GEO101 Exam 2 Terms & Practice Questions
The sequence in which different silicate minerals crystallize during the progressive cooling of a melt.
Bowen's reaction series
Rock formed by the freezing of magma underground.
intrusive igneous rock
A blister-shaped igneous intrusion that forms when magma injects between layers underground in a manner that pushes overlying layers upward to form a dome.
laccolith
A thick slurry formed when volcanic ash and debris mix with water, either in rivers or from rain or melting snow and ice on the flank of a volcano.
lahar
Tiny glass shards formed when a fine spray of exploded lava freezes instantly upon contact with the atmosphere
ash
A volcano that has erupted within the past few centuries and will likely erupt again
active volcano
Tiny solid particles or liquid droplets that remain suspended in the atmosphere for a long time.
aerosol
A gently sloping apron of sediment dropped by an ephemeral stream at the base of a mountain in arid or semiarid regions.
alluvial fan
The process of magma contamination in which blocks of wall rock fall into a magma chamber and dissolve.
assimilation
A clastic sedimentary rock containing both quartz and feldspar grains.
arkose
A vast composite, intrusive, igneous rock body up to several hundred km long and 100 km wide, formed by the intrusion of numerous plutons in the same region.
batholith
A distinct layer of sediment or sedimentary rock, typically reflecting continuous deposition during a relatively short time interval.
bed
Sedimentary rock formed from material (such as shells) produced by living organisms
biochemical sedimentary rock
Large, angular pyroclastic fragments consisting of volcanic rock, broken up during the eruption.
block
Lava that is so viscous that it breaks into boulder-like blocks as it moves; typically, such lavas are andesitic or rhyolitic.
blocky lava
Larger blobs of lava that squirt out of a vent and then solidify become streamlined bombs, whose surfaces are typically streaked and polished.
bomb
Coarse sedimentary rock consisting of angular fragments; or rock broken into angular fragments by faulting.
breccia
A large circular depression with steep walls and a fairly flat floor, formed after an eruption as the center of the volcano collapses into the drained magma chamber below
caldera
The phase of lithification in which cement, consisting of minerals that precipitate from groundwater, partially or completely fills the spaces between clasts and attaches each grain to its neighbor.
cementation
Sedimentary rocks made up of minerals that precipitate directly from water solution.
chemical sedimentary rock
A subaerial volcano consisting of a cone-shaped pile of tephra whose slope approaches the angle of repose for tephra.
cinder cone
Sedimentary rock consisting of cemented-together detritus derived from the weathering of preexisting rock.
clastic sedimentary rock
A black, organic rock consisting of greater than 50% carbon; it forms from the buried and altered remains of plant material.
coal
A type of fracturing that yields roughly hexagonal columns of basalt; columnar joints form when a dike, sill, or lava flow cools.
columnar jointing
The phase of lithification in which the pressure of the overburden on the buried rock squeezes out water and air that was trapped between clasts, and the clasts press tightly together.
compaction
Very coarse-grained sedimentary rock consisting of rounded clasts
conglomerate
Thick salt deposits that form as a consequence of precipitation from saline water.
evaporite
Violent volcanic eruptions that produce clouds and avalanches of pyroclastic debris
explosive eruption
A volcano that was active in the past but has now shut off entirely and will not erupt in the future.
extinct volcano
Rock that forms by the freezing of lava above ground, after it flows or explodes out (extrudes) onto the surface and comes into contact with the atmosphere or ocean.
extrusive igneous rock
A conduit in a magma chamber in the shape of a long crack through which magma rises and erupts at the surface.
fissure
Vast sheets of basalt that spread from a volcanic vent over an extensive surface of land; they may form where a rift develops above a continental hot spot, and where lava is particularly hot and has low viscosity.
flood basalt
The empty space left when a lava tunnel drains; this happens when the surface of a lava flow solidifies while the inner part of the flow continues to stream downslope.
lava tube
The transformation of loose sediment into solid rock through compaction and cementation.
lithification
The melting in a rock of the minerals with the lowest melting temperatures, while other minerals remain solid.
partial melting
The rind of a pillow momentarily stops the flow's advance, but within minutes the pressure of the lava squeezing into the pillow breaks the rind, and a new blob of lava squirts out, freezes, and produces another pillow. A flow made of these blobs is called pillow lava.
pillow lava
An irregular or blob-shaped intrusion; can range in size from tens of m across to tens of km across
pluton
A glassy igneous rock that forms from felsic frothy lava and contains abundant (over 50%) pore space.
pumice
Fragmented material that sprayed out of a volcano and landed on the ground or sea floor in solid form.
pyroclastic debris
A fast-moving avalanche that occurs when hot volcanic ash and debris mix with air and flow down the side of a volcano.
pyroclastic flow
Rock made from fragments that were blown out of a volcano during an explosion and were then packed or welded together.
pyroclastic rock
The seaward migration of a shoreline caused by a lowering of sea level.
regression
Relatively small elongated ridges that form on a sedimentary bed surface at right angles to the direction of current flow.
ripple mark
Coarse-grained sedimentary rock consisting almost entirely of quartz.
sandstone
A glassy, mafic, igneous rock containing abundant air-filled holes.
scoria
A depression, created as a consequence of subsidence, that fills with sediment.
