Dictionary Definition
orogeny n : the process of mountain formation
(especially by the upward displacement of the earth's crust)
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Extensive Definition
Orogeny (Greek for "mountain generating") is the
process of natural mountain building, and may be
studied as a tectonic structural event, as a geographical event and
a chronological event, in that orogenic events cause distinctive
structural phenomena and related tectonic activity, affect certain
regions of rocks and crust and happen within a time frame.
Orogenic events occur solely as a result of the
processes of plate
tectonics; the problems which were investigated and resolved by
the study of orogenesis contributed greatly to the theory of plate
tectonics, coupled with study of flora and fauna, geography and mid ocean
ridges in the 1950s and 1960s.
The physical manifestations of orogenesis (the
process of orogeny) are orogenic belts or orogens. An orogen is
different from a mountain range in that an orogen may be completely
eroded away, and only
recognizable by studying (old) rocks that bear the traces of the
orogeny. Orogens are usually long, thin, arcuate tracts of rocks
which have a pronounced linear structure resulting in terranes or blocks of deformed
rocks, separated generally by dipping
thrust
faults. These thrust faults carry relatively thin plates (which
are called nappes, and
differ from tectonic
plates) of rock in from the margins of the compressing orogen
to the core, and are intimately associated with folds and
the development of metamorphism.
The topographic height of orogenic mountains is
related to the principle of isostasy, where the
gravitational force of the upthrust mountain range of light,
continental
crust material is balanced against its buoyancy relative to the
dense mantle.
Erosion inevitably
takes its course, removing much of the mountains and exposing the
core or mountain roots (metamorphic
rocks brought from tens of km depth to the surface). Such
exhumation may be helped by isostatic movements balancing
out the buoyancy of the evolving orogen. It is a question of debate
to what extent can erosion modify the patterns of tectonic
deformacion (see erosion
and tectonics). This is the final form of the majority of old
orogenic belts, being a long arcuate strip of crystalline
metamorphic rocks sequentially below younger sediments which are
thrust atop them and dip away from the orogenic core.
History
Before the development of geologic concepts during the 19th century, the presence of mountains was explained in Christian contexts as a result of the Biblical Deluge, for Neoplatonic thought, which influenced early Christian writers, assumed that a perfect Creation would have to have been in the form of a perfect sphere. Such thinking persisted into the eighteenth century.Orogeny was used by Amanz
Gressly (1840) and Jules
Thurmann (1854) as orogenic in terms of the creation of
mountain elevations, as the term mountain building was still used
to describe the processes.
Elie de
Beaumont (1852) used the evocative "Jaws of a Vise" theory to
explain orogeny, but was more concerned with the height rather than
the implicit structures orogenic belts created and contained. His
theory essentially held that mountains were created by the
squeezing of certain rocks.
Eduard Suess
(1875) recognised the importance of horizontal movement of rocks.
The concept of a precursor geosyncline or initial
downward warping of the solid earth (Hall, 1859) prompted James
Dwight Dana (1873) to include the concept of compression in the
theories surrounding mountain-building. With hindsight, we can
discount Dana's conjecture that this contraction was due to the
cooling of the Earth (aka the cooling
earth theory).
The cooling Earth theory was the chief paradigm
for most geologists until the 1960s. It was, in the context of
orogeny, contested hotly by proponents of vertical movements in the
crust (similar to tephrotectonics), or
convection within the asthenosphere or mantle.
Gustav
Steinmann (1906) recognised different classes of orogenic
belts, including the Alpine type orogenic belt, typified by a
flysch and molasse geometry to the
sediments; ophiolite
sequences, tholeiitic
basalts, and a nappe style
fold structure.
In terms of recognising orogeny as an event,
Leopold
von Buch (1855) recognised that orogenies could be placed in
time by bracketing between the youngest deformed rock and the
oldest undeformed rock, a principle which is still in use today,
though commonly investigated by geochronology using
radiometric dating.
H.J. Zwart
(1967) drew attention to the metamorphic differences in orogenic
belts, proposing three types, modified by W. S.
