National Parks: Areas of Complex Mountains
Growth of Continent
Folding and Faults
Types of Faulting
Geology
100

Grand Tenton

What is Wyoming

100

Craton

What is stable, Interior portion of continent, usually very old crystalline rocks

100

Anticline 

What is rocks folded upward in arch

100

Normal Faulting 

What is Hanging wall down, tensional forces pulling apart 

100

Grand Teton National Park 

What is elevations range from 6,000 feet in Snake River Valley to 13,770 on Grand Teton 

200

Great Basin

What is Nevada

200

Tectonic Accretion 

What is addition of exotic terranes to a continental land mass, usually by intense plate collisions

200

Syncline

What is rocks folded downward in trough

200

Reverse Faulting 

What is hanging wall up, compressional forces pushing blocks together 

200

Great Basin National Park 

What is normal faulting and weathering creates basin and range topography 
300

Saguaro

What is Arizona

300

Crustal Deformation 

What is folding and Faulting 

300

Monocline

What is one side of rock layers folded down, not common, but present in Colorado Plateau
300

Strike-slip fault 

What is lateral movement 

300

Metamorphic core complex

What is core of low grade Precambrian and Paleozoic rocks faults over each other 

400

Channel Islands

What is Arkansas 

400

Folding 

what is bending of rock 

400

Fractures in the crust along which movement has occurred 

What is Faults 

400

Normal Faulting 

What is hanging wall moves down relative to footwall 

400

Crustal Extension 

What is thinning and extension of continental crust occurred in Cenozoic 

500

Shenandoah

What is Virginia 

500

Faulting 

What is breaking Displacement of Rock 

500

Dip-slip Faults 

What is vertical displacement 

500

Fault plane 

What is the actual surface of the fault 

500

Bristlecone Pine 

Oldest trees on earth in Great Basin National Park