Mountain’s function
The Qur’an draws attention to a very important geological function of mountains:
021.031► وَجَعَلْنَا فِي الأرْضِ رَوَاسِيَ أَنْ تَمِيدَ بِهِمْ وَجَعَلْنَا فِيهَا فِجَاجًا سُبُلا لَعَلَّهُمْ يَهْتَدُونَ
We placed firmly embedded mountains on the Earth, so it would not move under them… (Qur’an, Al-Anbiya 21:31)
The verse states that mountains perform the function of preventing  shocks in the Earth. This fact was not known by anyone at the time the  Qur’an was revealed. It was, in fact, brought to light only recently, as  a result of the findings of modern geological research.
Formerly, it was thought that mountains were merely protrusions  rising above the surface of the Earth. However, scientists realised that  this was not actually the case, and that those parts known as the  mountain root extended down as far as 10-15 times their own height. With  these features, mountains play a similar role to a nail or peg firmly  holding down a tent. For example, Mount Everest, the summit of which  stands approximately 9 km above the surface of the Earth, has a root  deeper than 125 km (77.7 miles).
Mountains emerge as a result of the movements and collisions of  massive plates forming the Earth’s crust. When two plates collide, the  stronger one slides under the other, the one on the top bends and forms  heights and mountains. The layer beneath proceeds under the ground and  makes a deep extension downward. Consequently, as stated earlier,  mountains have a portion stretching downwards, as large as their visible  parts on the Earth.
In a scientific text, the structure of mountains is described as follows:
Where continents are thicker, as in mountain ranges, the crust sinks deeper into the mantle.
Professor Siaveda, a world-renowned underwater geologist, made the  following comment in reference to the way that mountains have root-like  stalks attaching them to the surface:
The fundamental difference between continental mountains and the  oceanic mountains lies in its material… But the common denominator on  both mountains are that they have roots to support the mountains. In the  case of continental mountains, light-low density material from the  mountain is extended down into the earth as a root. In the case of  oceanic mountains, there is also light material supporting the mountain  as a root… Therefore, the function of the roots are to support the  mountains according to the law of Archimedes.
Furthermore, a book titled Earth, by Dr. Frank Press, former  president of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, which is still used  as a text book in a great many universities, states that mountains are  like stakes, and are buried deep under the surface of the Earth.28
In other verses, this role of the mountains is pointed out by a comparison with “pegs”:
 

078.006► أَلَمْ نَجْعَلِ الأرْضَ مِهَادًا
078.007► وَالْجِبَالَ أَوْتَادًا
Haven’t We made the Earth as a bed and the mountains its pegs? (Qur’an, An-Naba 78:6-7)
079.032► وَالْجِبَالَ أَرْسَاهَا
In another verse it is revealed that Allah “made the mountains firm.” (Qur’an, an-Naziat -79:32)
The word “arsaahaa” in this verse means “was made rooted, was fixed,  was nailed to the earth.” Similarly, mountains extend to the surface  layer joining lines on and below the surface, and nail these together.  By fixing the Earth’s crust they prevent any sliding over the magma  layer or amongst the layers themselves. In short, mountains can be  compared to nails holding strips of wood together. The fixing effect of  mountains is known as isostasy in scientific literature. Isostasy is the  state of equilibrium between the upward force created by the mantle  layer and the downward force created by the Earth’s crust. As mountains  lose mass due to erosion, soil loss or melting of glaciers, they can  gain mass from the formation of glaciers, volcanic explosions or soil formation.  Therefore, as mountains grow lighter they are pressed upwards by the  raising force implemented by the liquids. Alternatively, as they grow  heavier they are pressed into the mantle by the force of gravity.  Equilibrium between these two forces is established by isostasy. This  balancing property of mountains is described in these terms in a  scientific source:
G.B Airy in 1855 suggested that the crust of the earth could be  likened to rafts of timber floating on water. Thick pieces of timber  float higher above the water surface than thin pieces and similarly  thick sections of the earth’s crust will float on a liquid or plastic  substratum of greater density. Airy was suggesting that mountains have a  deep root of lower density rock which the plains lack. Four years after  Airy published his work, J.H Pratt offered an alternative hypothesis…  By this hypothesis rock columns below mountains must have a lower  density, because of their greater length, than shorter rock columns  beneath plains. Both Airy and Pratt’s hypothesis imply that surface  irregularities are balanced by differences in density of rocks below the  major features (mountains and plains) of the crust. This state of  BALANCE is described as the concept of ISOSTASY. 29
Today,  we know that the rocky external layer of the Earth’s surface is riven  by deep faults and split into plates swimming above the molten lava.  Since the Earth revolves very quickly around its own axis, were it not  for the fixing effect of the mountains, these plaques would shift. In  such an event, soil would not collect on the Earth’s surface, water  would not accumulate in the soil, no plants could grow, and no roads or  houses could be built. In short, life on Earth would be impossible.  Through the mercy of Allah, however, mountains act like nails, and to a  large extent, prevent movement in the Earth’s surface.
This vital role of mountains, which has been discovered by modern  geological and seismic research, was revealed in the Qur’an centuries  ago as an example of the supreme wisdom in Allah’s creation.
031.010► خَلَقَ السَّمَاوَاتِ بِغَيْرِ عَمَدٍ تَرَوْنَهَا وَأَلْقَى  فِي الأرْضِ رَوَاسِيَ أَنْ تَمِيدَ بِكُمْ وَبَثَّ فِيهَا مِنْ كُلِّ  دَابَّةٍ وَأَنْزَلْنَا مِنَ السَّمَاءِ مَاءً فَأَنْبَتْنَا فِيهَا مِنْ  كُلِّ زَوْجٍ كَرِيمٍ
… [He] cast firmly embedded mountains on the Earth so that it would not move under you… (Qur’an, Luqman -31:10) 
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