Chapter 11 Notes: Section 1 How Rock Deforms
Chapter 11 Notes: Section 1 How Rock Deforms
Chapter 11 Notes: Section 1 How Rock Deforms
Isostasy-
deformation the bending , tilting, and breaking of Earth’s crust; The change in shape of volume
of rock in response to stress
• Deformation can occur when the weight of some part of Earth’s crust changes. Earth’s
crust is part of the lithosphere.
• When the forces acting on the lithosphere are balanced, the lithosphere and asthenosphere
are balanced, and in a state of isostasy.
isostasy a condition of gravitational and buoyant equilibrium between Earth’s lithosphere and
asthenosphere
• When the weight of the lithosphere changes, the lithosphere sinks or rises until a balance
is reached once again.
• The movements of the lithosphere to reach isostasy are called isostatic adjustments.
Stress
stress the amount of force per unit area that acts on a rock
• As Earth’s lithosphere moves, or when tectonic plates collide, these actions exert force on
the rock called stress.
• There are three types of stress: compression, tension, and shear stress.
Compression
• Compression is the type of stress that squeezes and shortens a body of rock.
• Compression commonly reduces the amount of space that rock occupies, and pushes
rocks higher up or deeper down into the crust.
• Compression occurs at or near convergent boundaries.
Tension
• Tension is stress that stretches and pulls a body of rock apart.
• When rocks are pulled apart by tension, the rocks tend to become thinner.
• Tension occurs at or near divergent boundaries.
Fold: a form of ductile strain in which rock layers bend, usually as a result of compression.
• When rock deforms in a ductile way, folds form.
• A fold is most easily observed where flat layers of rock were compressed or squeezed
inward.
• Although a fold commonly results from compression, it can also from as a result of shear
stress.
Types of Folds
• To categorize a fold, scientists study the relative ages of the rocks in the fold.
• An anticline is a fold in which the oldest layer is in the center of the fold. Anticlines are
commonly arch shaped.
• A syncline is a fold in which the youngest layer is in the center of the fold. Synclines are
commonly bowl shaped.
• A monocline is a fold in which both limbs are horizontal or almost horizontal.
Monoclines form when one part of Earth’s crust moves up or down relative to another
part.
Sizes of Folds
• Folds vary greatly in size. Some folds are small enough to be contained in a hand-held
rock specimen.
• Other folds cover thousands of square kilometers can be seen only from the air.
• A large anticline may form a ridge, which is a large, narrow strip of elevated land that can
occur near mountains.
• A large syncline may form a valley.
Fault: a break in a body of rock along which one block slides relative to another; a form of
brittle strain
• Stress on rock can cause rock to break.
• Breaks in rock along which there is no movement of the surrounding rock is called a
fracture.
• A break along which the surrounding rock moves is called a fault.
• The surface or plane along which the motion occurs is called the fault plane.
Dome Mountains
dome mountain a circular or elliptical, almost symmetrical elevation or structure in which the
stratified rock slopes downward gently from the central point of folding
• Dome mountains are rare, and form when magma rises through the crust and pushes up
the rock layers above the magma.
Volcanic Mountains
• Mountains that form when magma erupts onto Earth’s surface are called volcanic
mountains, which commonly form along convergent plate boundaries.
• Some of the largest volcanic mountains are part of the mid-ocean ridges along divergent
plate boundaries.
• Other large volcanic mountains form on the ocean floor at hot spots.