Deforming Earth's Crust: Section 3
Deforming Earth's Crust: Section 3
Deforming Earth's Crust: Section 3
Why It Matters
Tectonic plate motion shapes and reshapes Earth’s surface.
Have you ever tried to bend something, only to have it break? Take
long, uncooked pieces of spaghetti, and bend them very slowly and only
a little. Now, bend them again, but this time, bend them much farther
and faster. What happened?
Deformation
How can a material bend at one time and break at another time? The
answer is that the stress you put on the material was different each
time. Stress is the amount of force per unit area on a given material.
The same principle applies to the rocks in Earth’s crust. Rock reacts
differently when different amounts of stress are applied.
Folding
The bending of rock layers in response to stress in Earth’s crust is called folding.
Scientists assume that all rock layers started as horizontal layers. So, when scientists
see a fold, they know that deformation has taken place. All folds have a hinge and two
limbs. Limbs are the sloping sides of a fold. A hinge is the bend where the two limbs
meet.
Figure 2 Anticlines and synclines are two types of folds. The folds to the left and right
are anticlines. The fold in the center is a syncline. The blue planes represent surfaces
that run through each hinge and divide the folds into two limbs. How many limbs does
each fold have?
Shapes of Folds
The rock layers in the folds shown in Figure 2 bend symmetrically. But rock layers can
bend into folds that are not symmetrical. Such folds are asymmetrical (AY suh ME tri
kuhl) folds. In an asymmetrical fold, one limb may dip more steeply than the other
limb does. An overturned fold is a fold in which one limb is tilted beyond 90°. Rock
layers may also be bent so much that a fold appears to be lying on its side. Geologists
call this type of lying-down fold a recumbent fold.
Faulting
When rock is placed under so much stress that it can no longer stretch or flow, it may
break. The surface along which rocks break and slide past each other is called a fault.
The blocks of crust on each side of the fault are called fault blocks.
When a fault is not vertical, there are two kinds of fault blocks—the hanging wall and
the footwall. The illustration at the far left of Figure 3 shows the difference between a
hanging wall and a footwall. Faults are classified into three categories according to how
the fault blocks move relative to each other. The type of fault that forms can be used
to determine the type of stress that caused the fault.
Figure 3 Normal, Reverse, and Strike-Slip Faults
Normal Faults
A normal fault is shown in Figure 3. Along a normal fault, the hanging wall moves
down relative to the footwall. Normal faults usually form where tectonic plate motions
cause tension. Tension is stress that pulls rocks apart. Therefore, normal faults are
common at mid-ocean ridges. At mid-ocean ridges, plate separation causes oceanic
lithosphere to break into fault blocks.
Reverse Faults
A reverse fault is shown in Figure 3. Along a reverse fault, the hanging wall moves up
relative to the footwall. This movement is the reverse of a normal fault. Reverse faults
usually form where tectonic plate motions cause compression. Compression is stress
that pushes rocks together. Therefore, reverse faults are common in subduction zones.
In subduction zones, oceanic lithosphere descends into the asthenosphere.
Strike-Slip Faults
A strike-slip fault is shown in Figure 3. Along a strike-slip fault,
the two fault blocks move past each other horizontally. Imagine
that you are standing on one side of a strike-slip fault looking
across the fault. If the fault blocks moved, the ground on the
other side of the fault would appear to move to your left or right.
Strike-slip faults usually form where tectonic plate motions cause
shear stress parallel to Earth’s surface. Shear stress is stress that
pushes different parts of the rock in different directions.
Therefore, strike-slip faults are common along transform
boundaries.
Recognizing Faults
Some faults are only a few meters long. Other faults are several
hundred kilometers long. So, how can you recognize a fault when
you see one? Movement along faults causes rock layers to become
offset. Therefore, layers of different kinds of rock that sit side-by-
side indicate offset along a fault. In addition, features such as
grooves, striations, or polished surfaces called slickensides
indicate where rocks have moved.
Folded Mountains
When rock layers are squeezed together and pushed upward, folded
mountains form. These mountain ranges form at convergent boundaries
where continents have collided. When continents collide, compression
folds and uplifts the rock. Figure 4 shows the Appalachian Mountains,
an example of folded mountains.
Figure 4 The Appalachian Mountains were once as tall as the Himalaya
Mountains. But the Appalachian Mountains have been worn down by
hundreds of millions of years of erosion.
Fault-Block Mountains
When tension in Earth’s crust causes the crust to break into a large
number of normal faults, fault-block mountains form. These mountains
form when tension causes large blocks of Earth’s crust to drop down
relative to other blocks. The Tetons, shown in Figure 5, are a range of
fault-block mountains.
Figure 5 The Tetons in Idaho and Wyoming formed as a result of
tension that caused Earth’s crust to break into a series of normal faults.
Volcanic Mountains
When molten rock erupts onto Earth’s surface,
volcanic mountains form. Most of the world’s major
volcanic mountains are located at convergent
boundaries. At convergent boundaries, the motions
of the plates causes hot mantle rocks to rise
beneath the plate. The molten rock rises to the
surface and erupts. Volcanic mountains form both
on land and on the ocean floor. Sometimes, these
mountains can rise above the ocean surface to
become islands. Most of the active volcanic
mountains on Earth have formed around the
tectonically active rim of the Pacific Ocean. This
area is known as the Ring of Fire. Figure 6 shows
Mount Shasta in northern California. Mount Shasta
is one of the many volcanoes in the Ring of Fire.
Figure 6 Mount Shasta is a volcano that has
formed at a subduction zone.
Section Summary
Chapter Summary
The Big Idea
Plate tectonics accounts for important features on
Earth’s surface and major geologic events.
Section 1
Earth’s Structure
Section 2
The Theory of Plate Tectonics
Section 3
Deforming Earth’s Crust