Image:North america terrain 2003 map.jpg
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Relief map showing the varying age of bedrock underlying North America.
This cartographic tapestry is woven from a geologic map and a shaded relief image. This combination reveals the geologic history of North America through the interrelation of rock type, topography and time. Regional surface processes as well as continent-scale tectonic events are exposed in the three dimensions of space and the fourth dimension, geologic time.
From most recent to oldest, age is indicated by: yellow, green, blue, red.
The red U-shape of the Canadian Shield is clearly apparent. The base of ancient mountains and impact craters, this mineral-rich rock is nearly bare due to recent ice ages.
The Canadian Shield is an exposed part of the North American craton, a stable area which extends down the continent along the blue areas, and includes the sweep east of the Rocky Mountains back northward along the pale yellows of the Great Plains, light green across Wyoming and nearly to Alaska.
[edit] Rock types
Four maps show the North American distribution of four principal types of rock: sedimentary, volcanic, plutonic and metamorphic rock.
File links
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- Geology of the United States of America
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- Wikipedia:Featured picture candidates/April-2005
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- Wikipedia:Featured pictures thumbs 03
- Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2005-05-02/Features and admins
- Wikipedia:POTD/June 19, 2005
- Wikipedia:Picture of the day/June 19, 2005
- User:Cyde/Featured pictures
- Wikipedia:Featured pictures/Diagrams, Drawings, and Maps