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Geology
The geology of Great Smoky Mountains National Park is summarized in King and others (1968), and the geology of the Mount Le Conte quadrangle is discussed by Hadley and Goldsmith (1963). A good layman's guide to the geology of the Park is by Moore (1988), which also contains technical and non-technical references. A regional tectonic synthesis, which includes the area of Great Smoky Mountains National Park, can be found in Hatcher (1989), and an extensive reference list on the technical aspects of the geology in the park accompanies a recent study by Montes (1997). The summary below is taken from these sources.
Great Smoky Mountains National Park lies within the Appalachian Blue Ridge geologic and physiographic province. The highest mountains in eastern North America occur in the Blue Ridge province, and some of the highest peaks in this province are in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. The oldest rocks in the Blue Ridge province are at least 1 billion years old and consist of metamorphosed sedimentary and igneous rocks. These Proterozoic rocks form the core of the ancient Appalachian Mountains. Sediments deposited over these older rocks form the majority of rocks in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.
Most of the rocks in Great Smoky Mountains National Park are metamorphosed sedimentary rocks. These sedimentary rocks were formed from approximately 800 to 450 million years ago from deposits of clay, silt, sand, gravel, and lime or calcium carbonate. The oldest sedimentary rocks consist of vast amounts of clastic material that washed down into lowland basins from adjacent highlands. Rocks of the ancient highlands are similar to the ancient granite, gneiss, and schist found in the eastern parts of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park (Hadley and Goldsmith, 1963). Approximately 450 million years ago, the rocks were metamorphosed or "changed" by heat and pressure. For example, sandstone was changed to quartzite and shale to slate.
About 200 to 300 million years ago, the last phase of Appalachian Mountain building, (the Alleghenian orogeny) occurred when the North American continent collided with the African and European continents, closing the early Atlantic Ocean. This process, part of a continuous mountain building cycle known as "plate tectonics," ended sedimentation in the Appalachian region and uplifted the entire Appalachian mountain chain from Newfoundland, Canada to Georgia. These mountains may have been much higher than they are today, with elevations perhaps similar to the present-day Rocky Mountains. As the continents collided, the original horizontal layers were bent or folded and broken by fractures and faults. Tremendous forces caused huge masses of older rocks to be pushed westward, up and over younger rocks, along nearly flat-lying faults. Rocks in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park moved westward on the Great Smoky Mountain fault.
Bedrock in the Mount Le Conte quadrangle consists of a thick sequence of Late Proterozoic (800-600(?) million years old) metamorphosed sandstone, siltstone, shale, and conglomerate. A few metamorphosed igneous dikes of uncertain age occur in the Mount Le Conte area (Hadley and Goldsmith, 1963). The metasedimentary rocks in the Mount Le Conte quadrangle have been divided into two groups, chiefly on the basis of age and rock characteristic.
The
oldest rocks exposed in the Mount Le Conte area are
The
metasandstone is characterized by light green color due to
Pieces of green metasiltstone similar
to the overlying Pigeon
Overlying
the Roaring Fork Sandstone is fine-grained laminated
The Pigeon Siltstone and the Roaring
Fork Sandstone are part of the older Snowbird Group and are overlain across
the Greenbrier fault by the younger Elkmont Sandstone,
Thunderhead Formation, and Anakeesta Formation of the Great Smoky Group
(Hadley and Goldsmith, 1963).
Gray
and brown metasandstone and dark phyllitic metasiltstone
The
dark metasiltstone is sheared along the Greenbriar fault.
Overlying
the Elkmont Sandstone are massive thick beds of
The metasandstone is both thick bedded
and medium bedded with
These
are turbidite deposits with graded beds. The clastic
Dark
metasiltstone is interbedded with the metasandstone and
Named
after Anakeesta Ridge south of Mount Le Conte, rocks
Dolomite
is recognized by the pitted dissolution surface.
