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Uralian orogeny

Adapted from Wikipedia ยท Adventurer experience

An ancient map showing how the Ural Mountains formed millions of years ago.

The Uralian orogeny refers to the long series of events that caused the land to push upward and form mountains. These events raised the Ural Mountains, which we can still see today. The mountain building began in the Late Carboniferous and Permian periods, and finished in the Triassic to early Jurassic periods.

Map of the Uralian orogeny (blue with black dots)

The area affected by these mountain-building events is called the Uralian orogenic belt or the Uralides. It marks the boundary between Europe and Asia. This belt stretches for about 3,500 kilometres (2,200 miles) from the Aral Sea to Novaya Zemlya. It includes not just the Ural Mountains, but also the Pay-Khoy Ridge in northwest Russia and the Mugodzhar Hills in northwest Kazakhstan.

In the middle part of the Urals, near a place called the Middle-Urals Ring Structure, the mountains curve outward toward the east. Scientists think that an ancient structure from the Precambrian time caused this bend during the mountain-building process.

Formation

The Uralian orogeny tells us how the Ural Mountains were made. This happened long ago, from around 300 to 240 million years ago. Three old landmasses came together: Baltica, Kazakhstania, and Siberia.

First, Baltica joined with another landmass named Laurentia. This made a new land called Laurussia. Later, Kazakhstania moved into Laurussia. Finally, Siberia crashed into this group. These big moves made the mountain ranges we see today between Europe and Asia.

Images

An ancient map showing how the Ural Mountains and the landmass Laurasia formed over 280 million years ago.
An ancient map showing how the Ural Mountains formed and how continents looked 240 million years ago.
A colorful map showing the different geological regions of Europe.
Map showing different geological regions of the world, including shields, platforms, and basins.

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Uralian orogeny, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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