geology midterm 2
aftershocks
numerous small earthquakes, usually follow a major earthquake
xeno in greek means
foreign
igneous rocks
form from cooling and solidification of magma
metamorphic rocks
formed by changing pre existing igneous rocks, sedimentary rocks, or other metamorphic rocks driven by forces of heat and pressure
sedimentary rocks
formed from weathering of preexisting rocks sediments lithify into sedimentary rocks
pluonic/intrusive igenous rocks
magma that crystallizes at depths underground
glassy texture
rapid cooling, ions freeze before forming a structure
Ultramafic composition
rare, mostly comp. of olivine and pyroxene, ferromagensium minerals
andesitic/intermediate composition
25% or more dark silicates from volcanic island arcs ex. andesite (extrusive), diorite (intrusive)
lava composition
90% is basaltic <10% is andesitic 1% is rhyolitic
syncline
A downward fold in rock formed by compression in Earth's crust youngest layers in the middle
Viscosity
A liquid's resistance to flowing controls type of volcanic eruption
xenolith
Suspended blocks of country rocks found in plutons
monocline
a large steplike fold in otherwise horizontal sedimentary strata upward displacement
cleavage
a mineral's ability to split easily along flat surfaces # of cleavage planes, angle and shape
mineral
a naturally occurring, inorganic solid that has a crystal structure and a definite chemical composition
axial plane
center of an anticline or syncline
rock
a solid mass of minerals
fracture
absence of cleavage where a mineral is broken
largest wave recorded was
an s wave on the wood anderson scale wood anderson scale records p and s waves but cannot pick up surface waves
anticline
an upward fold in rock formed by compression of Earth's crust oldest layers in the middle
tuff
ash fragments cemented together
plunging anticline/syncline
axis of fold penetrates the ground
mafic examples
basalt (extrusive) gabbro (intrusive)
shield volcano
basaltic
mineralogy is influenced by
chemical composition of parent magma
Phaneritic texture
coarse grained, large crystals, slow cooling
pegmatitic texture
coarse grained; formed in late stages of crystallization; large crystals (over 1 cm)
properties for mineral identification
color, streak, cleavage, hardness, density, taste, feel, magnetism, luster, refraction, effervescence etc
liquidus
conditions at which rock completely melts
solidus
conditions at which rock starts to melt
pyroclastic (fragmental) texture
consolidation of rock fragments ejected during eruptions
pluton
cooled, emplaces magma into preexisting rock
texture is influenced by
cooling history of a rock
crystallization
cooling of magma leads to arrangement of ions into orderly patterns
mafic (basaltic) composition
dark silicates, calcium rich feldspar MA(gnesium) F(e/iron)IC higher density than felsic/granitic rocks forms oceanic crust
ductile deformation in anticlines and synclines
domes-upward circular features (oldest rock in center) basins- downward circular features (youngest rock in center)
magnitude
estimate of amount of energy released at source of earthquake
aphanitic texture
fine grained, small crystals, rapid cooling
rock sliippage originates at the
focus/hypocenter
examples of felsic rock
granite (intrusive) rhyolite (extrusive) obsidian pumice
types of eruptions
high viscosity causes explosive eruptions low viscosity causes slow, Hawaiian style eruptions
welded tuff
hot ash that fused together, contains pieces of pumice and other rock
partial melting
incomplete melting of rocks produces most magmas melt is enriched with ions
time intervals between p and s waves...
increase as distance from epicenter increases we use this time lag to find the epicenter using data from at least three stations
intensity is easier to use because
it requires no equipment but it can vary due to type of ground material the earthquake affected (ex mud shakes more than granite) historical reports can determine intensity based on human accounts
causes of earthquakes
landslides, meteorites, and eruptions cause weak quakes stress builds from plate movement and overcomes frictional resistance along faults, causing faults to slip and rock to break
Porphyritic texture
large crystals (phenocrystals) embedded in a matrix of smaller crystals
batholith
largest intrusive body
possible bonus
last San Fransisco quake was in 1906, fault wasnt exactly located 1989 last significant quake south of san fran but still affected it
Aa lava
lava that hardens into rough, jagged rocks with a crumbly texture
stratovolcano
layered rhyolitic/andesitic
Felsic (Granitic) Composition
light colored, contains quartz or potassium feldspar major component of continental crust FEL(dspar) (sil)IC(on)
EC
lodestone is a natural magnet calcite has double refraction carbonates effervesce
intensity
measure of degree of earthquake shaking based on damage
richter scale
measures amplitude of largest seismic wave logarithmic scale, accounts for decrease in wave amplitude over distance
magma is composed of
melt (liquid) solids (minerals) and crystallized silicates volatiles: dissolved gasses that vaporize at surface pressure (water vapor, silicon dioxide and carbon dioxide)
deecompression melting
melting occurs at higher temp with increasing depth higher pressures require higher temps to melt rocks addition of water lowers melting temp
overturned anticline/syncline
one limb is tilted beyond the vertical
speed of waves
p waves are faster than s waves any wave travels faster through denser,colder material waves speed up deeper in the earth and then come up and out
volcanic breccia
particles larger than ash
the epicenter
point on ground surface above focus
vesicular texture
rock has voids/holes due to gas bubbles in lava usually extrusive igneous rocks
elastic rebound
rocks snap back into their original position ductile deformation --> brittle deformation
the subducting plate doesnt melt
sediment from ocean floor melts water is squeezed out of oceanic lithospehre, density decreases and it rises up seeps into mantle, creating wedge where water seeps in, lowers MP, and melts
stored energy is released as
seismic waves that radiate in all directions from focus/hypocenter
habit
shape/aggregate of a crystal
Si-O tetrahedron
silicon and oxygen link together first to form Si-O tetrahedron (silicates)
cooling rate and crystals
slower cooling rate= fewer, larger crystals faster cooling rate= many smaller crystals
foreshocks
small earthquakes that come before a major earthquakes only determined foreshocks after mainshock
Pahoehoe lava
smooth surfaced, resembles a twisted braided rope
volcanic/extrusive igneous rocks
solidification of lava/volcanic debris at the surface
earthquakes
sudden ground shaking caused by sudden rapid movement of a sliding fault rocks slide in fractures in crust (faults) faults that dont creep and cause high magnitude earthquakes are the only parts in earths crust that arent moving
viscosity is affected by
temp: hotter magma less viscous composition silica: higher SiO2 content is more viscous dissolved gasses: dissolved water reduces viscosity
using seismology to find the epicenter does not take... into account
the depth of the focus beneath the ground
geotherm
the temperature as a function of depth
moment magnitude
total energy released during an earthquake uses average amount of slip on the fault, area of fault, and strength of faulted rock to determine earthquake strength
partial melting formations
ultramafic rock produces mafic magma mafic rock produces intermediate magma intermediate rock produces felsic magma
Mercalli Intensity Scale
uses california buildings as a standard to measure shaking based on property destruction, so its subjective