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Chapter 11: Mountain Building

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Mountain-A large mass of rock that rises ... E. Horst and Grabens ... some blocks of rock are thrust upward (Horst) and some are dropped (Graben). See page 245! ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 11: Mountain Building


1
Chapter 11 Mountain Building
  • 11.1 Where Mountains Form
  • 11.2 How Mountains Form
  • 11.3 Types of Mountains

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2
11.1 Where Mountains Form
  • Mountain Belts
  • Mountain-A large mass of rock that rises a great
    distance above its base.
  • Most mountains are found along convergent plate
    boundaries. Why?

Because of the collision of the plates.
3
11.1 Where Mountains Form
  • B. Continental Margin- A boundary between
    continental crust and oceanic crust.
  • Two Types Active and Passive. Active occur near
    plate boundaries and passive do not.
  • Mountain building takes place at active
    boundaries.
  • Passive continental margins are the material used
    for mountain building.

4
11-2 How Mountains Form
  • Types of Stress
  • Stress- A measure of the amount of force applied
    over a given area.
  • Compression-Rocks are being squeezed inward.
    Bows upward.
  • Tension- Rocks are being stretched. Creates a
    valley.
  • Shear Stress- Rock layers are being pushed in two
    different directions.

5
11-2 How Mountains Form
  • B. Folds
  • Occurs underground and then is exposed by erosion
    and weathering.
  • Anticline- An upfold of rock layers. P. 239
  • Syncline- A downfold of rock layers.

6
11-2 How Mountains Form
Hanging wall
  • Faults
  • Normal Fault- When hanging wall moves down with
    respect to the footwall.
  • Reverse Fault- Hanging wall moves up with respect
    to the footwall.
  • Thrust Fault- Is a reverse fault in which the
    fault plane dips 45 (or less from horizontal.
  • Strike-slip- The rocks on opposite sides of the
    fault plane move horizontally.

Foot Wall
7
11-2 How Mountains Form
  • D. Joints
  • Joints- Are breaks in bedrock along which no
    apparent movement has occurred.
  • 2. Provide an avenue for groundwater and magma
    flow. This allows for large deposits of
    minerals.

8
11-3 Types of Mountains
  • Folded Mountains- When two plates carrying
    continental crust collide, rocks can fold and
    crumple. examples The Alps, Himalayas and Rocky
    Mountains.
  • Oceanic crust subducts until there is a
    continent-to-continent collision.
  • See Himalayan example pg. 243. Why are there
    ocean sediments at the top of Mt. Everest?

Uplift of Sea Floor Sediments
9
11-3 Types of Mountains
  • B. Dome Mountain- A nearly circular folded
    mountain. They are individual, isolated
    structures that occur in flat lying sedimentary
    rocks.
  • Bent upwards by uplifting forces.
  • Two Types Plutonic and Tectonic. Plutonic is
    created by rising magma. Tectonic is created by
    uplifting forces.

10
11-3 Types of Mountains
  • C. Volcanic Mountains
  • These mountains are created by rising magma that
    forms volcanoes.
  • 2. They are a result of a subducting plate
    boundary.

11
11-3 Types of Mountains
  • D. Fault-Block Mountains
  • These mountains are created by tension in the
    crust as it is slowly being up lifted.
  • E. Horst and Grabens
  • As the earth's crust uplifts, some blocks of rock
    are thrust upward (Horst) and some are dropped
    (Graben). See page 245!
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