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mountains, mountain building, & growth of continents

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Presentation on theme: "mountains, mountain building, & growth of continents"— Presentation transcript:

1 mountains, mountain building, & growth of continents

2 mountains and mountain building
mountain belts • are chains of mountains 1,000’s of km’s long • sit at or near edges of continents • form from tectonic or volcanic processes over millions of years--geosphere • erode as they grow higher and steeper--hydrosphere • cause precipitation as air rises above them--atmosphere

3 mountains and mountain building
mountain belts are very long compared to their width North American Cordillera extends from Alaska to Panama

4 mountains and mountain building
mountain belts height is related to age: old mountains (100’s of millions of years) (Appalachians) have lower elevations (due to erosion) than young mountains (a few million years) (Himalayas)

5 mountains and mountain building
ancient mountain belts eroded flat: form stable, interior of continents: craton -- oldest parts are shields -- e.g. Canadian shield

6 mountains and mountain building
mountain belts • thick sequences of folded and faulted rocks --typically marine (formed in ocean) sedimentary rocks • metamorphic rocks locally common

7 mountains and mountain building
mountain belts • fold and thrust belts --crust shortened and thickened (remember: thrust faults indicate shortening) • common at convergent boundaries (compression)

8 green arrow shows Lewis Thrust, Glacier National Park
mountains and mountain building mountain belts fold-thrust mountains Himalayas, Alps, Urals, northern and Canadian Rockies green arrow shows Lewis Thrust, Glacier National Park

9 mountains and mountain building
evolution of mountain belts accumulation stage rocks (sedimentary) that will later be uplifted, faulted, and folded into mountains are deposited in opening ocean (sea floor spreading) orogenic stage mountain building episode from plate convergence (provides compression necessary for thrusting)

10 Mt. Everest Himalayan foothills Swiss Alps

11 mountains and mountain building
evolution of mountain belts when mountains get very tall (e.g. Himalayas), gravitational collapse and spreading may occur --normal faulting and extension/thinning of crust --uplift of metamorphic rocks from depth as crust thins and spreads

12 mountains and mountain building
evolution of mountain belts after convergence stops, erosion and uplift occur --isostatic adjustment-- to thin continental root

13 mountains and mountain building
evolution of mountain belts uplifting crust spreads and results in tension (extension) that produces normal faulting and creates fault-block mountains (horsts and grabens from normal faulting)

14 mountains and mountain building
evolution of mountain belts topography fault-block mountains Basin and Range, western US

15 Basin and Range

16 mountains and mountain building
evolution of Basin and Range crustal extension dominates today --accompanied by high heat flow-- older period of thrusting and formation of mountains when continental root developed uplift and erosion yield extension but must explain high heat flow delamination of mantle? mantle lithosphere detaches and sinks into asthenosphere warm asthenosphere fills space and results in stretching of crust

17 extension at surface; upwelling asthenosphere at depth
mountains and mountain building modern Basin and Range extension at surface; upwelling asthenosphere at depth

18 continent along its edge
mountains and mountain building continents grow as mountain belts evolve at active continental margins igneous activity adds new crust sedimentary rocks originally deposited in ocean are uplifted, folded, and faulted to form new terranes that are “accreted” or added to continent along its edge accreted terranes in western US

19 continental growth continents decrease in age toward their margins

20 (Ouachitas, Marathons)
growth of continents: US example geologic map of the United States on-going subduction (Cascadia) Basin and Range (rifting) Canadian shield transform boundary (San Andreas) Paleozoic orogenic belts (Appalachians) craton Paleozoic to Recent active margin Mesozoic to Recent passive margin Paleozoic to Recent orogenic belts Paleozoic orogenic belts (Ouachitas, Marathons) from:


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