Mtns Lecture

23
Mountains form in different ways Fault-block Form when huge tilted blocks of rock separated from surrounding rock by large faults Folded Form by compression forces folding rock layers. Unwarped Forces push up Earth’s crust and allow the sedimentary rock to erode; leaving igneous or metamorphic rock Volcanic Layers of lava form a cone-shaped mountain of igneous rock.

Transcript of Mtns Lecture

Page 1: Mtns Lecture

Mountains form in different ways Fault-blockForm when huge tilted blocks of rock separated from surrounding rock by

large faults

FoldedForm by compression forces folding rock layers.

UnwarpedForces push up Earth’s crust and allow the sedimentary rock to erode;

leaving igneous or metamorphic rock

VolcanicLayers of lava form a cone-shaped mountain of igneous rock.

Page 2: Mtns Lecture

Folded Mountains

Page 3: Mtns Lecture
Page 4: Mtns Lecture
Page 5: Mtns Lecture
Page 6: Mtns Lecture

Fault-Block

Page 7: Mtns Lecture
Page 8: Mtns Lecture
Page 9: Mtns Lecture
Page 10: Mtns Lecture

Volcanic

Page 11: Mtns Lecture
Page 12: Mtns Lecture
Page 13: Mtns Lecture
Page 14: Mtns Lecture

Unwarped

Page 15: Mtns Lecture
Page 16: Mtns Lecture

Underwater

Page 17: Mtns Lecture

Mid Ocean Ridge an underwater mountain range formed by plate

tectonics. The uplifted sea floor results from convection currents in the mantle. Lava erupts there, creating new crust upon cooling. A mid-ocean ridge makes the boundary between two tectonic plates and is a divergent plate boundary.

Page 18: Mtns Lecture
Page 19: Mtns Lecture

Plateau n. pl. pla·teaus or pla·teaux (-t z ) 1. An elevated,

comparatively level expanse of land; a tableland.

Page 20: Mtns Lecture

Island n. A land mass, especially one smaller

than a continent, entirely surrounded by water.

Page 21: Mtns Lecture

Trench/Rift

Page 22: Mtns Lecture
Page 23: Mtns Lecture

Mountains form in different ways Fault-blockForm when huge tilted blocks of rock separated from surrounding rock by

large faults

FoldedForm by compression forces folding rock layers.

UnwarpedForces push up Earth’s crust and allow the sedimentary rock to erode;

leaving igneous or metamorphic rock

VolcanicLayers of lava form a cone-shaped mountain of igneous rock.