Landforms MtnBuildingPPT
Landforms MtnBuildingPPT
Depositional Landforms are produced from the deposition of weathered and eroded
surface materials. Depositional landforms include features such as: beaches, deltas,
flood plains, dunes, alluvial fans, and glacial moraines.
The Stromboli Volcano erupting off the Floodplain deposits at the confluence
coast of Sicily in the Mediterranean Sea. of Mississippi and Arkansas Rivers.
Fractures
Appalachian Mountains
Himalayan Mountains
Andes Mountains
Orogenesis
Orogenesis is the thickening of the continental crust and the building of
mountains over millions of years and it translates from Greek as “birth of
mountains”, (oros is the Greek word for mountain).
Orogeny encompasses all aspects of mountain formation including plate
tectonics, terrane accretion, regional metamorphism, thrusting, folding,
faulting, and igneous intrusions.
Orogenesis is primarily covered in the plate tectonics section of the earth
science education materials, but it is important to review for the landform
section because it includes deformation processes responsible for mountain
building.
South Carolina’s Blue Ridge
Mountains and Inner Piedmont
Region were formed by multiple
orogenic events when rocks
forming South Carolina were
uplifted, metamorphosed, folded,
faulted, and thrusted. More
information on the Blue ridge
mountains is included on the
section for the Appalachian
Mountain Range.
Photo courtesy of SCGS, SCDNR
Deformation
Deformation processes deform or alter the earth’s crust by extreme stress or pressure in
the crust and mantle.
Most deformation occurs along plate margins from plate tectonic movements. Folding
and faulting are the most common deformation processes.
Folding occurs when rocks are compressed such that the layers buckle and fold.
Faulting occurs when rocks fracture under the accumulation of extreme stress
created by compression and extensional forces.
Both of these folds are in biotite-rich gneiss from the South Carolina Piedmont, the areas where the folds
are most pronounced contain greater amounts of quartz from the granitic composition of the rock. The
scale card shows us that the rock on the left contains smaller folds than the rock on the right.
Photo: South Carolina Geological Survey Photo: South Carolina Geological Survey
Folding
Folding occurs when rocks are compressed or deformed and they
buckle under the stress.
The diagram below is a cartoon illustrating how rocks fold.
Very intense compressional forces form tight isoclinal folds, less intense compressional forces
produce open folds.
Folds can be asymmetric, upright, overturned, or curved. A fold pushed all the way over onto its
side is called recumbent.
Twisting or tilting during rock deformation and compression can cause folds to form at different
angles.
Some folds are very small and can be viewed in hand held specimens, while other folds are as
large as a mountain and can be viewed from aerial photos.
Folding
Anticline exposed along NJ Route 23 near Syncline valley between
Butler NJ. The man in the bottom of the mountain peaks.
photo helps show the scale of the folds.
Normal
1. Normal: rocks above the fault plane, or hanging
wall, move down relative to the rocks below the
fault plane, or footwall. Strike-Slip
2. Reverse: rocks above the hanging wall moves up
relative to the footwall
Reverse 3. Strike-slip: rocks on either side of a nearly
vertical fault plane move horizontally
Geologists recognize faults by looking for off-set rock layers in outcrops.
Geologists recognize faults by looking for off-set rock layers in outcrops.
Faults may also be recognized by debris, breccia, clay, or rock fragments that break apart or are pulverized during the
movement of the rocks along the fault plane. Fault ‘gouge’ is a term used to describe the material produced by faulting.
If a fault plane is exposed, there may be grooves, striations (scratches), and slickenslides (symmetrical fractures) that show
evidence of the rocks movement.
Large fault systems, such as the San Andreas fault can be seen from aerial imagery.
Faulting
Faulting
The San Andreas fault is the largest fault system in North
America and it runs for nearly 780 miles through western
California and in some places the width of the fault zone is 60
miles. The San Andreas fault is a transform boundary between
the Pacific Plate on the west and the North American Plate to
the east. The Pacific Plate is moving northwestward against the
North American Plate. This motion generates earthquakes along
the fault that pose significant hazards to people and alters the
physical landscape.
www.visibleearth.nasa.gov
Major Mountain Ranges of the World
Antarctica: Antarctic Peninsula, Transantarctic Mountains
Africa: Atlas, Eastern African Highlands, Ethiopian Highlands
Asian: Himalayas, Taurus, Elburz, Japanese Mountains
Australia: MacDonnell Mountains
Europe: Pyrenees, Alps, Carpathians, Apennines, Urals, Balkan Mountains
North American: Appalachians, Sierra Nevada, Rocky Mountains, Laurentides
South American: Andes, Brazilian Highlands
Andes
Mountain
s
Rocky Mountains
The Rocky Mountains, which extend from British Columbia to Texas were formed by the
Laramide Orogeny 40-80 million years ago; however, there is still active uplift today.
