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Historical Historical Geology Geology Tectonics Tectonics Harry Williams Harry Williams 1

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Page 1: Historical Geology Tectonics Harry Williams 1. Harry Williams, Historical Geology2 HISTORICAL GEOLOGY STRUCTURE OF THE EARTH, OROGENESIS, CONTINENTAL

Historical GeologyHistorical Geology

TectonicsTectonics

Harry WilliamsHarry Williams

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HISTORICAL GEOLOGYSTRUCTURE OF THE EARTH, OROGENESIS, CONTINENTAL

GROWTH BY ACCRETION.

Denser elements, such as IRON AND NICKEL, form the CORE; lighter minerals such as the FELDSPARS (which have a low melting point and low density) form the CRUST; minerals having intermediate density, such as the iron and magnesium-rich silicates OLIVINE and PYROXENE form the MANTLE.

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Even after 4 billion years of cooling, the outer core remains molten and part of the upper mantle is partially molten and capable of flowing very slowly.

Elements Of The Crust And Upper MantleContinental crust: averages about 35 km thick. Rich in feldspars and "granitic" rocks.

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Oceanic crust: 5-12 km thick. Rich in iron and magnesium - basalt rock.Upper mantle: the uppermost part of the mantle (to approx. 100 km deep) is solid. This part of the mantle together with the overlying crust is the LITHOSPHERE.The Asthenosphere: this part of the mantle, between about 100 and 700 km deep, is partially molten and capable of flowing very slowly. Plate motion may be driven by convection here.

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Continental crust can be divided into 4 regions:a) Shields: old, precambrian metamorphic and igneous rocks at the "core" of continents. b) Platforms: adjacent to shields, similar rocks; covered by newer sedimentary rocks formed during transgressions (shield + platform = craton).c) Orogenic belts, usually around the edge of the continents, severely deformed due to plate collision. Orogenic = "mountain-building".d) Passive margins, the trailing edge of continents; little or no tectonic activity. Coastal plains.

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The craton tends to be very stable, but has undergone broad warpingin the past - especially in platform areas, creating basins, domes and tilted strata.

View of the Canadian Shield

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Platforms Platforms are parts of the craton which are covered by relatively undeformed layers of sedimentary rock, formed when seas occupied these areas (due to tilting/sinking of the craton or rise in sea level). A large part of the interior of North America consists of platform areas. Structure within the platform rocks is usually quite subdued: however, many parts of platforms are not completely flat; instead broad warping of the underlying craton has produced gently tilted beds (< 5o), domes (e.g. the Black Hills of Dakota; Ozark Mountains of Missouri) and basins (e.g. Michigan Basin).

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An exception to the generally subdued structure of platforms, resulting from plate movements, is intracratonic rifting which forms rift valleys, seas and aulacogens in platform regions.

Red Sea rift(view to the south)

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A relatively new idea in plate tectonics suggests that rifting may actually be initiated by hot spots which cause the continental crust to dome up and split into a triple rift.

Commonly, one of the rift arms fails, while the other two become active and contribute to an opening linear ocean basin. So the convection cell that drives sea-floor spreading may actually be a line of "hot spots".

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The rift valley forms a large linear trough, bounded by fault scarps and floored by volcanic rocks. If the valley extends below sea level, it becomes the site of sedimentation.

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The failed arm, represented by a deep linear trough into the adjacent continent, may become a natural location for a major river valley within platform areas - probable examples include the Mississippi and the Amazon.

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It is also possible for a failed arm of a rift to become "squeezed shut" by later plate movements - forming an aulacogen. The Arbuckle Mountains lie on the northeastern margin of the southern Oklahoma aulacogen.

Closure of the aulacogen resulted in severe folding and faulting of marine sedimentary rocks which had accumulated in the trough - one of the few places that platform strata are so deformed.

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PLATE TECTONICS

We are concerned primarily with plate collision and orogenesis:

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Orogenic Belts In the case of North America there are three major orogenic belts - the older Appalachian and Ouachita chains in the east and south, and the much younger Rockies in the west. All were formed by plate convergence and have similar structural features. All three areas underwent uplift, metamorphism, volcanism, folding, thrust faulting and later erosion.

