Chapter 11 Notes: Section 1 How Rock Deforms

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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.

Mountains and Isostasy


• Isostatic adjustments regularly occur in mountainous regions.
• The surface of mountains is worn away by erosion over millions of years, resulting in a
reduction of height and weight of the mountain range.
• The surrounding crust becomes lighter, and the area rises by isostatic adjustment in
process called uplift.

Deposition and Isostasy


• Isostatic adjustments occur in areas where rivers carrying a large load flow into large
bodies of water, such as an ocean.
• Most of the material that the river carries is deposited on the ocean floor.
• The added weight to the area causes the ocean floor to sink by isostatic adjustment in a
process called subsidence.
Glaciers and Isostasy
• Isostatic adjustments also occur as a result of the growth and retreat of glaciers and ice
sheets.
• The weight of the ice causes the lithosphere to sink, while the ocean floor rises because
the weight of the overlying water is less.
• When glaciers or ice sheets melt, the land rises and the ocean floor sinks.

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.

Strain: any change in a rock’s shape or


volume caused by stress
• When stress is applied slowly, the
deformed rock may regain its original
shape when the stress is removed.
• The amount of stress that rock can
withstand without permanently
changing shape is limited.
• If a stress exceeds the rock’s limit, the rock’s shape permanently changes.

Types of Permanent Strain


• Brittle strain and ductile strain are types of permanent strain.
• Materials that respond to stress by breaking or fracturing are brittle. Brittle strain appears
as cracks fractures.
• Ductile materials respond to stress by bending or deforming without breaking. Ductile
strain is a change in the volume or shape of rock in which the rock does not crack or
fracture

Factors that Affect Strain


• The composition of rock determines where rock is ductile or brittle, but temperature and
pressure also affect how rock deforms.
• At lower temperature and pressure, rock is likely deform in a brittle way. At higher
temperature and pressure, rock will deform in a ductile way.
• The amount and type of stress and the rate at which stress is applied affects strain.
• The greater the stress on the rock is, the more likely rock is to undergo brittle strain.
• The more quickly stress is applied to rock, the more likely rock is to respond in a brittle
way.

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.

Section 2 How Mountains Form


Mountain Ranges and Systems
 mountain range a series of mountains that are closely related in orientation, age, and
mode of formation
• A mountain is the most extreme type of deformation.
• A group of mountain ranges that are adjacent is called a mountain system.
• The largest mountain systems are part of two larger systems called mountain belts.
• Earth’s two major mountain belts are the circum-Pacific belt and the Eurasian-
Melanesian belt.
• The circum-Pacific belt forms a ring around the Pacific Ocean.
• The Eurasian-Melanesian belt runs from the Pacific islands through Asia and southern
Europe and into northwestern Africa.
• The circum-Pacific and the Eurasian-Melanesian mountain belts are both located along
convergent plate boundaries.
• Scientists think that the location of these two mountain belts provides evidence that most
mountains form as a result of collisions between tectonic plates.
Collisions between Continental and Oceanic Crust
• Some mountains form when oceanic lithosphere and continental lithosphere collide at
convergent plate boundaries.
• In this type of collision, the oceanic lithosphere subducts beneath the continental
lithosphere, producing large-scale deformation which uplifts high mountains.
• In addition, the subduction of the oceanic lithosphere causes partial melting of the
overlying mantle and crust.
• This melting produces magma which can erupt to form volcanic mountains on Earth’s
surface.

Collisions Between Oceanic Crust and Oceanic Crust


• Volcanic mountains commonly form where two plates whose edges consist of oceanic
lithosphere collide.
• In this collision, the denser oceanic plate subducts beneath the other oceanic plate.
• As the denser oceanic plate subducts, fluids from the subducting lithosphere cause partial
melting of the overlying mantle and crust.
• The resulting magma rises and breaks through the oceanic lithosphere.
• These eruptions of magma form an arc of volcanic mountains on the ocean floor.
Collisions Between Continents
• Mountains can form when two continents collide.
• An example of this type of collision is the formation of the Himalaya Mountains in which
the oceanic lithosphere of the Indian plate subducted beneath the Eurasian plate.
• When the continental lithosphere of both plates collided, subduction stopped, but the
collision continued.
• The intense deformation that resulted from the collision uplifted the Himalayas.
• Because the plates are still colliding, the Himalayas are still growing taller.
Types of Mountains
Folded Mountains and Plateaus
folded mountain a mountain that forms when rock layers are squeezed together and uplifted
• The highest mountain ranges in the world consist of folded mountains that form when
continents collide.
• The same stresses that form folded mountains also uplift plateaus, which are large, flat
areas of rock high above sea level.
• Most plateaus form when thick, horizontal layers of rock are slowly uplifted so that the
layers remain flat instead of faulting and folding.
• Most plateaus are located near mountain ranges.
• Plateaus can also form when layers of molten rock harden and pile up on Earth’s surface
or when large areas of rock are eroded.

Fault-Block Mountains and Grabens


fault-block mountain a a mountain that forms where faults break Earth’s crust into large
blocks and some blocks drop down relative to other blocks
• Where parts of Earth’s crust have been stretched and broken into large blocks, faulting
may cause the blocks to tilt and drop relative to other blocks.
• The same type of faulting that forms fault-block mountains also forms long, narrow
valleys called grabens.
• Grabens develop when steep faults break the crust into blocks and one block slips
downward relative to the surrounding blocks.
• Grabens and fault-block mountains commonly occur together.

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.

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