The bulk of the North Cascades consists of "deformed and
metamorphosed, structurally complex pre-
Tertiary rocks". These originated in diverse locations around the globe: the area is built of several ("perhaps ten or more") different
terranes of different ages and origins. These terranes are separated by a series of ancient
faults, the most significant being the Straight Creek Fault, which runs north–south from north of
Yale, British Columbia, through
Hope,
Marblemount, Washington, and down to
Kachess Lake near Snoqualmie Pass. There is evidence of significant
strike-slip movement on this fault in the past, with similar rocks on either side of the fault separated by dozens of miles. This is thought to be related to northward tectonic movement of the West Coast relative to the rest of North America. Since about 35 million years ago,
oceanic crust from the
Pacific Ocean has been
subducting under the
continental margin, which has formed the current
volcanoes as well as a number of
igneous intrusions composed of
diorite and
gabbro. The current
uplift of the Cascade Range began around 8 million years ago. Rocks similar to those in the North Cascades continue north to the vicinity of
Mount Meager massif in the
Coast Mountains, where they abut the Stikinia Terrane of the Omineca-Intermontane Province that dominates the
Interior Plateau of British Columbia. This geologic similarity between the North Cascades and Coast Mountains results in a fairly arbitrary boundary between the two. In British Columbia, the western geologic boundary of the North Cascades is defined as the
Fraser River as it follows the Straight Creek Fault, while in the United States the western boundary is defined by the
Puget Lowlands in the west, although there are significant westward extensions of rocks similar in origin to those in the North Cascades found in the
San Juan Islands. The eastern geologic boundary of the North Cascades may be marked by the Chewack-Pasayten Fault. This fault separates the easternmost portion of the North Cascades, the Methow Terrane, from the Quesnellia Terrane, one of the
Omineca and
Intermontane Belts. The fault also separates the
Methow River valley, part of the Methow Terrane, from the
Okanagan Range, part of the Quesnellia Terrane. The
Columbia River Basalt Group bounds the North Cascades to the southeast. The southern limit of what is geologically considered the "North Cascades" may variously be defined as being the southern limit of exposure of igneous and metamorphic terranes which is generally north of Snoqualmie Pass, Snoqualmie Pass itself, or
Naches Pass at the White River Fault Zone.
Glaciers and the upper
Coleman Glacier While
alpine glaciers are a defining feature of the Cascade Range as a whole, this is especially true of the North Cascades. The stratovolcanoes (Mount Baker and Glacier Peak) are the most obviously glaciated peaks and have the largest glaciers, but many of the smaller, nonvolcanic peaks are glaciated as well. For example, the portion of the Cascades north of
Snoqualmie Pass (roughly the North Cascades as defined in this article) These glaciers all retreated from 1900 to 1950. From 1950 to 1975 many but not all North Cascades glaciers advanced. Since 1975 retreat has become more rapid with all 107 glaciers monitored retreating by 1992. 2015 was an especially damaging year for Cascadian Glaciers, an estimated mass loss of five to ten percent, the single greatest loss in over 50 years. There are approximately 700 glaciers in the range, though some have already disappeared. Since a brief advancing period in the 1950s, most of these glaciers have been
retreating. This is a serious concern to
water managers in the region, as the glaciers (and the winter snowpack) form a large reservoir of
water. As snow and ice melts in the summer, the resulting
meltwater compensates for the seasonal decrease in precipitation. As glaciers retreat they will provide less summer runoff. The Cascades north of Snoqualmie Pass have 756 glaciers covering of terrain. For comparison, the entire
contiguous United States has about 1,100 glaciers in total, covering . ==Ecology==