Transcript
Page 1: Geology of the Sierra Nevada  Mountain Range

Geology of the Sierra Nevada Mountain Range

By Elena Kurbatova

South Lake in the Sierra Nevada Mountains, courtesy of Duane Shoffner

Page 2: Geology of the Sierra Nevada  Mountain Range

Geological History Late Jurassic, Cretaceous, and Tertiary Periods• Kula and Farallon plates are subducted under

the North American plate. • Hot felsic magma coming from the mantle

starts rising, producing a chain of volcanoes on the continent.

• Volcanic eruptions produce layers of solidified magma, most of which stays deep below the surface and forms plutons of solid granite.

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Subduction of the Farallon Plate beneath the North American continental margin, 140-100 million years ago.

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Late Cretaceous Period

• Plutons come together to form the single, massive batholith (deeply imbedded rock).

• Batholith begins to rise. • The layer of marine sedimentary rock that lay

over the mountain is gradually eroded away and deposited in the valley.

• The granitic core of the range is exposed.

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Granite is exposed

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Tertiary Period

• The continental crust east of the Sierra Nevada begins to stretch in an east-west direction.

• The crust breaks into a series of north-south-trending valleys and mountain ranges—the beginning of the Basin and Range province.

• The Sierra Nevada Range starts rising along its eastern margin.

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What might have caused the uplift:

• The oceanic plates are subducted and become completely overridden.

• The North American and Pacific plates come into direct contact for the first time.

• Shear replaces compression as the North American plate begins interacting with the Pacific plate.

• On the other side of the Sierra Nevada Range Basin and Range Province is being pulled apart.

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Faulting

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The Sierra Nevada Faults

• The Sierra Nevada Fault is a normal fault produced by tension

• There is also a smaller strike-slip fault produced by shearing stress

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The Sierra Nevada is an enormous tilted fault block

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Quaternary Period

• Not long after the Sierra uplift begins, the Earth cools.

• Glaciers grow in the Sierra highlands and make their way down former stream channels, carving U-shaped valleys.

• The combination of river and glacier erosion exposes the granitic plutons previously buried, leaving only a remnant of metamorphic rock on top of some of the Sierra peaks.

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What makes the Sierra Nevada Range geologically interesting

• Gold deposits in the foothill metamorphic belt• A possibility of a major earthquake along the

fault line• The unpredictability of the future plate

movement

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Web sites consulted

• Sierra Nevada Physical Geography Joel Michaelsen http://www.geog.ucsb.edu/~joel/g148_f09/readings/sierra_nevada/sierra_nevada.html

• Sierra Nevada Mountains (Geology) http://www.knowledgerush.com/kr/encyclopedia/Sierra_Nevada_Mountains/

• America's Volcanic Past Sierra Nevadas http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/LivingWith/VolcanicPast/Places/volcanic_past_sierra_nevadas.html

• Pacific Mountain System http://www.nature.nps.gov/Geology/usgsnps/province/pacifmt.html

• GEOLOGY OF THE SIERRA NEVADAS Mary Ann Resendes http://www.sierrahistorical.org/archives/geology.html

• Geology of Yosemite http://www.nps.gov/yose/naturescience/geology.htm• California Geological History

snobear.colorado.edu/.../CaliforniaMtns/California_geologic_history.pp


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