Pitcher (1979);
- Hercynotype (back-arc
basin type);
- Shallow, low-pressure metamorphism; thin metamorphic zones
- Metamorphism dependent on increase in temperature
- Abundant granite and migmatite
- Few ophiolites, ultramafic rocks virtually absent
- very wide orogen with small and slow uplift
- nappe structures rare
- Alpinotype (ocean trench style);
- deep, high pressure, thick metamorphic zones
- metamorphism of many facies, dependent on decrease in pressure
- few granites or migmatites
- abundant ophiolites with ultramafic rocks
- Relatively narrow orogen with large and rapid uplift
- Nappe structures predominant
- Cordilleran (arc) type;
- dominated by calc-alkaline igneous rocks,andesites, granite batholiths
- general lack of migmatites, low geothermal gradient
- lack of ophiolite and abyssal sedimentary rocks (black shale, chert, etcetera)
- low-pressure metamorphism, moderate uplift
- lack of nappes
The advent of plate tectonics has explained the
vast majority of orogenic belts and their features. The cooling
earth theory (principally advanced by Descartes) is
dispensed with, and tephrotectonic style vertical movements have
been explained primarily by the process of isostasy.
Some oddities exist, where simple collisional
tectonics are modified in a transform plate boundary, such as in
New
Zealand, or where island arc orogenies, for instance in
New
Guinea occur away from a continental backstop. Further
complications such as Proterozoic continent-continent collisional
orogens, explicitly the Musgrave
Block in Australia, previously inexplicable (see Dennis, 1982)
are being brought to light with the advent of seismic imaging
techniques which can resolve the deep crust structure of orogenic
belts.
Physiography
The process of orogeny can take tens of millions of years and build mountains from plains or even the ocean floor. Orogeny can occur due to continental collision or volcanic activity. Frequently, rock formations that undergo orogeny are severely deformed and undergo metamorphism. During orogeny, deeply buried rocks may be pushed to the surface. Sea bottom and near shore material may cover some or all of the orogenic area. If the orogeny is due to two continents colliding, the resulting mountains can be very high (see Himalaya).Orogeny usually produces long linear structures,
known as orogenic belts. Generally, orogenic belts consist of long
parallel strips of rock
exhibiting similar characteristics along the length of the belt.
Orogenic belts are associated with subduction
zones, which consume crust,
produce volcanoes, and build island arcs.
These island arcs may be added to a continent during an orogenic
event.
List of orogenies
North American orogenies
- Wopmay
orogeny
- Along western edge of Canadian shield, 2100-1900 mya.
- Hudsonian
orogeny or Trans-Hudson
orogeny
- Extends from Hudson Bay west into Saskatchewan then south through the western Dakotas and Nebraska. Result of the collision of the Superior craton with the Hearne craton and the Wyoming craton during the Proterozoic.
- Lasted from 2000-1800 mya.
- Penokean orogeny
- Big Sky
orogeny
- Proterozoic collision between the Hearne craton and the Wyoming craton in southwest Montana, 1770 mya.
- Ivanpah
orogeny
- Mojave province, south western USA
- Yavapai
orogeny
- mid to south western USA, circa 1750 mya.
- Mazatzal
orogeny
- mid to south western USA, circa 1600 mya.
- Grenville
orogeny
- Worldwide during the late Proterozoic, 1300-1000 mya. Associated with the assembly of the supercontinent Rodinia. Formed folded mountains in Eastern North America from Newfoundland to North Carolina, 1100-1000 mya.
- Caledonian
orogeny
- the Taconic phase in the NE U.S. and Canada during the Ordovician Period.
- the Acadian phase in the Eastern U.S. during Silurian and Devonian Periods.
- Appalachian
orogeny, usually seen as the same as the Variscan
orogeny in Europe.
- Appalachian Mountains is a well studied orogenic belt resulting from a late Paleozoic collision between North America and Africa.
- Taconic orogeny
- Acadian orogeny
- Alleghenian orogeny
- Ouachita
orogeny
- Ouachita Mountains of Arkansas and Oklahoma is an orogenic belt that dates from the late Paleozoic Era and is most likely a continuation of the Appalachian orogeny west across the Mississippi embayment - Reelfoot Rift zone.
- Antler
orogeny
- Ancestral Sierra Nevada western United States.
- Late Devonian - early Mississippian.
- Innuitian
orogeny or Ellesmerian
orogeny
- Innuitian Mountains, Canadian Arctic, extending from Ellesmere Island to Melville Island, Mississippian 345 mya.
- Sonoma
orogeny
- Rocky Mountains, western North America, 270 - 240 million years ago.
- Nevadan
orogeny
- Developed along western North America during the Jurassic Period.
- Sevier
orogeny
- Rocky Mountains, western North America, 140 - 50 million years ago.
- Laramide
orogeny
- Rocky Mountains, western North America, 40-70 Myr ago.
European orogenies
- The Caledonian orogeny
- Uralian
orogeny
- Formation of the Ural Mountains, Eurasia, during the Permian Period.
