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Tableland
Plateaus are sculpted by geologic forces that lift them up and the wind and rain that
wear them down into mesas, buttes, and canyons. Monument Valley and the Grand
Canyon, both icons of the American Southwest, were chiseled from the Colorado
Plateau.
Plateaus are built over millions of years as pieces of Earth's crust smash into each other, melt, and gurgle back
toward the surface. Some owe their creation to a single process; others have been subjected to more than one
during different epochs of Earth's history.
The highest and biggest plateau on Earth, the Tibetan Plateau in East Asia, resulted from a collision between
two tectonic plates about 55 million years ago. The land buckled up along the seam of the collision and formed
the Himalaya mountain range. Farther away, the crust uplifted but didn't crumple and wrinkle, creating instead a
raised, flat, and wide open expanse known as the "roof of the world."
Many plateaus form as magma deep inside the Earth pushes toward the surface but fails to break through the
crust. Instead, the magma lifts up the large, flat, impenetrable rock above it. Geologists believe a cushion of
magma may have given the Colorado Plateau its final lift beginning about ten million years ago.
Repeated lava flows that spill out from cracks in the ground and spread out over hundreds of square miles can
also slowly build up massive plateaus. The Columbia Plateau in the U.S. Pacific Northwest and the Deccan
Plateau of west-central India were formed by these runny lava flows.
Plateaus also form in the ocean, such as the Mascarene Plateau in the Indian Ocean, one of the few underwater
features clearly visible from space. It extends approximately 770 square miles (2,000 square kilometers)
http://science.nationalgeographic.com/science/earth/surface-of-the-earth/plateaus-article/
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