- Geology of Connecticut
As part of
New England ,Connecticut has undergone much geologic change shaped byplate tectonics ,volcanism , andglacial activity.Appalachian Mountains
During the early
Triassic , the super-continentPangea was formed as theIapetus Ocean closed up and the proto-North American continent collided withAvalonia , part of modern-dayAfrica . This caused great uplift and the creation of theAppalachian Mountains , which, at the time, were bigger than modern-dayHimalayas . Erosion of theAppalachian Mountains now exposesmetamorphic rocks once very deep in the Earth’s mantle and uplifted during this time period.Eastern Border Fault
About 200 million years after this collision and the formation of Pangea, during the middle of the Mesozoic Era, the
Atlantic Ocean floor started spreading and great extensional forces were experienced, resulting in faulting. Connecticut’s famousEastern Border Fault was created, a fault which begins in New Haven, CT and stretches 130 miles up to Keene, NH. As a result, the land west of this fault was downset, causing arift valley and the land to tilt an average of 15 to 25 degrees. The fault is currently inactive. The formation of this basin eventually refilled with soft fluvial and alluvial sediments.Ice Age
During
Ice Age s,glacial activity shaped much ofNew England ’s landscape, eroding mountains, leavingglacial till scattered everywhere, and forming glacial lakes. At its greatest extent, one of these glaciers leaves behind amoraine which becomes today'sLong Island . One of the biggest glacial lakes of the time was GlacialLake Hitchcock . It formed when theLaurentide ice sheet retreated andglacial meltwater began to accumulate at the glacier’s terminalmoraine inRocky Hill, Connecticut and back up into theConnecticut River . The glacial lake left behind a soft,varve d landscape, gatheringsilt and sand in the summertime due to the influx ofglacial meltwater and clay in the wintertime as the lake froze until it was later drained.River Valley
This soft surface has since been downcut, resedimented and oft flooded by the
Connecticut River , making it a very soft, nutrient-replenished area and host to the majority of Connecticut’s farmland soils. The land on either side of theConnecticut River Valley is less suitable for farmlands. The eastern section holds the shallow Proto-North AmericanTerrane while the western section contains the Iapetos and AvalonianTerrane s, which still holds remnants ofglacial till and lack the softfluvial sediments so prominent in theConnecticut River Valley region.External links
* [http://www.wesleyan.edu/ctgeology/ Wesleyan University's Connecticut Geology]
* [http://www.wesleyan.edu/ctgeology/images/CtGeoMap_big.jpgMap of Connecticut Bedrock Geology] United States topic
title =Geology of the United States by political division
prefix = Geology of
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