Colorado’s Front Range, the Sangre de Cristo Mountains of Colorado and New Mexico, the
Franklin Mountains in Texas, and Wyoming’s Bighorn Mountains are all part of the “Rocky
Mountain Range”.
The Rocky Mountains contain some of the most
beautiful scenery in North America and are home
to hundreds of parks and recreational areas
including Rocky Mountain National Park,
Yosemite National Park, Glacier National Park,
and Grand Tetons National Park.
Source: USGS
The Laramide Orogeny was characterized by intense
tectonic activity resulting from a series of compressional
and extensional events. The subduction of the Pacific
Ocean Plate caused compressional forces in the continental
plate, and pushed the oceanic plate downward. Following
subduction of the oceanic plate, upwelling and extensional
forces caused the literal uplift of the continental bedrock
and formed of the Rocky Mountains. The lower crust in this
region of upwelling and uplifting is relatively thin and
stretches under pressure. The upper crust is very brittle and
deforms easily. As a result the upper crust is characterized
by large angular tilted faults blocks which form the Rocky
Mountains we see today. Copyright© Dr. Roger Slatt, University of Oklahoma
Appalachian Mountains
The Appalachian Mountains extend along the eastern margin of North America from
Alabama to Maine in the United States, and through the southeastern provinces of Canada
to Newfoundland.
The Appalachian Mountains were formed during the Paleozoic Era from several orogenic
episodes, the Taconic Orogeny (Ordovician ~480 mya), followed by the Acadian Orogeny
(Devonian ~400 mya), and lastly the Alleghany Orogeny (Permian ~ 300 mya).
Each of these major orogenic episodes involved multiple events of folding, faulting,
metamorphism, emplacements of igneous intrusions, and uplift.
The Appalachian Mountains are divided into four major provinces: Piedmont, Blue Ridge,
Valley and Ridge, and Appalachian Plateau.
Waterfall carved into valley
of Blue Ridge Province of
the Appalachians near the
South Carolina and North
Carolina border.
www. maps.google.com
This is an aerial view of the Susquehanna River
in Pennsylvania flowing through the folded
and faulted Valley and Ridge Province of the
Appalachian Mountains.
Source: SCGS
Source: USGS
Andes Mountains
The Andes Mountains began forming during the Jurrasic period (~200 mya) when plate
tectonics forced the oceanic Nazca plate to subduct beneath the continental South
American plate.
The subduction zone between the plate margins marks the Peru-Chile ocean trench which
is 26,500 ft (8,065 meters) below sea level.
Tectonic forces along this active continental margin are forcing the ongoing uplift, folding,
faulting, and thrusting of bedrock forming the Andes Mountains.
The Andes are the longest mountain range on land and they extend along the entire
western coast of South America. They are divide into three sections: (1) Southern Andes in
Argentina and Chile, (2) Central Andes including the Chilean and Peruvian cordilleras an
parts of Bolivia, and (3) Northern sections in Venezuela, Columbia, and Ecuador, including
to parallel ranges the Cordillera Occidental and the Cordillera Oriental.
The Andes Mountains contain many active volcanoes, including Cotopaxi in Ecuador, one of
the largest active volcanoes in the world.
http:visibleearth.nasa.gov/
European Alps
The European Alps began forming during the Alpine Orogeny (~ 20-120 mya) with the
collision of the African Plate moving northward into the European Plate. This motion is still
active today as the Alps continue to uplift, fold, fault, and accrete.
The Alps are the largest mountain range in Europe and they extend from Austria and
Slovenia in the east, through Italy, Switzerland, Germany, and France in the west.
Major orogenic events involved recumbent folding and thrust faulting of crystalline
basement rocks that today form some of the highest peaks in the Alps.
The Alps were one of the first mountain ranges to be studied by geologists and as a result
many geomorphic terms, especially those relating to glaciation and ‘alpine’ environments,
were first defined in the European Alps.
