American Geology and Geosynclines
American Geology
- Practical and economic orientation on natural resources
- Infrastructure
- State Surveys
- Rather ephemeral due to state funding
- Focus on resources
- Same individuals participated in many state surveys
- National Surveys
- Western Surveys after Civil War
- USGS founded 1878
- Few universities with small staffs
- First generation trained in Europe under Werner’s students
- Distributed along East Coast
- Some differences from Europe
- No “gentleman scientists”
- Strong emphasis on practical
- Many areas were previously unexplored
- State Surveys
Tectonics and Geosynclines
- Rodgers brothers
- Highly influential maps and sections of folded Appalachians
- Dana (early version)
- Idea
- Cooling earth caused contraction
- Initial cooling resulted in lower ocean basins
- Ocean basins gently warped
- Oceans pushed against margins of continents
- Uplift of mountains along the edges of the continents
- Observations
- Trends in the Pacific: depths, cleavage lines
- Different composition of ocean basins versus continent
- Driven by cooling-driven contraction (in the European tradition)
- Prior experience
- Dana’s Manual Mineralogy
- United State Exploring Expedition (Pacific)
- Idea
- Hall
- Idea
- Erosion and deposition of sediments along the margin of the continent
- Results in incremental subsidence of trough as sediments keep it full
- Lower part of pile is stretched and undergoes extension – normal faults and igneous intrusions
- Upper part of pile is compressed, resulting in erosion
- Observations
- Thickness variations across east-west transects
- Driven by loading and sagging of crust (in the Herschel tradition)
- Prior experience
- Survey work in New York and Midwest
- Dana’s comment that this is a fine theory for sediment accumulation but it leaves out how to make mountains.
- Idea
- Dana (late version)
- Combines elements of his earlier work with Hall
- Idea
- Cooling-driven contraction, greater in oceans
- Deformation greatest at the ocean-continental boundary
- Warping creates a pair of broad structure features
- Geosyncline: trough for accumulating sediment
- Geoanticline: adjacent uplifted area to supply sediment
- Once geosyncline is stiff enough (which may take quite a long time), shift to more seaward belt
- Leads to sequential addition of marginal belts around continental core
- Observations
- Uses all those noted above for early Dana and Hall
- Driven by cooling-driven contraction
- Some version of this would persist in the US into the 1960s (!)
Bigger picture
- Geosynclines were an important tectonic concept
- Linked tectonics to sedimentation patterns
- Worked reasonably well for North America
- Failed in most European settings (Apennines might work)
- All these tectonic models reflected the influence of European ideas (contractions, loading) but moved into an American settings
- Easily overlooked (at first) is Dana’s recognition of the fundamental difference between oceans and continents. Implied a permanence to these features that was completely lacking in earlier tectonic ideas.