User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
- A large, linear depression in the Earth's crust in which sediment accumulates
Extensive Definition
Geosyncline theory is an obsolete concept
involving vertical crustal movement that has been replaced by
plate
tectonics to explain crustal movement and geologic features.
Geosyncline is a term still occasionally used for a subsiding
linear trough that was caused by the accumulation of sedimentary
rock strata
deposited in a basin
and subsequently compressed, deformed, and uplifted into a mountain
range, with attendant volcanism and plutonism. The filling of a
geosyncline with tons of sediment is accompanied in the late stages
of deposition by
folding, crumpling, and faulting of the deposits. Intrusion of
crystalline igneous rock and regional uplift
along the axis of the trough generally complete the history of a
particular geosyncline. It is then transformed into a belt of
folded mountains. Thick volcanic sequences, together with graywackes (sandstones rich in
rock fragments with a muddy matrix), cherts, and various sediments
reflecting deepwater deposition or processes, are deposited in
eugeosynclines, the outer deepwater segment of geosynclines.
Geosynclines are divided into miogeosynclines and
eugeosynclines, depending on the types of discernible rock strata
of the mountain system. A miogeosyncline develops along a continental
margin on continental
crust and is composed of sediments with limestones, sandstones and shales. The occurrences of
limestones and well-sorted quartzose sandstones indicate a
shallow-water formation, and such rocks form in the inner segment
of a geosyncline. The eugeosynclines consist of different sequences
of lithologies more
typical of deep marine environments. Eugeosynclinal rocks include
thick sequences of greywackes, cherts, slates, tuffs and submarine lavas. The eugeosynclinal deposits
are typically more deformed, metamorphosed,
and intruded by small to large igneous plutons. The
eugeosynclines often contain exotic flysch and mélange
sediments.
An orthogeosyncline is a linear geosynclinal belt
lying between continental and oceanic terranes, and having internal
volcanic belts (eugeosynclinal) and external nonvolcanic belts
(miogeosynclinal). Also known as geosynclinal couple or primary
geosyncline. A miogeosyncline is the nonvolcanic portion of an
orthogeosyncline, located adjacent a craton. A zeugogeosyncline is
a geosyncline in a craton or stable area within which is also an
uplifted area, receiving clastic sediments, also known as yoked
basin. A parageosyncline is an epeirogenic geosynclinal basin
located within a craton area. A exogeosyncline is a parageosyncline
that lies along the cratonal border and obtains its clastic
sediments from erosion of the adjacent orthogeosynclinal belt
outside the craton. Also known as delta geosyncline; foredeep; or transverse
basin.
Several types of "mobile" geosynclinal zones have
also been recognized and named. Among the more common of these are
the taphrogeosyncline, a depressed block of the Earth's crust that
is bounded by one or more high-angle faults and that serves as a
site of sediment accumulation; and the paraliageosyncline, a deep
geosyncline that passes into coastal plains along continental
margins.
History of the concept
The geosyncline concept was first developed by the American geologists James Hall and James Dwight Dana in the mid 1800s during the classic studies of the Appalachian Mountains. Dana was first to use the term geosynclinal in reference to a gradually deepening and filling basin resulting from his concept of crustal contraction due to a cooling and contracting Earth. The geosynclinal theory was further developed in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and at that time was widely accepted as an explanation for the origin of most mountain ranges until its replacement by the subduction zone and continental collision orogenies of plate tectonics in the 1960s. Although the usage varied over the following 100 years, a geosyncline is still basically a large linear deepening basin along a continental margin which becomes deformed and then uplifted in parts as a mountainous region.References
- King, Philip B. (1977) The Evolution of North America, Revised edition, Princeton University Press, pp 54-58
- Kay, Marshall (1951) North American Geosyncline: Geol. Soc. America Mem. 48, 143pp.
See Also
- Émile Haug, French geologist
External links
geosyncline in Bengali: মহীখাত
geosyncline in German: Geosynklinale
geosyncline in Spanish: Geosinclinal
geosyncline in Italian: Geosinclinale
geosyncline in Dutch: Geosynclinetheorie
geosyncline in Japanese: 地向斜
geosyncline in Polish: Geosynklina
geosyncline in Romanian: Geosinclinal
geosyncline in Russian: Теория
геосинклиналей
geosyncline in Slovak: Geosynklinála
geosyncline in Ukrainian:
Евгеосинкліналь