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Crustal Deformation Review of Chapter 11
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Isostasy Balance in possible vertical movement of the plates –Gravity bears down –Heated aesthenosphere is buoyant (heat=expand=less dense=rise & cool=shrink=more dense=fall) –Usually equal or nearly so Imbalance upsets isostasy and results in a rise or fall of plates Fall somewhere results in rise elsewhere and vice versa
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Isostasy explains the vertical distribution of Earth's crust. George Bedell Airy proposed that the density of the crust is everywhere the same and the thickness of crustal material varies. Higher mountains are compensated by deeper roots. This explains the high elevations of most major mountain chains, such as the Himalayas. G H Pratt hypothesized that the density of the crust varies, allowing the base of the crust to be the same everywhere. Sections of crust with high mountains, therefore, would be less dense than sections of crust where there are lowlands. This applies to instances where density varies, such as the difference between continental and oceanic crust.
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Deformation All changes in volume or shape of rock Reaction to stress From confining pressure –Greater with depth –Shallow = brittle –Deeper = ductile
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Stress A force that acts on rocks to change shape and/or volume Compression – squeeze Tension – pull apart Shear – an an angle
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Strain Change in shape or volume of rock as a result of stress Stress must exceed resistance of rock which is variable –Rock composition –Temperature –Pressure –Amount/type/speed of stress
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Types of Deformation Brittle
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Types of Deformation Elastic (reversible)
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Types of Deformation Plastic (permanent)
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Rocks deform elastically when exposed to stresses. Experiments have proven that most rocks at depth deform plastically once their elastic limit is surpassed. Surface rocks also deform elastically, but turn brittle and fracture when they exceed their elastic limit.
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Strike and Dip Strike is the direction in which strata lie Dip is the angle of inclination from the surface at which strata lie
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The structure of a slope is called its strike and dip. Geologists draw these symbols on maps to define the way beds of rock are at angles, or the way they are dipping. Strike and dip are at right angles to each other. The arrow points in the direction of dip. The angle of dip is the angle (in degrees) off of horizontal that the bed is dipping. It is usually measured with a Brunton compass and is given by a number like 28 degrees or 45 degrees.
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Folds Flat rock bent into undulations, usually by compression Sides are called limbs and come off the axis May have 1 or 2 limbs Axis may not be horizontal = plunging
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Anatomy of a Fold
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Types of Folds-Anticline
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Types of Folds-Syncline
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Types of Folds-Monocline
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Types of Folds-Recumbent
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Types of Folds
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Fold sizes Small in hand-held sizes Large; seen only from the air –Ridge –Valley
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Domes and Basins Gentle upwarping or downwarping of crustal rock produce domes and basins Erosion of these structures results in an outcrop pattern that is roughly circular or elongated
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Domes and Basins
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sandstone limestone Crystalline Metamorphic core
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Faults Rock breaks in response to severe stress (fracture or joint) Movement along fracture (horizontal and/or vertical Surface of movement is fault plane
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Dip-slip faults Movement is vertical (on the dip) Footwall below and hanging wall above Normal, reverse, thrust
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Normal Fault
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Fault block valley Fault block ridge
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Fault scarp
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Strike-slip Fault
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Oblique-slip fault
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Joint to Fault
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