Mountain Building - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Mountain Building

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Mountain Building An uplifting experience! How and where? Deformation of crust from stress. Compression = Rocks are squeezed together Occurs at convergent boundaries ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Mountain Building


1
Mountain Building
  • An uplifting experience!

2
How and where?
  • Deformation of crust from stress.
  • Compression Rocks are squeezed together
  • Occurs at convergent boundaries
  • Tension Crust is stretched apart
  • Occurs at divergent boundaries
  • Build-up of crust from volcanic activity.
  • Accretion (build-up of magma) inside crust
    stretches crust (tension) or erupts and
    accumulates on surface.
  • Occurs above subduction zones and hot spots

3
FOLDING
  • Rocks bend without breaking
  • A response to compressional stress
  • Upward folds are called anticlines
  • These form mountain ranges
  • Downward folds are called synclines
  • These form valleys between ranges
  • http//www.wiley.com/college/strahler/0471480533/a
    nimations/ch14_animations/animation2.html

4
Faulting
  • Vertical Faults
  • Normal and Reverse
  • Defined by movement of hanging wall relative to
    the foot wall.
  • Horizontal
  • Strike-slip
  • Results from shear stress
  • Occur along transform boundaries

5
Normal Faults
  • Form as a result of tensional stress
  • At divergent boundaries or above subduction
    zones.
  • Hanging wall slides down the foot wall.
  • The exposed footwall forms a cliff called a
    fault scarp.
  • http//www.pbs.org/wnet/savageearth/animations/ind
    ex.html
  • http//www.classzone.com/books/earth_science/terc/
    content/visualizations/es1103/es1103page01.cfm?cha
    pter_novisualization

6
Reverse Faults
  • Form as a result of compressional stress
  • At or near convergent plate boundaries
  • Hanging wall moves up relative to the foot wall.
  • If hanging wall gets pushed up and over the foot
    wall it is known as a thrust fault.
  • Often occurs along with folding.

7
Fold Mountains
  • Form in collision zones from compression.
  • Form large systems with many ranges.
  • Examples
  • Appalachian Mountains (past)
  • Alps (still forming)
  • Himalayas (still forming)
  • Rocky Mountains (past)

8
Fault-Block Mountains
  • Usually form above subduction zones or
    continental hot spots.
  • Rising magma tensional stress normal faults.
  • Examples
  • Teton Range (Wyoming)
  • Sierra-Nevada mountains (CA)
  • Exploring Earth Visualizations

9
Tetons
10
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11
Volcanic Mountains
  • Form above active subduction zones or hot spots
    where magma erupts from the crust.
  • The erupted materials pile-up aroune the vent,
    forming a mountain.
  • Examples
  • Some of the Cascade range (Oregon and Washington)
  • Some of the Andes mountains
  • Mountains of Japan, Phillipines, Indonesia
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