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Slide 1Slide 2Slide 3Slide 4Slide 5Slide 6Slide 7Slide 8Slide 9Slide 10Slide 11Slide 12Slide 13Slide 14Slide 15Slide 16Slide 17Slide 18Harry Williams, Geomorphology 1TECTONIC REGIONS OF NORTH AMERICAThe distribution of tectonic activity around continents (including North America) usually provides a clear contrast between continental interiors and margins; and between leading margins (converging or active) and passive margins (diverging or trailing). This division provides us with distinct large-scale structural regions:Passive marginActivemarginHarry Williams, Geomorphology 2Craton: old, Precambrian (540 million+) metamorphic and igneous rocks at the "core" of continents. The metamorphic rocks are the "roots" of ancient orogenic belts, long since eroded away.Shield: the exposed part of the craton. The North American craton is exposed mainly in the Canadian Shield. Platform: adjacent to the shield, this is where the craton is covered by newer sedimentary rocks. Cratonic rocks are also called "basement rocks" because they underlie more recent rocks in Platform regions.Orogenic belts - the currently or formerly active edge of continents, severely deformed due to tectonic activity(orogenic = "mountain-building").Passive margins - the trailing edge of continents; little or no tectonic activity.Harry Williams, Geomorphology 3The craton tends to be very stable, but has undergone broad warpingin the past (because of tectonic movements around the margins) - especially in platform areas, creating basins, domes and tilted strata.View of the Canadian ShieldHarry Williams, Geomorphology 4Platform Regions.Harry Williams, Geomorphology 5Deformed accretionary wedge sediments in california – a real contrast to mostly flat sedimentary strata in Platform areas such as Texas.Harry Williams, Geomorphology 6Platforms Platforms occur where the craton is 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 – all driven mainly by tectonics). 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, Permian Basin).Harry Williams, Geomorphology 7An 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)Harry Williams, Geomorphology 8A 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".Harry Williams, Geomorphology 9The 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.Harry Williams, Geomorphology 10The 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.Harry Williams, Geomorphology 11It 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.Harry Williams, Geomorphology 12Recap: although platform rocks can be severely deformed like those in the Arbuckles, they are more usually flat or gently tilted, like these shown below in Dallas.Harry Williams, Geomorphology 13Orogenic Belts In the case of North America there are two major orogenic belts - the older Appalachian chain in the east, and the much younger Cordilleran belt in the west. Both were formed by plate convergence and have similar structural features. Both areas underwent uplift, metamorphism, volcanism, folding, thrust faulting and later erosion; some crustal extension was also experienced in the west.CordilleraAppalachiansOuachitasSHIELDPLATFORMPASSIVE MARGINOROGENIC BELTOROGENIC BELTACTIVE MARGINCOASTAL PLAINHarry Williams, Geomorphology 14The present-day relief of these mountains is a result of erosion - the Appalachians being much older are more subdued and lower and consist mainly of eroded folds (more on this later).Appalachians CordilleraHarry Williams, Geomorphology 15The western Cordillera has a number of other features related to orogenesis:Erosion has exposed the granitic batholiths emplaced during orogenesis, forming the Sierra Nevada Mountains.Half Dome MountainHarry Williams, Geomorphology 16Another part of the crust in the west underwent stretching during the orogeny - forming the Basin and Range Province. These ridges and valleys are formed by normal faulting caused by crustal stretching (more later).Death ValleyHarry Williams, Geomorphology 17Another large region in the west experienced uplift, but with little deformation, forming the large Colorado plateau - rivers cut down through the uplifted strata forming many canyons, including the Grand Canyon.ColoradoplateauHarry Williams, Geomorphology 18The Atlantic and Gulf Coast margins of the U.S. are PASSIVE MARGINS, characterized by low-lying flat coastal plains extending below sea-level into a wide continental shelf (the submarine part of the continent, overlain by sediments and subject to subsidence - recall the role of these sediments in


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UNT GEOG 3350 - tectonics2

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