
The Appalachian Orogeny, a result of
three separate continental collisions.
The
Alleghenian orogeny or Appalachian
orogeny is one of the geological
mountain-forming events (orogeny) that formed the Appalachian
Mountains
and Allegheny
Mountains. The term and spelling "
Alleghany
Orogeny" (sic) originally proposed by H.P. Woodward (1957,
1958) is preferred usage.Approximately 350 million to 300 million
years ago, in the
Carboniferous
period, when
Gondwana (specifically what became Africa) and what
became North America collided, forming
Pangaea. This collision exerted massive stress on
what is today the
Eastern Seaboard
of North America, resulting in a large-scale uplift of the entire
region. Closer to the boundary between the colliding plates,
tectonic stresses contributed to the metamorphosizing of the rock
(i.e. the transformation of
igneous and
sedimentary rock into
metamorphic rock). These stresses
concurrently caused faults (mostly
thrust
faults and some
strike-slip faults) as
well as folding.
The immense region involved in the
continental collision, the vast temporal length of the orogeny and
the thickness of the pile of sediments and igneous rocks known to
have been involved are evidence that at the peak of the
mountain-building process, the Appalachians could have risen as
high or perhaps even higher than the present-day Himalaya
.
The Appalachian Orogeny is responsible for the creation of the
mountains themselves and is not responsible for the topography that
now typifies the
Piedmont
and
coastal plain regions east of the
mountain chain. The heavily-eroded hills of Piedmont are remnants
of the sizeable mountain chain, while the coastal plain is made up
of the material that was washed away in that process. Thus, the
coastal plain and Piedmont are largely the byproducts of erosion
that took place from 150+ million years ago to the present.
Evidence
for the Appalachian orogeny stretches for many hundreds of miles on
the surface from Alabama
to New Jersey
and can be traced further subsurface to the
southwest. In the north it enters a region of confused
topography associated with earlier orogenies, but clearly the Applachian deformation
extends northeast to Newfoundland
.
The mountains were once rugged and high, but in our time are now
eroded into only a small remnant.
Sediments
that were carried eastward form part of the
continental shelf. Sediments that were
carried westward form the
Allegheny and
Cumberland Plateau, which in some areas
are popularly called mountains, but are actually simply
uplifted and eroded plateaus.
Carbonates and fine sediments from these mountains
were carried farther to form limey rocks
in a shallow sea that was later uplifted and forms the bulk of
Tennessee
, Kentucky
, Ohio
, and
Indiana
.
A portion
of the Alleghenian mountain system departed with Africa when
Pangaea broke up and the Atlantic Ocean
began to form. Today, this forms the
Anti-Atlas
mountains of Morocco
. The
Anti-Atlas have been geologically uplifted in relatively recent
times, and are today much more rugged than their Alleghenian
relatives.
See also
Geology of the
Appalachians
External links