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Classroom presentations to accompany Understanding Earth, 3rd edition prepared by Peter Copeland and William Dupré University of Houston Chapter 21 Deformation of the Continental Crust
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Deformation of continental crust Since continents are not destroyed by subduction, we look here for the ancient history of Earth. orogenyorogeny: sum of the tectonic forces (i.e., deformation, magmatism, metamorphism, erosion) that produce mountain belts
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Pangaea 250 Million Years Ago Fig.21.1
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Mountains and Mountain Building Mountains are one part of the continuum of plate tectonics—the most evident one. Example: Limestones at the top of Mount Everest.
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Structures of continents 1) Continents are made and deformed by plate motion. 2) Continents are older than oceanic crust. 3) Lithosphere floats on a viscous layer below (isostasy).
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Alfred Wegener: Father of Continental Drift and Grandfather of Plate Tectonics Fig.21.1
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Age of the Continental Crust Fig.21.2 Blue areas mark continental crust beneath the ocean
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Fig.21.3 Major Tectonic Features of North America
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Deformed and Metamorphosed Canadian Shield Fig.21.4
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Continental characteristics Granitic-andesitic composition 30–70 km thick 1/3 of Earth surface Complex structures Up to 4.0 Ga old
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Three basic structural components of continents Shields Stable platforms Folded mountain belts
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Shields (e.g., Canada) Low elevation and relatively flat ”Basement complex" of metamorphic and igneous rocks Composed of a series of zones that were once highly mobile and tectonically active
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Stable platforms Shields covered with a series of horizontal sedimentary rocks Sandstones, limestones, and shales deposited in ancient shallow seas Many transgressions, regresssions caused by changes in spreading rate
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Mountain belts Relatively narrow zones of folded, compressed rocks (and associated magmatism) Formed at convergent plate boundaries Two major active belts: Cordilleran (Rockies-Andes), Alps-Himalayan Older examples: Appalachians, Urals
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Mountain types Folded—Alps, Himalaya, Appalachians Fault block—Basin and Range Upwarped—Adirondacks Volcanic—Cascades
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Stacked Sheets of Continental Crust Due to Convergence of Continental Plates Fig.21.5
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Indian plate subducts beneath Eurasian plate Fig.21.6a 60 million years ago
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Indian subcontinent collides with Tibet Fig.21.6b 40–60 million years ago
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Accretionary wedge and forearc deposits thrust northward onto Tibet Fig.21.6c Approximately 40–20 million years ago
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Main boundary fault develops Fig.21.6d 10–20 million years ago
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Fig.21.7 Appalachian Mountains
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Fig.21.8 A A’ Line of cross section Physiographic Provinces of the Western United States
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Cross section of the Cordillera from San Francisco to Denver Fig.21.9 A A’
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Fig.21.10a Volcanic Origin, e.g. Cascades
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Upwarped with Reverse Faults, e.g. Central Rocky Mountians Fig.21.10b
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Tilted Normal Fault Blocks, e.g. Basin and Range Province Fig.21.10c
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Folded Rocks, e.g. the Appalachian Ridge and Valley Fig.21.10d
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Overlapping Thrust Faults, e.g. the Himalayas Fig.21.1
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Fig.21.11 Typical Basin and Range Topography
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Triassic Rift Valleys of Connecticut Fig.21.12
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Inferred Thickness of Mesozoic and Cenozoic Sedimentary Rocks Fig.21.13
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Idealized Cross Section of Basin and Dome Structures Fig.21.14
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Fig.21.15 Black Hills of South Dakota: a Dome Structure
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Uplift Formed by Removal of Ice Sheet Fig.21.16a
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Uplift Caused by Heating Subsidence Caused by Cooling Fig.21.16b
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Uplift Caused by Heating Subsidence Caused by Extension Fig.21.16c
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Uplift Caused by Rising Mantle Plume Fig.21.16d
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Fig.21.17 Raised Beaches Due to Isostatic Uplift
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Fig.21.18 Effects of subsidence on Venice Raised sidewalk
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Fig.21.19 Present Rates of Uplift and Subsidence
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