Product has been added to the basket
Shopping Basket
Basket is empty
Item has been added to bibliography

Mountains: The origins of the Earth’s mountain systems

Product Code: MPMNT
Series: Miscellaneous titles
Author/Editor: Graham Park
Publication Date: 14 November 2017
Add a review

Description

Published by Dunedin. Stocked by GSL from 14 November 2017.

Most mountains on Earth occur within relatively well-defined, narrow belts separated by wide expanses of much lower-lying ground. Their distribution is not random but is caused by the now well-understood geological processes of plate tectonics. Some mountains mark the site of a former plate collision – where one continental plate has ridden up over another, resulting in a zone of highly deformed and elevated rocks. Others are essentially volcanic in origin.

The most obvious mountain belts today – the Himalayas, the Alps and the Andes, for example – are situated at currently active plate boundaries. Others, such as the Caledonian mountains of the British Isles and Scandinavia, are the product of a plate collision that happened far in the geological past and have no present relationship to a plate boundary. These are much lower, with a generally gentler relief, worn down through millennia of erosion.

The presently active mountain belts are arranged in three separate systems: the Alpine-Himalayan ranges, the circum-Pacific belt and the mid-ocean ridges. Much of the Alpine-Himalayan belt is relatively well known, but large parts of the circum-Pacific and ocean-ridge systems are not nearly as familiar, but contain equally impressive mountain ranges despite large parts being partly or wholly submerged.

This book takes the reader along the active mountain systems explaining how plate tectonic processes have shaped them, then looks more briefly at some of the older mountain systems whose tectonic origins are more obscure. It is aimed at those with an interest in mountains and in developing an understanding of the geological processes that create them.

Graham Park is Emeritus Professor of Tectonic Geology at the University of Keele and the author of the best-selling Introducing Geology and The Making of Europe: A geological history also published by Dunedin Academic Press.

Type: Book
Ten Digit ISBN:
Thirteen Digit ISBN: 9781780460666
Publisher: Dunedin Academic Press
Binding: Hardback
Pages: 224
Weight: 1.1 kg

Contents

Reviews

There are currently no reviews available for this product.

Please login to submit review.

Back to search results

You pay
£ 29.99 each

List price: £ 29.99
Fellow's price: £ 26.99