THE NATURE OF OROGENESIS
Mountain belts are traditionally considered to be the result of slow convergence of lithospheric plates, and the result of overall shortening of the crust and lithosphere. Our current theories for mountain-building processes do not acknowledge a significant role for extensional tectonism, except during the late stage collapse or destruction of mountain belts, while extensional shear zones and detachment faults dismember the previously constructed orogen. Extension during the early stages of orogenesis is thought to be restricted to local buoyancy or channel flow driven phenomena. Yet field observations show that it is major extensional shear zones that draw once deeply buried rocks from the crustal roots of the mountain belt back towards the surface. The sheer scale and the overall attitude of these areally extensive structures means that they could only form in response to overall horizontal stretching of the Earth's crust. This implies that mountain belts do not collapse. Rather they are torn apart by lithosphere scale extension. This can be explained by roll-back of subducting slabs adjacent to the orogenic belt. No other as yet postulated mechanism provides a coherent explanation of the observed phenomena.