Geologic Formations
Glacier Moraine
Piles of sediment in front of and along the sides of a glacier.
Disconformity
A missing layer caused by erosion, or a long span of time with no new deposits added.
Relative Age
Being able to tell which rocks are older or younger based on their position.
Inclusion
Bits of older rock that become part of a newer rock. Like when magma picks up bits of rock as it moves up through layers.
Original Horizontality
Sediments are added in horizontal layers.
Lateral Continuity
Sediments spread out in all directions until they thin out or hit a barrier.
Alluvial Fan
Triangle-shaped deposit formed when a river flows out onto the land.
Delta
Triangle-shaped deposit formed when a river meets a large body of water like a lake or ocean.
Angular Unconformity
Formed when rocks are folded, eroded, and then new sediments added on top.
Law of Superposition
In undisturbed layers, the oldest rocks are on the bottom, youngest ones on top.
Cross-cutting relationship
When a rock is cut by an event (like an earthquake), the rock has to be older than the event.
hanging valley
a valley that opens onto another valley, or as a cliff above a plain
mass movement
any type of erosion occurring as a result of gravity
rockfall
blocks of rock break loose from a steep slope, go airborne, crash into other rocks & knock them loose as well
cirque
bowl-shaped depression at the head of a glacier
weathering
breaking rock down into smaller particles
steep
describes a high angle of incline
transporting
glaciers erode sediment & deposit it somewhere else
glacier
large mass of ice and snow moving on land under its own weight
till
mixture of different sized sediments deposited by retreating glaciers
erosion
moving weathered sediment from one place to another
lahar
mudflow resulting from a volcano melting glacier ice
rock slide
occurs when LAYERS of rock suddenly slip downslope
creep
occurs when sediments (and trees!) shift slowly downhill
plucking
rocks are lifted by glacier water melting and refreezing around them
eskers
sediments left behind by a river of meltwater under the glacier
index fossil
species that existed briefly, but everywhere. Used in relative age dating.
mudflows
steep slope + heavy rain + little vegetation (sometimes called a mudslide)
deposition
the laying down of eroded sediments
slump
when a mass of material slips down along a curved surface