sedimentary basin
A relict of wall rock surrounded by intrusive rock when the intrusive rock freezes.
xenolith
A lava flow with a rubbly surface.
a'a'
(1) A circular depression at the top of a volcanic mound; (2) a depression formed by the impact of a meteorite.
crater
Internal laminations in a bed, inclined at an angle to the main bedding; cross beds are a relict of the slip face of dunes or ripples.
cross bed
A rock that consists of minerals that grew when a melt solidified, and eventually interlock like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle.
crystalline igneous rock
A wedge of sediment formed at a river mouth when the running water of the stream enters standing water, the current slows, the stream loses competence, and sediment settles out.
delta
The process by which sediment settles out of a transporting medium.
deposition
A setting in which sediments accumulate; its character (fluvial, deltaic, reef, glacial, etc.) reflects local conditions.
depositional environment
All of the physical, chemical, and biological processes that transform sediment into sedimentary rock and that alter the rock after the rock has formed.
diagenesis
A tabular (wall-shaped) intrusion of rock that cuts across the layering of country rock.
dike
A name sometimes used for a carbonate rock containing a high proportion of dolomite.
dolostone
A volcano that has not erupted for hundreds to thousands of years but does have the potential to erupt again in the future.
dormant volcano
A pile of sand generally formed by deposition from the wind.
dune
An eruption that yields mostly lava, not ash.
effusive eruption
The grinding away and removal of Earth's surface materials by moving water, air, or ice.
erosion
Episodes when volcanoes extrude lava and pyroclastic debris.
eruption
The character of a particular volcanic eruption; geologists name styles based on typical examples (e.g., Hawaiian, Strombolian).
eruptive style
The remnant, or trace, of an ancient living organism that has been preserved in rock or sediment.
fossil
The process by which a magma becomes progressively more silicic as it cools, because early-formed crystals settle out.
fractional crystallization
A rock consisting of igneous chunks and/or shards that are packed together, welded together, or cemented together after having solidified.
fragmental igneous rock
Igneous rock consisting entirely of glass, or of tiny crystals surrounded by a glass matrix
glassy igneous rock
A layer of sediment, deposited by a turbidity current, in which grain size varies from coarse at the bottom to fine at the top.
graded bed
Rock that forms when hot molten rock (magma or lava) cools and freezes solid.
igneous rock
Any pyroclastic particle that is 2 to 64 mm in diameter (i.e., marble-sized); the particles can consist of frozen lava clots, pumice fragments, or ash clumps.
lapilli
A region in which huge volumes of lava and/or ash erupted over a relatively short interval of geologic time.
large igneous province (LIP)
Molten rock that has flowed out onto the Earth's surface.
lava
A dome-like mass of rhyolitic lava that accumulates above the eruption vent.
lava dome
Sheets or mounds of lava that flow onto the ground surface or sea floor in molten form and then solidify.
lava flow
A column of molten lava spraying upward under pressure from a volcanic vent.
lava fountains
Molten rock beneath the Earth's surface
magma
A space below ground filled with magma.
magma chamber
Very fine-grained sedimentary rock that will not easily split into sheets.
mudstone
An igneous rock consisting of a solid mass of volcanic glass.
obsidian
Shale containing kerogen.
oil shale
Sedimentary rock (such as coal) formed from carbon-rich relicts of organisms
organic sedimentary rock
A lava flow with a surface texture of smooth, glassy, ropelike ridges.
pahoehoe
Rock that forms either by the cementing together of fragments broken off preexisting rock or by the precipitation of mineral crystals out of water solutions at or near the Earth's surface.
sedimentary rock
A distinctive shape or form (examples—bed, ripple mark, cross bed) formed during deposition of sediment.
sedimentary structure
Very fine-grained sedimentary rock that breaks into thin sheets.
shale
A subaerial volcano with a broad, gentle dome, formed either from low-viscosity basaltic lava or from large pyroclastic sheets.
shield volcano
A nearly horizontal tabletop-shaped tabular intrusion that occurs between the layers of country rock.
sill
Fine-grained sedimentary rock generally composed of very small quartz grains.
siltstone
Rhyolitic lava freezes while still in the vent and then pushes upward as a column-like spire up to 100 m above the vent.
spire
A large, cone-shaped subaerial volcano consisting of alternating layers of lava and tephra
stratovolcano
A volcano that erupts a vast amount (more than 1,000 cubic km) of volcanic material during a single event; none have erupted during recorded human history.
supervolcano
A basaltic volcanic glass
tachylite
Unconsolidated accumulations of pyroclastic grains.
tephra
A pyroclastic igneous rock composed of volcanic ash and fragmented pumice, formed when accumulations of the debris cement together.
tuff
Open holes in igneous rock formed by the preservation of bubbles in magma as the magma cools into solid rock.
vesicle
The resistance of material to flow.
viscosity
A curving chain of active volcanoes formed adjacent to a convergent plate boundary.
volcanic arc
Tiny glass shards formed when a fine spray of exploded lava freezes instantly upon contact with the atmosphere.
volcanic ash
A mixture of water and pyroclastic debris that moves downslope like wet concrete.
volcanic debris flow
(1) A vent from which melt from inside the Earth spews out onto the planet's surface; (2) a mountain formed by the accumulation of extrusive volcanic rock.
volcano