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Mountain Building
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Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

Dec 29, 2015

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Page 1: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

Mountain Building

Page 2: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

Folded Mountain

-compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

Page 3: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

Folded Mountain

Ex.

Page 4: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.
Page 5: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.
Page 6: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.
Page 7: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.
Page 8: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.
Page 9: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

Up-Warped Mountain

- crust is pushed upward by forces inside the earth.

Page 10: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

Up-Warped Mountain

- crust is pushed upward by forces inside the earth.

Page 11: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

Up-Warped Mountain

Ex.

Page 12: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

Adirondak Mountains

Page 13: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

Rockies

Page 14: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

Rockies

Page 15: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

Black Hills

Page 16: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

Volcanic Mountain

-molten material reaches the surface through a weak area of crust and piles up, one layer on top of another to form a cone-shaped structure

Page 17: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

Volcanic Mountain

Ex.

Page 18: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

Moana Loa

Page 19: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

Moana Loa – shield volcano

Page 20: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

Mt. St. Helens

Page 21: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

Mt. St. Helens

Page 22: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

Vesuvius

Page 23: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

Etna

Page 24: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

Colima, Mexico

Page 25: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

One day a man from a small village in Michoacán, Mexico was going out in his fields. Just then the ground nearby opened up a fissure. There was a greenish smoke and a smell of sulfur. Then the ground rose up 2 ½ meters high.

Paricutin exploded out of a cornfield about 200 miles west of Mexico City in early 1943, giving the modern world its first opportunity to witness the birth of a volcano. Within a year, the volcano's cinder cone reached 1,100 feet. Within two years, its slow-moving lava flows buried most of the town of Paricutin. The lava eventually covered about 10 square miles.

Page 26: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

Paricutin, Mexico

Paricutin is not expected to erupt again. The village was rebuilt some distance away.

Page 27: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

Fault Block Mountain

- huge tilted blocks separated from surrounding rock by faults.

Page 28: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

Fault Block Mountain

- huge tilted blocks separated from surrounding rock by faults.

Page 29: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

Fault Block Mountain

Ex.

Page 30: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.
Page 31: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

Tetons

Page 32: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

Sierras - California

Page 33: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.
Page 34: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

Franklin Mts. - Texas

Page 35: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

San Pedro Valley

Page 36: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

Thirty miles south of Salt Lake City, near the mouth of Provo Canyon in Orem, Utah is an excellent example of fault block mountains. The north-south trending Wasatch Range extends throughout the center of Utah. The western flank of

the range is very steep and relatively straight, the result of displacement along the extensive and still-active Wasatch Fault. Summits along the crest of the range have elevations between 9,000 and 10,000 feet. The mountain-sized fault

blocks of this region developed in a fairly orderly fashion, breaking roughly at right angles to the westward direction of stress. As visible in this photo, the truncated spurs of the Wasatch Mountains provide evidence that movement on the

Wasatch fault is geologically recent.

Page 37: Mountain Building. Folded Mountain -compressional forces squeeze the rock layers from opposite sides causing it to buckle.

California