Rockies

Appalachians

Ouachitas

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OROGENESIS AT CONVERGENT BOUNDARIES1. Passive Margins: prior to orogenesis, the continental boundary is a PASSIVE margin. Sedimentation at passive margins reflects the progressive increase in water depth. Nearshore deposits are coarser - sand grading to silt and clay; further out on the continental shelf in clean shallow water, carbonate reefs form in tropical regions. A common feature of continental margins undergoing extensive sedimentation is SUBSIDENCE, due to the weight of sediment ISOSTATICALLY DEPRESSING the crust; in this way shallow water deposits (e.g. 100’ depth) can build up thicknesses of 1000's of feet.

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mountainshills

cliffs ridges

Andean-Type Orogenesis

1. Passive stage (pre-convergence) -> marginal deposits form.

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canyons

valleys

beaches

deltas

2. early subduction -> marginal deposits are deformed by compression. Folds and thrust faults are formed.3. Volcanic arc forms.4. Lateral growth by accretion; emplacement of igneous masses; metamorphism; further deformation of marginal deposits.

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5. Continued uplift and deformation results from continuing plate convergence. Examples = Andes of western south America; Rockies of North America (older, inactive mountain belt).

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The Sierra Nevada and the Coast Range are good examples of inactive Andean-type orogenesis. The Sierra Nevada batholith is a remnant of a continental volcanic arc. The Coast Range consists of accretionary wedge sediments that have been deformed and uplifted by plate convergence (Note: the subduction zone between the Pacific and North American plates that formed these features has since changed into a transform fault – the San Andreas).

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Continental Collision-Type OrogenesisAbout 20 million years ago - India was separated from Asia by a progressively narrowing ocean basin - the Tethys Sea. The “collision” begun with the subduction of the oceanic plate beneath the Tethys Sea. This caused the onset of orogenesis in Tibet (uplift, folding, faulting, metamorphism, volcanism).Initial growth was similar to Cordilleran-type orogenesis; however, when the continents collide one of them can not be subducted (too thick and buoyant), therefore the plates are welded together forming a SUTURE ZONE and producing a large mountain chain, containing sedimentary, igneous and metamorphic rock.

17.23a

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The period of mountain building is termed an OROGENY. The Himalayas are very high because they are very young (geologically). Uplift continues and erosion hasn’t had long to wear the mountains down.

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Suture zones usually have symmetrical patterns of rock types (folded sedimentary, metamorphic, granite) and the high rugged mountains resulting from orogenesis are subject to intense erosion, shedding sediment to both sides of the mountain range.

sediment sediment

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The present-day relief of mountain belts is a result of erosion: in North America, the Appalachians being much older than the Rockies are more subdued and lower and consist mainly of eroded folds.

Appalachians Rockies

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folds

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Young (relatively) mountain belts like the Rockies are higher and more rugged. Fault block mountains are also common

UPLIFT

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The Grand Tetons of Wyoming are an example of a block of crust uplifted along a fault.

faults

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All orogenies have common features: 1. compression, buckling and uplift at the edge of the continent. 2. emplacement of igneous rock masses 3. folding, faulting and metamorphism 4. erosion of the growing mountains and deposition adjacent to the mountains (including the back-arc basin).5. scraping off, folding and uplift of sea floor rock and sediments onto the edge of the continent - resulting in:

sediment

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Continental Growth By Accretion Caused by the "plastering on" of material at the edge of a continental plate adjacent to a subduction zone. The material that accumulates in this fashion can be small continental masses MICROCONTINENTS or oceanic features such as volcanic arcs and seamounts submarine volcanoes). The Seychelles Bank in the Indian Ocean is an example of a microcontinent, which hasapparently become detached from Africa. These larger masses of rock are scraped off the subducting plate and plastered onto the continent to form ALLOCHTHONOUS or EXOTIC TERRANES (meaning they had originated elsewhere).

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Example: Wrangellia consists of basaltic island arc volcanic rocks, deep marine shales and shallow marine limestones. This material originated in the area presently around New Guinea in Triassic time (225 million years ago) - travelling some 10,000 km to its present location. The collision of these smaller masses with the larger continent also causes orogenic activity, resulting in coastal mountain ranges.