African Plate
Austria
Germany
European
Switzerland Plate
p s
Al
e an
r op Slovenia
France Eu Italy
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matterhorn
The Matterhorn, on the border between
Switzerland an Italy, is one of the most familiar
mountains in the world and is a popular climbing
site. The continent-continent collision resulted in
the peak of the Matterhorn containing bedrock
from the African Plate while the lower portions
contain bedrock from the European Plate.
Modified from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alps
Himalaya Mountains
Himalaya orogeny began 45-54 million years ago from the collision between the India
and Eurasian Plates and is still active today.
When two continental plates collide, the Earth’s crust at the plate boundaries is folded,
faulted, overthrusted, uplifted forming an extensive continental mountain range.
Today, the Himalayas separate the Indian sub-continent from the Tibetan Plateau and
they are recognized as the tallest above sea level mountains on Earth. The Himalayas
contain 10 of the tallest mountain peaks on Earth >8,000 meters , including Mount
Everest with a peak of 8850 meters (29,035 ft). In addition, the Himalayas include
three major individual mountain ranges, the Karakoram, Hindu Kush, and Toba Kakar.
Shallow, intermediate, and deep earthquakes are associated with this zone, and
scientists predict that several major earthquakes will occur in the region posing a
significant hazard to millions of people.
The name Himalaya is from Sanskirt,
and it means “the abode of snow”.
Continental – Continental Plate Collision
‘Hima’ for snow and ‘alaya’ for abode.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Himalayas.jpg
www.usgs.gov
Volcanic Landforms:
Extrusive Igneous
Cinder Cones
Shield Volcanoes
Strato (Composite)Volcanoes
Lava Domes
Caldera
Volcanic Necks
Volcanic Hot-Spots
Cinder Cones
Cinder cones are relatively small cone shaped hills (< 2000 ft of relief) formed by the accumulation
of cinders and ash during volcanic eruptions. The cinders form from bursting bubbles of gas in the
magma that eject lava into the air. The summit my be truncated or bowl-shaped where the magma
emerges from a single central vent or volcanic neck.
Cinder cones are formed from an accumulation of ejected tephra and scoria rocks. Tephra and scoria
occur in a range of different sizes from fine ashes to large volcanic rock fragments. Once the magma
is ejected into the air, it cools, hardens, and is deposited on the summit or slopes of the cinder cone.
The pyroclastic tephra and scoria rocks are produced from gas-rich basaltic magma, and is usually
reddish-brown to black in color.
Cinder cones generally form from a single volcanic episode and are rarely associated with eruptions
lasting more than a decade.
Cinder cones can be found in combination with shield and strato volcanos and can occur at
convergent or divergent plate boundaries.
Cinder cones are the most common type of volcano and often occur in large numbers within a region
forming ‘volcano fields’. Flagstaff Arizona contains a volcanic field of nearly 600 cinder cones.
Copyright©Lyn Topinka
Volcanic Hot Spots
Volcanic hot-spots occur where a mass of magma ascends toward the earth’s surface as a mantle
plume, releasing basaltic magma that generates volcanic activity at a locally specific site.
Hot-spots do not occur along plate boundaries but instead form as intraplate volcanic features
characterized by magma upwelling. Once a hot spot is generated it may stay active for millions of years.
Hot spots may produce thermal effects in the ground water and the crust producing geothermal power
often in the form of steam. In Iceland and Italy geothermal power is used to generate electricity for
industrial and municipal use.
The Hawaiian Islands formed over the last 5 million years from a hot spot in the Pacific Ocean. As the
Pacific plate moves over the hotspot, it generates a chain of islands that emerge as seamounts above
the ocean’s surface. Hot spot activity is currently most active on the big island, Hawaii.
Nihau Kauai
Oahu
Oldest Islands
Molokai
Maui
Pa Lanai
cif
ic Kahoolawe
Pl
at Hawaii
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www.maps.google.com
Volcanic Necks
Volcanic necks are remnant cooled lava pipes that are exposed after the exterior
volcanic mountain is weathered and eroded.
Volcanic necks are a good example of differential weathering. The magma cooled in
the interior pipes is more resistant than the ejected deposits that accumulate on the
exterior. As a result, when the volcanic mountain erodes, it leaves behind the remnant
more resistant volcanic neck.
Source: USGS
Batholith
Batholiths are massive igneous intrusions that form linear bodies that extend for hundreds of
kilometers across the landscape and can be several kilometers thick.
Some batholiths may incorporate groups of smaller plutons in addition to their massive structure.
Batholiths form below the earth’s surface as intrusions of magma emplaced during tectonic
processes. Following emplacement they may be uplifted and exposed by weathering and erosion
processes.
