Deformation of the Earth's crust
Diastrophism
is the process of deformation of the Earth's
crust
which involves
folding
and
faulting
. Diastrophism can be considered part of
geotectonics
. The word is derived from the
Greek
διαστρο??
diastroph?
'distortion, dislocation'.
[1]
Diastrophism covers movement of solid (plastic) crust material, as opposed to movement of molten material which is covered by
volcanism
. Movement causes rock to be bent or broken. The most obvious evidence of diastrophic movement can be seen where
sedimentary rocks
have been bent, broken or tilted. Such non-horizontal
strata
provide visual proof of movement. Diastrophic movement can be classified as two types, folding and faulting, tilted beds usually are part of a larger
syncline
or
anticline
. Diastrophic movement is often called
orogenic
as it is associated with mountain building.
There are various theories of the cause of diastrophic movement such as being the result of pressures exerted by
convection currents in the mantle
or the rise of
magma
through the crust. Other deformations are caused by
meteorite impact
and combinations of gravity and erosion such as
landslides
and slumping.
[2]
The study of diastrophism encompasses the varying responses of the crust to tectonic stresses. These responses include linear or torsional horizontal movements (such as continental drift) and vertical subsidence and uplift of the
lithosphere
(strain) in response to natural stresses on Earth's surface such as the weight of mountains, lakes, and glaciers. Subsurface conditions also cause subsidence or uplift, known as epeirogeny, over large areas of Earth's surface without deforming rock strata. Such changes include the thickening of the lithosphere by overthrusting, changes in rock density of the lithosphere caused by metamorphism or thermal expansion and contraction, increases in the volume of the asthenosphere (part of the
upper mantle
supporting the lithosphere) caused by hydration of olivine, and orogenic, or mountain-building, movements.
Historical development of the concept
[
edit
]
By the end of the 19th Century it was generally accepted that the cause of folding and faults was lateral compression that resulted from a shrinking Earth caused by its gradual cooling.
[3]
In the late 19th Century,
Eduard Suess
proposed his eustatic theory that provided the underpinnings for
Chamberlin's
explanation of diastrophism.
[4]
In volume two of
Das Antlitz der Erde
[5]
Suess set out his belief that across geologic time, the rise and fall of sea levels were mappable across the earth, that is, that the periods of
ocean transgression
and
regression
were correlatable from one continent to another. Suess postulated that as sediments filled the ocean basins the sea levels gradually rose, and periodically there were events of rapid ocean bottom subsidence that increased the ocean's capacity and caused the regressions. Chamberlin proposed that instead of a thermal contraction, diastrophic movement was caused by gravitational contraction.
[6]
In the United States, it was not until the late 1960s that thermal convection replaced the shrinking Earth theories.
[6]
Notes
[
edit
]
- ^
"diastrophism"
.
Oxford English Dictionary
(Online ed.).
Oxford University Press
.
(Subscription or
participating institution membership
required.)
- ^
Kallweit, Cheryl (February 1993). "Deformation Style and Structural Relationships Associated with a Well-Exposed Slump Block within the Tongue River Formation of the Fort Union Group, Carter County, Southeastern Montana".
Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs
.
25
(1).
ISSN
0016-7592
.
- ^
Burt, T. P.
et al.
(eds.) (2008)
The History of the Study of Landforms: Quaternary and recent processes and form (1890?1965) and the mid-century revolution.
(volume 4 of
The History of the Study of Landforms; or, The Development of Geomorphology
), p. 77,
ISBN
978-1-86239-249-6
, citing: Dana, James D. (1873) "On some results of the earth's contraction from cooling, including a discussion of the origin of mountains, and the nature of the earth's interior"
American Journal of Science
(3rd series) Part I 5: pp.423?443; Part II 6: pp.6?14; Part IV pp.104?115 and Part V pp.161?171; as well as Iddings, Joseph P. (1914)
The Problem of Volcanism
Yale University Press, New Haven, Connecticut,
OCLC
569285
- ^
Chorley, Richard J. (1963) "Diastrophic Background to Twentieth-Century Geomorphological Thought"
Geological Society of America Bulletin
74(8): pp. 953?970;
abstract
- ^
Suess, Eduard (1885?1908)
Das Antlitz der Erde
F. Tempsky, Vienna,
OCLC
2903551
, Note: volume 3 was published in two parts
- ^
a
b
Dott, Robert H. (1997) "James Dwight Dana's old tectonics; global contraction under divine direction"
American Journal of Science
297: pp.283?311, p. 283;
abstract
, citing Chamberlin, Thomas C. and Salisbury, Rollin D. (1904?1906)
Geology
(3 volumes) H. Holt, New York,
OCLC
547718
Further reading
[
edit
]
- Chorley, Richard J. (1963). "Diastrophic Background to Twentieth-Century Geomorphological Thought".
Geological Society of America Bulletin
74
(8): pp. 953?970.
- McKnight, Tom L; Hess, Darrel (2000).
"The Internal Processes: Diastrophism"
.
Physical Geography: A Landscape Appreciation
. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall. p.
409
.
ISBN
0-13-020263-0
.