For the second time of trying:
1. God
2. Tectonic Plate Collision.
What controversies have surrounded the Olympics over the years?
The Mackenzie Mountains were formed through a combination of tectonic uplift, folding, and faulting processes that occurred over millions of years. The mountains are part of the larger North American Cordillera, which was created by the collision of tectonic plates. Erosion and glaciation have also played a role in shaping the rugged landscape of the Mackenzie Mountains over time.
No, mountains are not formed by erosion. Mountains are typically formed by tectonic forces such as plate movements, volcanic activity, or folding of the Earth's crust. Erosion can shape and alter the surface of a mountain over time, but it does not create the mountains themselves.
Tectonic Plates.One went over one.
These volcanic mountains were formed primarily by the movement of tectonic plates, which caused magma to rise to the Earth's surface and solidify over time, creating the mountainous structures we see today. The repeated volcanic activity over millions of years also contributed to their formation.
The Cohutta Mountains were formed over 300 million years ago during the Alleghanian orogeny, a mountain-building event in the Paleozoic Era. They are part of the Appalachian Mountains in the southeastern United States.
orographic lifting
These are either VERY old mountains formed by the crust compressing or mountains formed by the crust slowly pulling apart over time.
the grand canyon is layers of rock formed over millions of years
Mountains formed by magma that reach the Earth's surface are called volcanoes. These volcanic mountains are created through the eruption of lava, ash, and gases from the Earth's mantle and crust. Over time, repeated eruptions build up the volcano, forming a distinct peak.
Tectonic plates can be formed when two land masses collide over time (also how mountains can be formed). In this case however one land mass slides over the other. This can be very unstable though which is why earthquakes happen.
The mountains on Hawaii were formed through volcanic activity. As the Pacific tectonic plate moved over a hotspot in the Earth's mantle, magma rose to the surface and formed new land. Over time, repeated volcanic eruptions created the mountainous landscape we see today on the Hawaiian Islands.