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NGE >> Science and Medicine >> Earth Sciences >> Geology >> Blue Ridge Geologic Province |
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Blue Ridge Geologic Province The
The Blue Ridge province is bounded on the northwest by the Great Smoky fault, across which lies the Valley and Ridge province, and on the southeast by the Brevard fault zone, across which lies the inner section of the Piedmont province. The Blue Ridge province is primarily a physiographic designation, and for this reason, many of the rocks making up the western Blue Ridge resemble the oldest rocks of the Valley and Ridge, whereas some rocks of the eastern Blue Ridge resemble those of the Piedmont. Separating the western from the eastern Blue Ridge are the Hayesville and Allatoona faults. Western Blue Ridge The western Blue Ridge is dominated by low- to high-grade metamorphosed sedimentary rocks of late Precambrian to early Paleozoic eras. These rocks were deposited in troughs and basins that formed
Eastern Blue Ridge The eastern Blue Ridge consists of a variety of igneous and high-grade metamorphic rocks, including numerous granite bodies. The metamorphic rocks were originally part of the Precambrian basement, as were the volcanic and sedimentary rocks laid down as the proto-Atlantic Ocean began to close during the early Paleozoic era. Gold, which formed as the hot rocks interacted
A thick section of quartzite, the metamorphic equivalent of quartz sandstone, partially rings the large Tallulah dome and forms the high, steep bluffs of Tallulah Gorge in northeast Georgia. Migmatites, rocks with both metamorphic and igneous characteristics, make up other eastern Blue Ridge rocks and reveal the very high temperatures reached by these rocks during mountain building. Thrust Faults and Thrust Sheets The Blue Ridge is an assembly of several stacked thrust sheets, each with its distinctive rock types and structural style. A thrust sheet in the continental crust is a large slice of rock that has been pushed up and over other rocks along a break in the crust known as a thrust fault. Thrust faults form in response to compression during mountain building, and once formed, they provide the break along which thrust sheets move. Along with "fold," or the bending of rocks, the movement
The major thrust sheets of the Blue Ridge in Georgia are, from southeast to northwest, the Chattahoochee thrust sheet, the Dahlonega gold belt, the Hayesville-Soque River thrust sheet, and the western Blue Ridge. The Chattahoochee thrust sheet, which contains the Tallulah dome, rests against and partially atop the Dahlonega gold belt running along the Chattahoochee fault. The Hayesville-Soque River thrust sheet sits against and partially atop both the Dahlonega gold belt and the western Blue Ridge along both the Hayesville fault and its probable equivalent, the Soque River fault. To the southwest the Dahlonega gold belt rests against the western Blue Ridge along the Allatoona fault. Continental Collision The proto-Atlantic Ocean finally closed at the end of the Paleozoic era, at which time the southeastern part of what is now North America collided with what is now northwest Africa. This great collision pushed the entire Blue Ridge province farther onto the continent by 150 kilometers or more, bulldozing the Paleozoic sedimentary rocks to the northwest into what is now the Valley and Ridge province. Present-Day Exposure Erosion
Suggested Reading Frederick A. Cook, Larry D. Brown, and Jack E. Oliver, "The Southern Appalachians and the Growth of Continents," Scientific American, October 1980, 156-68. John McPhee, In Suspect Terrain (New York: Noonday Press, 1991). R. Damian Nance, Thomas R. Worsley, and Judith B. Moody, "The Supercontinent Cycle," Scientific American, July 1988, 72-79. Timothy E. LaTour, Georgia State University Published 6/3/2005 |
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