Along
the Boulevard Trail are laminated metasiltstone with
Along
Boulevard Trail and Mount Le Conte are light fine-grained
At
the headwaters of Porters Creek northeast of Mount
These rocks have been metamorphosed
by differing degrees of temperature and pressure. On
the west, the rocks are chlorite grade, which indicates a lower temperature
and pressure than that experienced by rocks on the southeast part of the
quadrangle, which are garnet grade (Hadley and Goldsmith, 1963). Summaries
of available data on the timing of thermal metamorphism of rocks in the
park and surrounding areas are found in Drake and others (1989). Most
studies indicate that the peak of metamorphism occurred during the Ordovician
, around 450 million years ago.
The rocks in the Mount Le Conte quadrangle
were deformed by folding, faulting, fracturing, and jointing. Additionally,
cleavage, a form of planar "fracture" in the rocks caused by metamorphism
and folding, is common in the more shaly rocks (Hadley and Goldsmith, 1963). The
largest fault in the quadrangle, the Greenbrier fault, is thought to have
formed prior to the regional metamorphism, or prior to about 450 million
years ago. Other faults in
the quadrangle, such as the Gatlinburg and Mingus faults, occurred during
the Alleghanian orogeny, approximately 250 million years ago. Cleavage
and folding is thought to have occurred both prior to and during the Alleghanian
orogeny (Hadley and Goldsmith, 1963).
The surficial geology in the study area
consists of alluvium and terraces along modern low-elevation drainages,
and extensive boulder colluvium and boulder debris deposits. Also, modern
debris-flow deposits occur in the southern part of the quadrangle.
Terrace deposits and alluvium characteristically
contain both coarse and fine material.
The Glades, north of Highway 73 between
Gatlinburg and the
Coarse
alluvium in the highlands near the Chimneys Picnic area.
The very coarse material was derived
from reworking of older boulder fans as streams eroded and cut into the
older deposits. Finer grained
material was derived directly from scour of bedrock,
or erosion of soil and weathered
rock (saprolite). At lower
elevations, cobbles and boulders are well rounded and are in a fine-grained
sandy matrix. Alluvium along
steep gradient streams at high elevations consists only of poorly rounded
coarse boulders and cobbles.
Colluvium consists dominantly of boulders
and cobbles derived from weathering of bedrock.
Boulders
and cobbles of mostly metasandstone have been
Some of these deposits are within site
of the bedrock source
This rocky material has been transported
downslope chiefly by gravity. However,
some areas mapped as colluvium also contain boulder streams and boulder
fields that may have formed in periglacial environments at the higher elevations
during the latter part of the Pleistocene (Delcourt and Delcourt, 1985). In
the boulder streams and boulder fields, gravity, solifluction, freeze-thaw
ice wedging, and ice rafting may have contributed to downslope movement. In
general, colluvium and the periglacial deposits contain little or no matrix
or fine-grained material, such as soil, sand, or clay, between the coarse
rubble. Additionally, boulder streams, boulder fields, and coarse colluvium
often do not have trees and other vegetation growing on them and are usually
very well drained. No evidence
of present day movement is obvious.
Debris deposits are believed to be the
result of ancient, large debris flows and floods that carried large boulders
and cobbles down steep-walled valleys and deposited them as fans on the
lower slopes. These deposits usually have a finer grained matrix and have
soil developed on them.
Large fan-shaped deposits of forest-covered
debris and boulders
Today, the deposits are tree covered,
stable on the slope, and are being incised by the present streams. Both
the size of the deposits and the contact between debris deposits and colluvium
is usually gradational.
Modern debris flows are common in the
Park, particularly on the highest slopes underlain by shales of the Anakeesta
Formation. The debris flows
were the result of heavy rain and consist of weathered and fresh bedrock,
soil, and vegetation, including trees, shrubs, bushes, and grass.
There are abundant debris flows in this
part of GSMNP and virtually
The
most spectacular debris flows are found on the east side
The south side of Mount Le Conte has
extensive debris flows on
The map shows both the debris-flow deposit
on the lower slopes and the debris flow scar or source area higher on the
mountain. These debris flows pose a hazard to trail hikers and motorists
in the park. Whenever several
days of heavy rain have occurred, debris flows can be expected in this
part of the park.
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