Mount Fuji is NOT a residual mountain; it is a Volcanic mountain (specifically a stratovolcano). Residual mountains, like the Aravallis, Vindhyas and Appalachians, are the remnants of old, high mountain ranges that have been worn down by millions of years ...
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The Andes Mountains are the world’s longest continental Folded mountain range. They formed at a convergent boundary where the oceanic Nazca Plate subducts beneath the South American Plate. This compression, combined with significant volcanic activity, created the massive, elongated cordillera ...
The Himalayan mountain range is a classic example of a Folded mountain. It was formed by the collision of the Indian Plate and the Eurasian Plate. The intense compressive forces caused the sedimentary rocks of the ancient Tethys Sea to ...
The world’s largest mountain ranges, known as the “Young Fold Mountains” (like the Himalayas, Alps and Andes), were formed approximately 30 million years ago during the Tertiary period. This “Alpine Orogeny” was driven by intense plate tectonic collisions. These mountains ...
Among the options, the Rockies are the youngest mountain range. They are part of the “Young Fold Mountains” formed during the late Cretaceous to Tertiary periods. In contrast, the Urals and Appalachians are ancient ranges (Paleozoic era) that have been ...