts, and Wind Chapter 6
Introduction to Plate Tectonics `. Continental Drift According to the theory, the continents were once a part of a super continent. The supercontinent.
Cenozoic Era Geologic Time. Eons: Hadean ▫ bya Archaean ▫ bya Proterozoic ▫2.5 bya – 543 mya Phanerozoic 543 mya- present.
Eartscope-GeoPRISMS ENAM planning workshop report October 27-29, 2011 Bethlehem, PA ~95 people Motivation: Choice of East Coast of NA as the RIE focus.
Virginia Physical Geography
Virginia Physical Geography. The Physiographic Provinces of Virginia Virginia has had a long, complex geologic history, over 1.1 billion years Events.
Pacific Northwest Geology. Northwest Geology Starting points We’re interpreting events & conditions in the past using available evidence – the rock record.
Chapter 20 Section 2 Lauren Bauschard Jamie Reed.
The Geological History of Toronto and the GTA. Toronto’s Geological History The oldest rocks in southern Ontario are up to 1.5 billion years old and are.
California Geologic History Part I: Pre-San Andreas Fault System.
PLATE TECTONICS: PART 1 The Theory of Continental Drift Early in the 1900’s, Alfred Wagener proposed a theory, and suggested evidence for it. It was not.
Geology of Virginia Why? Pulls together what they already know: Rocks Plate Tectonics Wilson Cycles Geologic Structures Stratigraphic Principles/Sequence.
Geology of the Feather River Where does one start? NERDS 2006 Teresa Kennedy.
Internal Forces that Shape the Earth (Plate Actions)
GLACIERS AND GLACIATION. GLACIER A body of ice Formed on land Recrystallization of snow=> Firn => Ice Evidence of movement Alpine (valley) glaciation.
Long Island: Home Sweet Home
READING ASSIGNMENTS - Revised 26 Oct., 2003
Geography of Canada Planet Earth. 1.Geologic History 2.Plate Tectonics 3.Continental Drift 4.Earth’s Interior 5.Rock Cycle.
Harry Williams, Geomorphology1 TECTONIC REGIONS OF NORTH AMERICA The distribution of tectonic activity around continents (including North America) usually.
The Cenozoic Era The Modern World Emerges Tectonics
Section 3: The Changing Continents
PLATE TECTONICS A Summary & Review GEOL 1033 Lecture ppt file ) (Lesson 21)
3 Pillars of Geomorphology Time Time Process Process Structure Structure.
CGC 1D1 Mr. Zapfe.  Final changes occurred which gave Canada’s landforms their present shape  Continuing collision of North American and Pacific Plates.
9. Canada – The Physical Background The Geological Evolution of Canada The Geological Evolution of Canada Physiographic Regions Physiographic Regions Meteorite.
Late Paleozoic Earth History
PHYSICAL GEOLOGY OF CANADA. Introduction to Plate Tectonics.
California’s Geologic History. Location, location, location…  Three continental plates come together  Very complex history.
The Origin of Squam Lake: A Story of the Structural and Glacial Controls that Shaped this Iconic Lake by Erica Lehner.
GEOLOGY of VIRGINIA Windows into the World: Prepared by:
Plate Tectonics Earth Science.
VI Congreso Ibérico International Permafrost Association
The Paleozoic, Mesozoic, and Cenozoic Eras
Pleistocene Glaciation in the Pacific Northwest
How were the San Gabriel Mountains Uplifted?
Mountain Building “Tectonic Forces at Work”
Section 3: The Changing Continents
Evolution of the Earth.
Mt. Fuji Use with Session 6: Field Work in Nepal.
Natural Forces that Shape the Earth
Earth Science Chapter 23.3 Cenozoic Era.
HISTORY OF THE CONTINENTS
Chapter 21.
Chapter 10.
Planet Earth Geography of Canada.
Crust-Mantle Relationships
Geography of Canada Plate Tectonics Geography of Canada
Geological History of Connecticut
Geography of Canada Plate Tectonics Geography of Canada
Presentation transcript:

The Geologic History and Geomorphology of the Green Mountains of Vermont By Alyson Churchill

Overview The Green Mountains extend from Vermont’s northern to southern border, and provide evidence for both pervasive and complex geologic activity. The deposition of the basement complex and subsequent sedimentation form the base of the Green Mountains. They record the activity of ancient plate tectonics and were heavily influenced by the Taconic and Acadian Orogenies. The breakup of Pangaea is recorded in the Green Mountains through evidence of extensional tectonics. Glaciation during the Pleistocene was very influential. Geomorphologic processes continue to change the Green Mountains. Figure 1: A map of the geo-physiographic provinces of Vermont, with the Green Mountain Province highlighted in the central part of the state (from Doolan, 1996).

Underlying Basement Complex Core of the Green Mountains consists of Precambrian Grenville basement rocks derived from previously deposited sediments-these comprised the ancient Grenville Mountains. After the erosion of the Grenville Mountains, a major rifting event resulted in multiple episodes of magmatic activity and the first significant sediment input into basins. Formation of the Iapetus Ocean deposited marine sediments. A thick cover of mud was then deposited on top of the marine sediments, with its source being deep ocean sediments to the east. Figure 2: Simplified map of the geology of Vermont, including the Proterozoic basement rocks and subsequent depositions (from Coish, 2010).

