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Deforming the Earth’s Crust

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Deforming the Earth s Crust Deformation Stress is the amount of force per unit area on a given material The process by which the shape of a rock changes because of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Deforming the Earth’s Crust


1
Deforming the Earths Crust
2
Deformation
  • Stress is the amount of force per unit area on a
    given material
  • The process by which the shape of a rock changes
    because of stress is called deformation

3
Deformation
  • Two types of deformation can occur to rocks under
    stress
  • Layers can bend when stress is applied to them
  • When too much stress is applied, they can reach
    their elastic limit and break

4
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5
Compression Tension
  • Compression is the type of stress that occurs
    when an object is squeezed
  • Tension is stress that occurs when forces act to
    stretch an object such

6
Folding
  • Folding is the bending of rock layers because of
    stress in the Earths crust
  • Scientists assume that all rock layers start off
    horizontal
  • So when scientists see a fold, they know
    deformation has occurred

7
Types of Folds
  • There are two main types of folds
  • Anticlines, upward, arching fold
  • Synclines, downward, trough-like folds

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10
Faulting
  • Some rock layers break when too much stress is
    applied to them.
  • The surface along which a rocks break and slide
    past each other is called a fault

11
Faulting
  • The two sides of a fault are known as the hanging
    wall and the footwall
  • The type of fault that forms is dependent on
    where the hanging and footwall are located

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13
Types of Faulting
  • There are three types of faults that occur
  • Normal Faults
  • Reverse Faults
  • Strike-Slip Faults

14
Normal Faults
  • When rocks are pulled apart because of tension,
    normal faults often form
  • When a normal fault moves, it causes the hanging
    wall to move down relative to the footwall

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16
Reverse Fault
  • When rocks are pushed together by compression,
    reverse faults often form
  • When a reverse fault moves, it causes the hanging
    wall to move up relative to the footwall
  • Special type of reverse fault occurs when the
    hanging walls continues to be pushed over top of
    footwall called a thrust fault

17
Strike-Slip Fault
  • Forms when opposing forces cause rock to break
    and move horizontally
  • If you were standing on one side of the fault
    when it moved, the ground on the other side would
    appear to move to your left or right

18
Thrust Fault
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20
Plate Tectonics Mountain Building
  • When tectonic plates collide, land features that
    start as folds and faults, can eventually become
    large mountain ranges
  • When tectonic plates undergo compression and
    tension, they can form mountains in several ways

21
Folded Mountains
  • Form when rock layers are squeezed together and
    pushed upward
  • These mountains form at convergent plate
    boundaries
  • Appalachian Mountains 390 million years ago

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23
Fault-Block Mountains
  • When tectonic forces put enough tension on the
    Earths crust, a large number of normal faults
    can occur
  • Fault-Block mountains form when tension causes
    large blocks of the Earths crust to drop down
    relative to other blocks
  • Often leaves sharp, jagged peaks

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25
Volcanic Mountains
  • Located at convergent plate boundaries where
    oceanic crust sinks into the asthenosphere at
    subduction zones
  • The rock that is melted at subduction zones forms
    magma which rises to the surface and erupts

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27
Volcanic Mountains
  • Sometimes these mountains can rise above the sea
    and become islands
  • A majority of the tectonically active volcanic
    mountains have formed around the Pacific Plate
    which is known as the Ring of Fire

28
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29
Uplift and Subsidence
  • Uplift is the rising of regions of Earths crust
    to higher elevations
  • Subsidence is known as the sinking of Earths
    crust to lower regions

30
Uplifting of Depressed Rock
  • One way areas rise without deforming is a process
    known as rebound
  • Rebound occurs when the crust slowly springs back
    to its previous elevation
  • Rebound happens when a weight is removed from a
    region ( glacial melting)

31
Tectonic Letdown
  • Subsidence can occur when the lithosphere becomes
    stretched
  • A rift zone is a set of deep cracks that forms at
    a divergent plate boundary
  • As the plates move apart, the rift zone begins to
    subside between the plates

32
Question 1
  • What are two types of deformation?

33
Answer
  • Layers of rock can bend when stress is applied to
    them and if too much pressure is applied then the
    layers can break

34
Question 2
  • What type of fold has an upward, arching fold
    that looks like the letter A?
  • Syncline
  • Monocline
  • Anticline

35
Answer
  • The answer is C. An anticline has an upward,
    arching fold

36
Question 3
  • What type of fault forms when opposing forces
    cause rock to break and move horizontally?
  • Normal Fault
  • Reverse Fault
  • Strike-Slip Fault

37
Answer
  • The answer is C. A strike-slip fault is formed
    when opposing forces cause the rock to break and
    move horizontally.
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