- The Variscan
orogeny (also called the Hercynian orogeny)
- Formation of the mountains of western Iberia, SW Ireland, SW England, central France, southern Germany and Czechoslovakia during the Devonian and Carboniferous Periods.
- The Alpine
orogeny, encompassing:
- the Formation of the Alps during the Eocene through Miocene Periods.
- the Carpathian orogeny building the Carpathian Mountains of eastern Europe during the Miocene Period.
- the Hellenic orogeny in Greece and the Aegean area during Eocene through Miocene Periods.
- Ongoing (happening now):
- the Mediterranean Ridge.
Asian orogenies
- The Aravalli-Delhi Orogen (precambrian)
- The Altaid Orogeny (Paleozoic)
- The Cimmerian and Cathayasian orogenies
- Alpine
orogeny, encompassing:
- The Himalayan orogeny, forming the Himalaya Mountains, as a result of the ongoing collision of the Indian Plate with the Eurasian Plate.
South American orogenies
- Andean
orogeny
- Andes Mountains, 0-200 Myr ago.
African orogenies
Australian orogenies
- Sleaford Orogeny (2440-2420 Ma), Gawler Craton, South Australia
- Glenburgh Orogeny (c. 2005 - 1920 Ma), Glenburgh Terrane, Western Australia.
- Kimban Orogeny (c. 1845-1700 Ma), Gawler Craton, South Australia
- Yapungku Orogeny (c. 1700 Ma), North Yilgarn craton margin, Western Australia
- Mangaroon Orogeny (c.1680 - 1620 Ma), Gascoyne Complex, Western Australia.
- Kararan Orogeny (1650- Ma), Gawler Craton, South Australia
- Barramundi Orogeny (c. 1600 Ma), MacArthur Basin, northern Australia
- Isan Orogeny, c. 1600 Ma, Mt Isa Block, Queensland
- Olarian Orogeny, Olary Block, South Australia
- Capricorn Orogeny, Gascoyne Complex, Western Australia
- Musgrave Orogeny (c. 1080 Ma), Musgrave Block, Central Australia.
- Edmundian Orogeny (c. 920 - 850 Ma), Gascoyne Complex, Western Australia.
- Petermann Orogeny (c. 550-535 Ma late Neoproterozoic to Cambrian), Central Australia
- Delamerian Orogeny, South Australia and Victoria, Australia, Ordovician
- Lachlan Orogeny, c. 540 and 440 Ma., Victoria and New South Wales
- Alice Springs Orogeny in central Australia, Early Carboniferous
- Hunter-Bowen Orogeny, (c. 260 - 225 Ma) Permian to Triassic, Queensland and New South Wales
Antarctic orogenies
- Napier orogeny (4000 ± 200 Myr ago.)
- Rayner orogeny (~ 3500 Myr ago.)
- Humboldt orogeny (~ 3000 Myr ago.)
- Insel orogeny (2650 ± 150 Myr ago.)
- Early Ruker orogeny (2000 - 1700 Myr ago.)
- Late Ruker / Nimrod orogeny (1000 ± 150 Myr ago.)
- Beardmore orogeny (633 - 620 Myr ago.)
- Ross Orogeny (~ 500 Myr ago.)
New Zealand orogenies
- Tuhua Orogeny (370 to 330 Myr ago)
- Rangitata Orogeny (142 to 99 million years ago)
- Kaikoura Orogeny (24 million years ago to present day)
See also
References
- Élie de Beaumont, J.-B., 1852. Notice sur les Systèmes de Montagnes ("Note on Mountain Systems"), Bertrand, Paris, 1543 pp. (English synopsis in Dennis (1982))
- Buch, L. Von, 1902. Gesammelte Schriften, Roth & Eck, Berlin.
- Dana, James D., 1873. On some results of the Earth's contraction from cooling, including a discussion of the origins of mountains, and the nature of the Earth's interior. American Journal of Science, 5, pp. 423-443.
- Dennis, John G., 1982. Orogeny, Benchmark Papers in Geology, Volume 62, Hutchinson Ross Pulishing Company, New York ISBN 0-87933-394-4
- Hall, J., 1859. Palaeontology of New York, in New York National Survey No. 3, Part 1, 533 p.
- Suess, Eduard, 1875. Die Entstehung Der Alpen lit. The Origin Of The Alps, Braumüller, Vienna, 168 p.
- Harms, Brady, Cheney, 2006. "EXPLORING THE PROTEROZOIC BIG SKY OROGENY IN SOUTHWEST MONTANA", 19th annual Keck symposium.
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