Uplift of the Green Mountains-the Taconic Orogeny The Taconic Orogeny-collision of an island arc with the North American continent. This thrust Cambrian-Ordovician rock units onto the Laurentian continental margin, resulting in pervasive deformation and high-grade metamorphism A deep sedimentary basin developed after the Taconic Orogeny, recycling the sediments of structures produced by it.

Figure 3: Diagram reconstructing orogenic activity as a result of plate tectonics during the Tectonic Orogeny. C1-C3 detail the closing of the Iapetus Ocean by the subduction of oceanic crust under a trench, with mountains developing as a result of sediment accumulation along the continental margin (from Doolan, 1996).

The Acadian Orogeny - Continuing Deformation The Acadian Orogeny-collision of one or more microcontinents and island arcs with North America. This produced deformation and metamorphism of more intense magnitudes, refolding previously deformed structures within the Green Mountains. Large amounts of heat and pressure melted the material within the convergence zone, producing vast quantities of granite.

Figure 4: Reconstruction of collisional tectonics during the Acadian orogeny. D1-D2 detail the development of a new basin as well as the uplift of Vermont due to continent collisions (from Doolan, 1996).

Mesozoic Era Extension The breakup of Pangaea formed the present Atlantic Ocean and resulted in extension throughout New England. Extension reactivated faults formed during earlier periods. Extension also resulted in magmatism in the Green Mountains, producing lamprophyric dikes and small alkaline bodies. Magmatism could be related to a mantle plume beneath the North American plate or due to the rifting of the continental plate.

Pleistocene Glaciation Figure showing the strike of striations in the Green Mountains from Pleistocene Glaciation (Wright, 2013). During the late Pleistocene, the Laurentide Ice Sheet spread across New England. The glacial till that separated the ice from the underlying bedrock ground against the Green Mountains as it advanced. The ice flowed obliquely across the mountains from northwest to southeast, but changed direction and flowed from northeast to southwest as the ice sheet retreated. Possibility of local post-Laurentide mountain glaciation within the Green Mountains, though this is questioned.

Recent Geomorphic Processes Erosional processes currently comprise the main geomorphologic influence on the Green Mountains. The absence or presence of vegetation on the Green Mountains is one of the most influential factors contributing to hillside erosion. More extreme amounts of hydrologic activity due to climate change has also increased hillside erosion. The stability of the Green Mountain slopes is decreased by the prominence of moisture-laden storms and freeze-thaw cycles.

References Ackerly, Spafford C., 1989: Reconstructions of mountain glacier profiles, northeastern United States. Geological Society of America Bulletin, v. 101, no. 4, p. 561-572. Bierman, Paul, 1997: Postglacial Ponds and Alluvial Fans: Recorders of Holocene Landscape History. GSA Today, v. 7, no. 10, p. 1-8. Coish, Raymond A., 2010: Magmatism in the Vermont Appalachians. Geological Society of America, v. 206, p. 91-110. Conrad, Diane, and D. Vanacek, 1990: Welcome to Industrial Minerals of Vermont: 200 Years and Going Strong. Vermont Geological Survey, p. 1-2. Davis, P. Thompson, 1999: Cirques of the Presidential Range, New Hampshire, and surrounding alpine areas in the northeastern United States. Géographie physique et quaternaire, v. 53, p. 25-45. De Souza, S., A. Tremblay, and G. Ruffet, 2014; Taconian orogenesis, sedimentation and magmatism in the southern Quebec–northern Vermont Appalachians: Stratigraphic and detrital mineral record of Iapetan suturing. American Journal of Science, v. 314, p. 1065-1103. Doolan, Barry, 1996: The Geology of Vermont. Rocks and Minerals, Vermont Issue, v. 71, p. 218-224. Karabinos, Paul, 1984: Deformation and metamorphism on the east side of the Green Mountain massif in southern Vermont. Geological Society of America Bulletin, v. 95, no. 5, p.584-593. Karabinos, Paul, 1988: Tectonic Significance of Basement-Cover Relationships in the Green Mountain Massif, Vermont. The Journal of Geology, v. 96, no. 4, p. 445-454. Ratcliffe, Nicholas M., 1990: Comparative tectonics of basement massifs in the Northern Appalachians with special reference to the Green Mountain Massif of Vermont. Vermont Geological Society, v. 6, p. 55-56. Springston, George E., 2009: Analysis of rock fall and debris flow hazards in Smugglers Notch, Green Mountains, Northern Vermont. Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs, v. 41, p. 82. Sullivan, W.A., 2014: An introduction to the plate-tectonic evolution of northern New England and adjacent Canada with special emphasis on central and coastal Maine. Colby College Department of Geology, p. 1-3. Thompson, Douglas M., 1991: The effects of large organic debris on sediment processes in the Green Mountains of Vermont. Green Mountain Geologist, v. 17, p. 11-12. Wagner, Philip W, 1970: Pleistocene Mountain Glaciation, Northern Vermont. Geological Society of America Bulletin, v. 81, p. 2465-2469. Wright, Stephen F., 2003: Glacial Geology of the Burlington and Colchester 7.5’ Quadrangles, Northern Vermont. Vermont Geological Survey, p. 1-12. Wright, Stephen F., 2013: Laurentide Ice Sheet Flow across the Central Green Mountains, Vermont. Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs, v. 45, p. 105. Images: http://www.findandgoseek.net/blog/2012/10/02/deals-and-steals-for-families-skiing-in-vermont-this-winter/ http://dailyoffice.org/2012/10/20/morning-prayer-10-20-12-proper-23-ordinary-time/