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Stress, Faulting, Folding, Mountain Building Inside Earth:

Inside Earth:. Have you ever tried to bend something, only to have it break?

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Page 1: Inside Earth:. Have you ever tried to bend something, only to have it break?

Stress, Faulting, Folding, Mountain BuildingInside Earth:

Page 2: Inside Earth:. Have you ever tried to bend something, only to have it break?

•Have you ever tried to bend something, only to have it break?

Page 3: Inside Earth:. Have you ever tried to bend something, only to have it break?

How can material bend at one time and break at another?

• 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.

Page 4: Inside Earth:. Have you ever tried to bend something, only to have it break?

This same principle applies to the rocks in the Earth’s crust• Different things happen to rock when different

types of stress are applied.

Page 5: Inside Earth:. Have you ever tried to bend something, only to have it break?

Deformation• Deformation is the process

by which a rock changes because of stress.

• Rock layers bend when stress is placed on them.

• When enough stress is placed on rocks, they reach their elastic limit and break.

• There are two kinds of stress:• Compression• Tension

Page 6: Inside Earth:. Have you ever tried to bend something, only to have it break?

Compression

• This type of stress occurs when an object is squeezed.• Tectonic plates collide

• When compression happens at a convergent boundary, large mountain ranges can form

Page 7: Inside Earth:. Have you ever tried to bend something, only to have it break?

Tension

• Another form of stress is tension.

• Tension is the stress that occurs when forces stretch an object.

• They occur at divergent boundaries.•Mid Ocean ridges

Page 8: Inside Earth:. Have you ever tried to bend something, only to have it break?

Folding• The bending of rock layers because of stress in

the Earth’s crust is called folding.

• Scientists assume that all rock layers started as horizontal layers.

• When they see folding, they know that deformation has occurred

• There are three types of folding: anticlines, synclines and monoclines

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jVyBsUgD7Gk&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1

Page 9: Inside Earth:. Have you ever tried to bend something, only to have it break?

Anticlines

• Upward arching folds

Page 10: Inside Earth:. Have you ever tried to bend something, only to have it break?

Synclines

• Down-ward, trough-like folds

Page 11: Inside Earth:. Have you ever tried to bend something, only to have it break?

Monoclines

• Rock layers are folded so that both ends of the fold are horizontal.

Page 12: Inside Earth:. Have you ever tried to bend something, only to have it break?

Faulting

• Some rock layers break when stress is applied to them.

• The surface along which rocks break and slide past each other is called a fault.

• The blocks of crust one each side of the fault is called a fault-block.

Page 13: Inside Earth:. Have you ever tried to bend something, only to have it break?

Not all faults are vertical…• And understanding the

difference between it’s two sides, called hanging walls and foot walls is useful.

• The type of fault that forms depends on how the hanging wall and foot wall move in relationship to each other.

Page 14: Inside Earth:. Have you ever tried to bend something, only to have it break?

Normal Faults

• When a normal fault moves, it causes the hanging wall to move down relative to the footwall.

• Normal faults usually occur when tectonic forces cause tension that pull rocks apart

Page 15: Inside Earth:. Have you ever tried to bend something, only to have it break?

Reverse Faults

• When a reverse fault moves, it cause the hanging wall to move up relative to the footwall.

• Usually happen when tectonic forces cause compression that pushes rocks together

Page 16: Inside Earth:. Have you ever tried to bend something, only to have it break?

Strike-Slip Faults

• The third type of fault is called a strike-slip fault

• These form when opposing forces cause rock to break and move horizontally.

• The San Andreas fault is a strike-slip fault

Page 17: Inside Earth:. Have you ever tried to bend something, only to have it break?

Plate Tectonics and Mountain Building• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jqEo6nnSvhM&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1

• When tectonic plates collide, land features that start as faults and folds can eventually become large mountain ranges.

Page 18: Inside Earth:. Have you ever tried to bend something, only to have it break?

Mountains exist because tectonic plates are constantly moving around• As a result of this movement, they collide with

each other.

• Mountains, such as the Andes Mountains in South America, form in the subduction zone where two tectonic plates converge.

Page 19: Inside Earth:. Have you ever tried to bend something, only to have it break?

Mountains are formed in several ways

• The three most common types of mountains are classified by the way they were formed

•Folded Mountains

•Fault-Block Mountains

•Volcanic Mountains

Page 20: Inside Earth:. Have you ever tried to bend something, only to have it break?

Folded Mountains• Formed at the

convergent boundaries where the continents have collided.

• Formed when rock layers are squeezed together and pushed upward.

• The highest mountain ranges in the world• Appalachians• Himalayas

Page 21: Inside Earth:. Have you ever tried to bend something, only to have it break?

Fault-Block Mountains

• Form when tension pulls on large blocks of the Earth’s crust to drop down relative to other blocks.

• Sharp, jagged peaks

• Grand Tetons in Wyoming

Page 22: Inside Earth:. Have you ever tried to bend something, only to have it break?

Volcanic Mountains• Most of the world’s

major volcanic mountains are located at convergent boundaries.• Ring of Fire!

• They form when magma rises to the Earth’s surface and erupts, forming a volcanic mountains.

• Can also be found underwater

Page 23: Inside Earth:. Have you ever tried to bend something, only to have it break?

Uplift and Subsidence• Vertical movements in the Earth’s crust are

divided into two types.

• Uplift: created by the rising of the Earth’s crust to higher elevations

• Subsidence: The sinking of the Earth’s crust to low.er elevations

Page 24: Inside Earth:. Have you ever tried to bend something, only to have it break?

Compression

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