Some batholiths are metamorphosed by heat and pressure. For example, many of the batholiths in
the Appalachian Mountains are metamorphosed igneous intrusions.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Enchanted_rock_2006.jpg
Sills, Laccoliths, and Dikes
Sills and laccoliths are igneous intrusions that form near the earth’s surface. They are
concordant features meaning that they form parallel to existing strata or structures.
Sills form near the surface from very fluid magma that cools quickly they are usually mostly
basaltic rocks with an aphanitic (fine-grained) texture.
Laccoliths are similar to sills, accept they are formed by more viscous magma which collects in a
lens shape prior to cooling as a concordant igneous intrusion near the surface. This process may
force the overlaying strata to form a slightly domed structure over the bulging laccolith.
Dikes are tabular intrusions of igneous rock that form when magma injects into fractures. Dikes
are discordant features, meaning that they cut through layers of rock.
Magma can force the rock apart separating the fracture.
The cooled magma can range in thickness from centimeters to kilometers and may be more
resistant to erosion than the surrounding rocks enabling them to protrude outward amidst their
surroundings.
Photo: SCGS
35
Standards: 3-3.5, 3-3.6, 3-3.8
Standards: 5-3.1
Standards: 8-3.7, 8-3.9
Dams and Lakes
Dams are control structures on rivers which store and release river water from a lake (reservoir)
according to specific operating regimes.
Some dams are run-of-river structures which continually release the same amount of water entering
the reservoir, while others are operated as storage facilities for regulated control on water releases.
Although 70 percent of the earth is covered with water, only about 2.5 percent is freshwater, by
building dams with reservoirs people are able to store the freshwater and use it as needed.
Dams provide water for drinking, irrigation, hydro-electric power, river navigation, flood control,
recreation, and many other needs.
Dams disconnect river channels and can function as local base level controls on stream gradient and
store sediment from transporting downstream. They also act as barriers to migrating species, such
as fish traveling upstream to spawn, and the controlled water releases alter the downstream
ecology of river systems and their floodplains.
Lake Murray and Saluda Dam: Lake Powell and Glen Canyon Dam:
Saluda River, South Carolina Colorado River, Arizona
Crevasse
Channels
Meander-Scroll
ridges
River Terraces
River terraces are older remnant flood plain surfaces that are higher in elevation than
the modern flood plain. They may occur on one or both sides of the valley.
Terraces are formed when the river channel cuts down into the flood plain and laterally
erodes the alluvial valley, carving a new river channel and flood plain entrenched within
the older flood plain surfaces. Down cutting can occur because of hydrologic or
sedimentary changes in the headwaters or valley gradient changes caused by a
retreating sea-level and lowered or extended base-level. Terraces can also form from
tectonics and valley uplifting.
Terraces are generally isolated from the more recent river processes and may only flood
during 100 or 500 year flood events. River terraces are often archeological hot spots
because they contain artifacts from historic colonies that used the river and flood plain.
Terrace 1
This river has gone through several
different episodes of down cutting
Terrace 2 and rejuvenation. The modern flood
plain is preceded by four different
terraces that all reflect distinct
Terrace 3 periods of environmental conditions
or valley gradients, each different
Terrace 4 from the other. Over time, it is
possible that the river will down-cut
again abandoning a fifth terrace.
River Channel and Modern Flood Plain
Photo: SCGS
Barrier Islands
Barrier islands, also referred to as barrier beaches, are long, narrow, depositional
landforms, that form parallel to the coastline and may or may not connect to the mainland.
They are the first line of protection against hurricane storm surge.
They are generally composed of quartz sands, and they form along coasts where there is a
substantial supply of sand entering the ocean from Coastal Plain rivers.
Barrier islands often form where tidal process are minimal.
The landward side of the barrier islands may contain tidal flats, marshes, swamps,
lagoons, coastal dunes, and beaches.
Similar to beaches, barrier islands form in relation to, long-shore current processes and
overtime adjust to sea-level changes.
Classic examples of barrier islands include North Carolina’s Outer Banks and Texas’s Padre
Island. Both of these barrier islands have National Park Service lands that preserve natural
coastal processes and protect plant and wildlife habitat from human impacts.
Image: NOAA
Deltas
Deltas form where the mouth of a river meets its ultimate base level at the ocean or
sea. As the river’s velocity decreases, it looses the capacity to carry its sediment load
and the resulting deposits form a delta. Delta shapes and forms vary depending on
tidal influences, waves, currents, sediment type and quantity, river discharge, and the
stream gradient near the outlet. The most common types of deltas include bird-foot,
estuarine, and arcuate.
