Unit 4.3 Relative Dating
Igneous
a type of rock that forms from the cooling of molten rock at or below the surface
Disconformity
a type of unconformity in which the sedimentary layers above and below the unconformity are parallel
Index fossil
fossils of widely distributed organisms that lived only during a short geologic period that can be used to date and correlate the rock strata
Deposition
the process in which material such as sediments is laid down
Biodiversity
the variety of life in the world or in a particular habitat or ecosystem; Early rock record has very little, but the increase in variety is visible on the rock record over time
radiocarbon dating (carbon-14 dating)
type of radiometric dating that can be used to date organic material up to 50,000 years old
Unconformities
A break or gap in the geologic rock record created when rock layers are eroded or when sediment is not deposited for a long period of time; it represents a missing segment of Earth's history
Uniformitarianism
A principle that geologic processes that occurred in the past can be explained by current geologic processes: present is the key to the past.
Biozone
A section of strata containing fossils characteristic to a specific geologic time frame
Metamorphic
A type of rock that forms from an existing rock that is changed by heat, pressure, or chemical reactions.
Sedimentary
A type of rock that forms when particles from other rocks or the remains of plants and animals are pressed and cemented together
Nonconformity
An type of unconformity in which older,eroded metamorphic or intrusive igneous rocks are overlain by younger sedimentary strata.
Folds (in rock layers)
Bending or buckling ofthe rock layers caused by movement in the Earth's crust.
fossil succession
Change in fossils/fossil distribution in the rock record over time; Fossil organisms succeed one another in a definite and determinable order, and any time period can be recognized by its fossil content.
Biostratigraphy
Field of geology that uses biozones to study and date rock units based on the fossils present
Dike
Formed when magma forces itself vertically in rock layers
Sill
Formed when magma squeezes between horizontal layers of rock
Fault
Fracture in a rock (layer) along which movement has occurred.
Intrusion
Mass of igneous rock formed as magma is forced into or between other rocks and then solidifies.
Absolute dating
Method of measuring the age in years of a fossil, rock, feature, or a geologic event based on radiometric decay rates
relative dating
Method which places geologic events, rock layers, and fossils in chronological order; not exact age
Tilting (of rock layers)
Occurs when rock layers are uplifted unevenly, especially on one end, and are no longer horizontal
Principle (Law) of Cross-cutting relationships
States that any geologic feature that cuts partially though or completely across another feature is the younger of the two features.
Principle (Law) of Inclusions
States that any rock that is enveloped, or completely enclosed by another rock must be older than the rock that surrounds it.
Principle (Law) of Superposition
States that in undisturbed sequence of sedimentary strata, the oldest rock layer will be at the bottom and the youngest will be a t the top. This is the basis for all relative dating and is the fundamental concept in studying Earth's history.
Principle (Law) of Lateral Continuity
States that rock formations that have been subdivided since their original formation are continuous with each other.
Principle (Law) of Original Horizontality
States that sedimentary rock formations were first formed in horizontal layers.
Solidification
The change of state from a liquid to a solid; magma changing to rock
Weathering
The chemical and physical processes that break down rock at Earth's surface.
Catastrophism
The principle that states that changes in the earth's crust during geological history have resulted chiefly from sudden violent and unusual events.
Erosion
The process by which wind, water, ice, or gravity transports soil and sediment from one location to another
Uranium dating
Type of radiometric dating used to date rocks and fossils older than 50,000 years in age.
Angular Unconformity
Type of unconformity; Erosional surface in which the sedimentary rock layers below the surface are folded, uplifted, or tilted and then a younger horizontal layer is deposited on top.