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Mountains and Volcanoes Mountains • Mountains are over 300 m in height and have sloping sides. • Orogeny is the process of mountain building • Takes tens of millions of years; usually produces long linear structures, known as orogenic belts Two main processes that form mountains: 1) Deformation: continental collisions resulting in folding and faulting. 2) Volcanic Activity: opening in crust which allows magma to escape from below Types of Mountains • Types are based according to their origin • • • • • Fault-block: tension, normal faulting Folded: compression, reverse faulting Dome: magma pushing up on Earth’s crust Volcanic: Shield and stratovolcano Complex: mixture of most of the above Fault-Block Mountains • Form at faults (plates slipping by). • Edges of plates catch and push, which generates pressure. • Pressure can cause earthquakes, or push parts of plate upward to form mountains. Tilted fault-block range: Sierra Nevada from east, Steep side of block fault; Ansel Adams photo Horst and Graben •Alternating normal faults lead to a characteristic pattern called a “horst and graben” system. •An area under tension will often have multiple mountain ranges as a result. Folded Mountains • Form at convergent boundaries (continental-continental). • One plate plunges into the mantle, while the other folds under pressure. • ex) Rocky Mountains and Himalayas. http://www.geography.info/images/coco.gif Rocky Mountains, BC. North American plate collides with Juan de Fuca plate The Himalayas, Asia. Eurasian plate collides With Indian-Australian plate Dome Mountains • Form when magma from mantle rises and interacts with parts of the crust that won’t crack. • Magma pushes section of crust up to form a dome. • ex) Mount Royal, Quebec http://www.montrealbb.ca/img/mont_royal.jpg Volcanic Mountains Three types: a) Shield volcanoes b) Stratovolcanoes c) Cinder cones Shield Volcanoes • Found anywhere in a plate, not just edges. • Form above hot spots in the mantle. • Magma collects in large pools and eventually melts the rock above it and pours out through a hole in the crust. Mauna Loa, Hawaii Shield Volcanoes • • • • Magma that flows out is called lava. Lava is runny and flows like rivers. Hardens to form basalt rock. Hardens more quickly if occurs in ocean and forms cones. • Shield volcanoes do not explode. Mauna Loa in Background Kilaeua is Behind Mauna Loa Mauna Kea Stratovolcanoes • Volcanoes that explode and blow ash and rock everywhere! • Forms where two plates collide, one plate slides under the other (subduction). • The descending plate heats up and melts, magma rises and escapes through a hole in the top plate. Stratovolcanoes • Magma is thick and sticky. • Water from descending plate heats up and forms steam. • Steam increases pressure in volcano, which causes it to explode. • ex) Mount St. Helens, Washington Mount St Helens, 1980 Cinder Cones • Built from lava fragments called cinders. • The lava fragments are ejected from a single vent and accumulate around the vent when they fall back to earth. Status of Volcanoes • Active – currently erupting or has erupted within the last 200 years • Dormant – has not erupted recently (within the past few thousand years) but is considered likely to do so in the future • Extinct – has not erupted for a very long time (tens of thousands of years) and is considered unlikely to do. Truly extinct volcanoes are no longer fueled by a magma source. Complex Mountains •Continental-continental collision •Tend to have a little of everything: volcanoes, folds, and faults Orogenic Belt • Long tracts of highly deformed rock • Parallel strips of rock exhibiting similar characteristics along the length of the belt ANATOMY OF AN OROGENIC BELT Anatomy of an Orgogenic Belt • Oceanic Plate: plate containing the ocean floor • Accretionary Prism: sediment collected at a subduction zone • Igneous Arc: collection of igenous rock where lava is cooling • Foreland: land that develops next to a mountain/volcano • Craton: stable part of a tectonic plate found near the middle of the plate