Sei sulla pagina 1di 1

Continental landforms 1. Continental landforms are the surface features of the largest land area of the earth.

Such structures are rendered unique by the tectonic mechanisms that generate them and by the climatically controlled denudational systems that modify them through time. The resulting topographical features tend to reflect both the tectonic and the denudational processes involved. The most dramatic expression of tectonism is mountainous topography, which is either generated along continental margins by collisions between the slablike plates that make up the earths lithosphere or formed somewhat farther inland by rifting and faulting. Far more subtle tectonic expressions are manifested by vast continental regions of limited relief and elevation affected by gentle uplift, subsidence, tilting, and warping. The denudational processes act upon the tectonic set stage and are able to modify its features in a degree that reflects which forces are dominant through time. Volcanism as a syn-tectonic phenomenon may modify any landscape by fissureerupted flood basalts capable of creating regional lava plateaus or by vent eruptions that yield individual volcanoes. 2. The denudational processes, which involve rock weathering and both erosion and deposition of rock debris, are governed in character by climate, whose variations of heat and moisture create vegetated, desert, or glacial expressions. Most regions have been exposed to repeated changes in climate rather than to a single enduring condition. Climates can change very slowly through continental drift and much more rapidly through variations in such factors as solar radiation. 3. In most instances, a combination of the foregoing factors is responsible for any given landscape. In a few cases, tectonism, some special combination of denudational effects, or volcanism may control the entire landform suite. Where tectonism exists in form of orogenic uplift, the high-elevation topography depends on the nature of denudation. In humid or glacial environments whose geomorphic agencies can exploit lithologic variations, the rocks are etched into mountainous relief like that of the Alps or the southern Andes. In arid orogienic settings, the effects of aggradation and planation often result in alleviated intermontane basins that merge with high plateaus interrupted or bordered by mountains such as the central andes or those of Tibet and Colorado in the western United states. 4. In continental regions where mountainous uplifts are lacking, denudational processes operate on rocks that are only slightly deformed if they are sedimentary and only moderately elevated. This produces broad basins, ramps, swells, and plains. There are most thoroughly dissected in rain-and-river environments (sometimes attaining local mountainous relief on uplifts). Elsewhere, they may be broadly alleviated and pedimented where mainly arid, or widely scoured and aggraded where glacial. 5. Minor denudational landforms are superimposed on the major features already mentioned. Where aridity had dominated, they include pediments, pans, dune complexes, dry washes, alluvial veneers, bajadas, and fans. Ridge-ravine topography and integrated drainage networks with associated thick soils occur where humid conditions have prevailed. Combinations of these features are widespread wherever arid and humid conditions have alternated, and wither category may merge laterally with the complex suite of erosional and depositional landforms generated by continental glaciers at higher latitudes.

Potrebbero piacerti anche