Crustal Deformation. Economic Consequences of Geologic Structures Tracing Coal Seams, Aquifers, etc. Ore Deposits are often localized along faults and.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Deforming the Earth’s Crust
Advertisements

Structural Geology Crustal Deformation
Crustal Deformation Earth, 10e - Chapter 10
Ch 15 (Part I): Crustal deformation
Chapter 9 – FOLDS, FAULTS & GEOLOGIC MAPS
Crustal Deformation. Take-Away Points 1.Structures in the earth have practical implications 2.Basic terms for earth structures 3.Small structures provide.
Prentice Hall EARTH SCIENCE
Inuksuk - Nunavut, Canada
X. Deformation and. Mountain Building A.Plate Tectonics and Stress B.Rock Deformation C.Geologic Structures D.Origin of Mountains E.Continental Crust.
Unit 4 Lesson 3 Mountain Building
GEOLOGIC STRUCTURES “Architecture of bedrock” Structural Geology- –shapes, –arrangement, –interrelationships of bedrock –units & forces that cause them.
Chapter 5 pages Warm up Define deformation Exit
GEOLOGIC STRUCTURES.
Fold Geometry, Classification, and Mechanics
Metamorphism Changes in Rock Composition or Texture Due to Heat, Pressure and Action of Fluids.
Structural Geology: Deformation and Mountain Building
Chapter 20 Geologic structures.
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Earth: An Introduction to Physical Geology, 10e Tarbuck & Lutgens.
Earthquakes and Deformation of the Crust 1. 2 Deformation of the Crust Stress –Force that causes pressure in the rocks of the earth’s crust Strain –Change.
Rock Deformation and Geologic Structures
Geologic Structures Physical Geology, Chapter 15
Section 1: How Rock Deforms
Folds Rocks are often bent into a series of wave-like undulations called folds Characteristics of folds Folds result from compressional stresses which.
Crustal Deformation Structural Geology
Lecture Outlines Physical Geology, 14/e Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Plummer, Carlson &
Faults and Folds Normal Fault In normal faulting, the hanging wall block moves down relative to the footwall block. The fault plane.
Continental Drift Theory Plate Tectonics How the crust.
Structural Geology.
Crustal Deformation Review of Chapter 11. Isostasy Balance in possible vertical movement of the plates –Gravity bears down –Heated aesthenosphere is buoyant.
Unit 4 Lesson 3 Mountain Building
Mountain Building and Crustal Deformation. Economic Consequences of Geologic Structures Tracing Coal Seams, Aquifers, etc. Ore Deposits are often localized.
Folding of Shale-Sandstone sequence, Kings Canyon, California FOLDS and thrust Which deformation and stresses cause theses structures ?
Folds and Faults hScienceWork/FoldFault/FoldFaul tGeologyNotes.htm.
MECHANICS OF PLASTIC DEFORMATION > PLASTIC DEFORMATION IS BY FLOW; THE PROCESSES MAY BE: 1.INTERGRANULAR MOVEMENT A) DISPLACEMENT TAKES PLACE BETWEEN INDIVIDUAL.
STRESS, FAULTS, AND FOLDS. Deformation is the bending, tilting, and breaking of the Earth’s crust. Plate tectonics is the major cause of crustal deformation.
It’s your fault! Folding and faulting of rocks. The stresses of crustal rock As you learned last section, stress causes strain in crustal rock in three.
Relative Dating & Deforming the Earth’s Crust
Deformation of the Crust Section 1 Section 1: How Rock Deforms Preview Key Ideas Isostasy Stress Strain Folds Faults Hanging Walls and Footwalls.
11 CHAPTER 11 Mountain Building. Factors Affecting Deformation 11.1 ROCK DEFORMATION  Factors that influence the strength of a rock and how it will deform.
structural geology & mountain building
Folds Read Davis and Reynolds, Chapter 7 Why is it important? fundamental to deformation of the Earth’s crust; structural traps for oil ore deposits.
Mountain Building Lesson 4.7 How are mountains formed? Lesson 4.7.
Lecture Outlines Physical Geology, 12/e
Forces In Mountain Building
Metamorphic Processes I
Folds, Faults & Geologic Maps
Earth Science Mountain Building.
Room: 407 Tel: Patrice Rey.
GEOTECHNICS AND APPLIED GEOLOGY
MOUNTAIN BUILDING.
FOLDS, FAULTS AND GEOLOGIC MAPS
Lecture Outlines Physical Geology, 12/e
Unit 4 Lesson 3 Mountain Building
Eric H Christiansen.
Chapter 5 pages Warm up Explain what a thrust fault is? Exit
Deformation, Mountain Building, and Earth's Crust
Forces In Mountain Building
11.1 Rock Deformation Factors Affecting Deformation
Crustal Deformation Chapter 10.
FACULTY OF ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY & RESEARCH
Submition : geology Group:2.
Forces that cause deformation
Crustal Deformation Folds Faults Mountain Building
Modification of Rocks by Folding and Fracturing
DO NOW Pick up notes and Review #11. Turn IN Review #10.
Unit 4 Lesson 3 Mountain Building
Earth’s Materials and Processes-Part 10 Mountain Building and Faults
Structural Geology Structural geology is the study of rocks deformed by stress and strain This involves trying to understand stress and strain forces to.
The Results of Stress.
3-1 crustal deformation Unit 3: Dynamic Earth.
Presentation transcript:

Crustal Deformation

Economic Consequences of Geologic Structures Tracing Coal Seams, Aquifers, etc. Ore Deposits are often localized along faults and folds Petroleum Traps

Anticlines and Synclines

Monoclines and Homoclines

Axial Plane

How Fast Can Folds Form?

Which Way was Up? Sedimentary Structures are governed by: Gravity Exposure to the Surface They all have a “right way up”

Foliation Foliation is a sheetlike structure that forms when rocks are deformed.

Foliation a.Flattening b.Grain Rotation c.Solution d.New Minerals e.Partial Melting f.Shearing

Foliation In every case, the foliation is: In the direction of least resistance at right angles to the direction of greatest compression.

Folds and Foliation On a small scale (microscopic to centimeters), foliation forms by a variety of mechanisms, but always at right angles to the direction of greatest compression On a large scale (centimeters to kilometers), rocks fold. The axial plane of the fold is also at right angles to the direction of greatest compression

Folds and Foliation

The Importance of Minor Folds

How Geologists Use These Clues Here's an outcrop that might be seen in the field.

How Geologists Use These Clues Picture the axial plane of the fold as parallel to the foliation. The other side of the fold is roughly a mirror image of the side we can see.

How Geologists Use These Clues We can mentally fill out the sketch to get an idea of the shape of the fold. Note that we still have no idea how big the fold is, only what kind it is.

What if we did it the other way?

Isostasy

The Airy Model

The Pratt Model

Both Ideas are Correct at Times

How Isostasy Works

Isostatic Rebound in Canada

Isostatic Rebound in Scandinavia

Domes and Basins