Mountain Building Flashcards

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1
Q

what is a mountain?

A
  • Natural rise, but taller and steeper than a hill

- Commonly greater than 600m high

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2
Q

how do mountains affect our lives in BC?

A
  • Tourism
  • Skiing
  • Climate (Warm clouds forced to rise over mountains -> rain)
  • Water
  • Mass movement
  • Industry
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3
Q

how do mountains form?

A
  • Volcanic activity
  • Orogeny (main process): crustal shortening/compression
  • Block faulting: crustal extension/tension
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4
Q

mountain building

A
  • Most mountain belts are at orogenic belts (past and present plate interactions) and at the edges of continents (Ex. Coast mountains – active orogenic belts; Ex. Appalachians – ancient, passive margins, eroded)
  • Steady-state process, in equilibrium as long as uplift is balanced by erosion
  • Continues as long as plate tectonic section is active
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5
Q

orogeny

A
  • Episode of compressional mountain building accompanied by intense deformation, igneous activity, and metamorphism
  • Ex. Appalachians formed by Caledonian Orogeny
  • Ex. Himalayas – ongoing collision of plates
  • Limestone on top of Everest used to be in the ocean
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6
Q

areas in orogenic belt

A
  • Accretionary wedge (A)
  • Active arc (B)
  • Back-arc compression (C)
  • Most of BC is an orogenic belt!
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7
Q

Accretionary wedge

A
  • Folding, thrust faults
  • Eventually faulted, uplifted onto continents
  • Sediments scrape off and build up
  • Ex. West Coast Vancouver Island
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8
Q

Active arc

A
  • Adding volcanoes, plutons -> add volume to crust
  • Added heat -> regional and contact metamorphism
  • Compression and local extension -> folds, faults, uplift
  • Ex. Coast Mountains
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9
Q

Back-arc compression

A
  • Thickening crust/metamorphism
  • No volume added
  • Ex. Canadian Rockies (part of Cordilleran Orogenic Belt)
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10
Q

block faulting mountains

A
  • Relatively rare, but exist in California
  • Basin and range province – under tension
  • Basin (grabens)/range (horsts)
  • Ranges = mountains
  • Cause uncertain, but could be crustal thinning due to heating up of asthenosphere
  • Could also be crustal thinning due to shearing action of San Andreas fault
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11
Q

orogenic mountain belts

A
  • Most mountain belts have a complex history
  • Ex. Appalachians
  • Subduction/volcanism
  • Collision of island arcs
  • Collision of micro plates
  • Erosion post orogeny
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