Not all rivers form deltas, for example the Amazon deposits its sediment load directly
into the ocean onto an underwater seaward sloping continental shelf. The Columbia
River in the northwest United States, lacks a delta altogether, because the currents
are too strong and erosive for the sediments to deposit.
Mississippi River Delta: Bird-Foot Delta A bird-foot delta contains a large channel
with multiple smaller distributary channels
draining off from the main channel and
depositing sediments. They generally form
with rivers that have a high sediment load
and flow into an area with minimal tidal
influences. This false-color infrared image
provides a satellite view of the Mississippi
River delta. This delta has shifted
positions several times over the last 5000
years in relation to changes in the
Mississippi River. Scientist recognize
atleast 7 distinct deltas. The most recent
began forming 500 years ago and forms a
classic bird-foot delta.
Deltas
Nile River and Arcuate Delta An estuary delta is formed where a river meets the
ocean and sediments from the river are filling in
the estuary. Estuaries contain a brackish mixture
of freshwater and saltwater, and they have a
moderate to strong tidal influence. Estuarine
deltas are a common deltaic landform and they
occur in several rivers along the western and
eastern United States coasts, the Seine River in
France, and the Tiber River in Italy. The ACE Basin
of South Carolina, named for the Ashepoo,
Combahee, and Edisto Rivers, protects nearly
150,00 acres of undeveloped estuary habitat.
Red Sea
Lake
Victoria
Copyright ©2008 Google Earth
Continental Shelf and Slope: Mid-Ocean Ridges:
areas of turquoise colored boundary between divergent
continental crust around the plate margins, indicates areas of
continental margins sea-floor spreading
Kermadec
Trench
South Sandwich
Trench
Pacific-Antartic Indian Ridge
Ridge
Ice sheets are high latitude polar glaciers that cover extensive areas of continental
landmasses, for this reason they are also referred to as “ continental glaciers”. Glacial ice
sheet formation requires long periods of extremely low temperatures, which allows snow to
collect over vast areas covering the underlying terrain. The accumulation of snow forms dense
layers that are thousands of meters thick. Antarctica and Greenland are both almost completely
covered by glacial ice sheets.
Alpine glaciers are long, linear glaciers that occupy high altitude mountain valleys, for this
reason they are also referred to as “valley glaciers”. Alpine glaciers flow down valley, and
increase in size as they accumulate and absorb smaller tributary glaciers from the mountainous
terrain. Alpine glaciers can be found all around the world, and presently occur in may of the
major mountain ranges in the world including the Rockies, Andes, and Himalayas. Alpine
glaciers may also occur in high-latitude, polar or arctic mountains, such as those in Alaska.
Geomorphologist’s often refer to glaciers as “rivers of ice” because like rivers, continental and alpine
glaciers “flow” down-valley through the landscape eroding, transporting, and depositing weathered
materials along their the path. It is this combination processes that forms the diverse array of
constructive and destructive glacial landforms.
Tidal Glaciers and Icebergs
Tidal glaciers are the portion of either alpine or continental glaciers which spill out
into the sea and float on the surface of the saltwater.
The glacial ice over the water breaks by calving off into large icebergs.
Icebergs are large floating blocks of ice that calved off from tidal glaciers.
Icebergs usually calve off along crevasses or cracks in the ice, but can also fail
from a combination of melting and gravitational pull.
Icebergs vary in size and thickness, and some reach heights more than 100 feet!
Hanging Valley
Copyright ©Bruce Molnia, Terra Photographics
Lateral and Medial Moraines
Kennicott Glacier shows off multiple
Kennicott Glacier shows off multiple
Moraines are formed by the deposition of medial moraines as it descends Mount
glacial till as the glacier melts. Moraines are Blackburn in the Wrangell-St. Elias
National Park in Alaska.
defined by where the glacial till was deposited
relative to the moving, melting glacier.
Lateral moraines are long linear ridges of
glacial till deposited along the side of the
glacier parallel to its direction of movement.
Medial moraines are long linear ridges that
form along the contact where tributary
glaciers with lateral moraines merge to join
larger valley glaciers (makes a “Y”-like
formation). Medial moraines form were the
glaciers merge together the till deposits
become incorporated as dark ridges of
sediment oriented down valley and aligned
parallel through the middle of the glacier.