The geology of Mount Everest then is very simple. The mountain is a
huge slice of solidified sediments that once lay at the bottom of the
Tethys Sea,
an open waterway that existed between the Indian sub-continent and Asia
over 400 million years ago. The sedimentary rock was slightly
metamorphosed from its original deposition and then lifted upward at an
amazingly speedy rate-as much as 4.5 inches (10 centimeters) a year as
the Himalayas rose.
Sedimentary Layers Form Most of Everest
The sedimentary rock layers found on Mount Everest are
limestone,
marble,
shale, and
pelite
that are divided into rock formations; below them are older rocks
including granite, pegmatite intrusions, and gneiss, a metamorphic rock.
The upper formations on Mount Everest and Lhotse are filled with marine
fossils.
Three Distinct Rock Formations
Mount Everest is composed of three distinct rock formations by
geologists. From the mountain base to the summit, they are: the Rongbuk
Formation; the North Col Formation; and the Qomolangma Formation. These
rock units are separated by low-angle
faults, forcing each one over the next in a zigzag pattern.
The Rongbuk Formation at the Bottom
The Rongbuk Formation composes the basement rocks below Mount Everest. The
metamorphic rock includes schist and
gneiss, a finely banded rock. Intruded between these old rock beds are great sills of
granite and pegmatite dikes where molten magma flowed into cracks and solidified.
The North Col Formation
The complex North Col Formation, located between 7,000 and 8,600
meters, divides into several distinct sections. The upper 400 meters
composes the famous Yellow Band, a yellowish brown rock band of marble,
phyllite with muscovite and biotite, and
semischist,
a slightly metamorphosed sedimentary rock. The band also contains
fossils of crinoid ossicles, a marine organism with a skeleton. Below
the Yellow Band are more alternating layers of marble, schist, and
phyllite. The lower 600 meters is composed of various schists formed by
metamorphism of limestone, sandstone, and mudstone. At the bottom of the
formation is the Lhotse detachment, a
thrust fault that divides the North Col Formation from the underlying Rongbuk Formation.
The Qomolangma Formation at the Summit
The Qomolangma Formation, the highest rocks on the summit pyramid of
Mount Everest, is formed by layers of Ordovician-age limestone,
recrystallized dolomite, siltstone, and laminae. The formation starts at
8,600 meters at a fault zone above the North Col Formation and ends on
the summit. The upper layers have many marine fossils, including
trilobites,
crinoids,
and ostracods. One 150-foot-thick layer at the bottom of the summit
pyramid contains the remains of micro-organisms including cyanobacteria,
deposited in shallow warm water.
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