geology exam 2
5 Main Mineral criteria
1) naturally occurring 2) inorganic 3) solid element or compound 4) definite chemical composition 5) regular internal crystal structure
during mountain building, as crustal thickness increases, some of the added thickness goes into depending the root, and some adds to the height of the mountain range. Approximately how much of an increase in crustal thickness is required to add 2 meters to the elevation of a mountain range?
10 meters
say we have a rock sample with 100 parent atoms and 1,500 daughter atoms, how many half lives have elapsed since it formed?
4
Minerals
A solid inorganic substance of natural occurrence.
ox bow lake
An arc-shaped lake which has been cut off from a meandering river
Basalt
Mafic (high iron, dark toned), volcanic (extrusive, aphanitic)
what are the top 3 elements in continental crust, by weight percentage
Oxygen (47%) silicon (28%) and Aluminum (8.1%)
recurrence interval for a flood of rank M is just the inverse of probability
T=1/P=(N+1)/M
alluvial fan
a fan-shaped mass of material deposited by a stream when the slope of the land decreases sharply
stream
a flowing water within a channel (includes rivers)
delta
a low triangular area where a river divides before entering a larger body of water
capacity
a measure of the total load of material a stream can move
hydrograph
a plot of discharge or stage over time
drainage basin
a region from which a stream draws water
stage
a rise in the water
longitudinal profile
a sketch of a stream's elevation from source to mouth
rock
a solid aggregate of one or more minerals, or mineral materials
unconformity
a time gap in the rock record, from non deposition of erosion
the evacuation of a city in advance of a hurricane is an example of
an adjustment
decompression melting
as rock moves up, towards the surface, it experiences a drop in pressure, this will cause the melting temperature of the minerals in the rock to decrease. Then can allow some of the minerals to melt
Effects of urbanization or development on flood plain
asphalt and concrete, buildings and land fill, storm drains, vegetation loss
gravel would normally be carried as what type of load by a stream
bed load
intrusive/plutonic rocks cooled slowly deep beneath Earth's surface
big to moderate sized visible crystals
floodplains
broad, fairly flat expanse of land covered with sediment around the stream channel. An area into which the stream spills over during floods
how does sedimentary rocks form
by weathering of pre-existing rocks minerals, lithification
erosion concentrated in valleys
can cause peaks to become higher
Common nonsilicate minerals
carbonates, sulfates, sulfides, oxides, native elements
suppose you are told that the area where you lived was once a shallow sea that evaporated. What kind of rock are you most likely to find hat is related to that time
chemical
sedimentary rocks
clastic sediment and clastic sedimentary rocks
caldera
collapsed magma chamber
volcanoes are
composed of different materials
gravel
conglomerate, ranges from rice grains to oranges
recurrence interval
curve is constructed by plotting discharge (or stage) as a function
pyroclastic flows
dense cloud formed from combination of tephra and volcanic gases
sedimentary rocks transportation process sorts grains so
deposits may have characteristic grain size (e.g., sand on a beach)
fossil succession
describes the predictability of fossil distribution through time. Fossils which are commonly preserved in sedimentary rocks are extremely useful as time markers for relative age dating. This is because specific fossils are only found within a limited, often narrow, time range
magma viscosity
escaping gases drive volcanic eruptions
mountains are areas of
extra crustal thickness
vegetation loss
farm lands and urban areas remove natural vegetation and expose the soil
rhyolite
felsic (low iron, light toned), volcanic (extrusive, aphanitic)
The Rise and Fall of Mountains
for every 1,000 meters of rock eroded from mountains, isostasy results in just 200 meters decrease in elevation
how does magma viscosity impact the type of volcanic eruption we should expect
gases are dissolved in magma, pressure on magma decreases as magma rises toward surface, gases are released
does does igneous rocks form
hot, molten rock material
reasons for floodplain occupation
ignorance of flood hazards, inexpensive land, nutrient rich soils
andesite
intermediate, volcanic (Extrusive, aphanitic)
why are mountains so long lived
isostasy (theory of floating) - deep root floats back up, partially replacing material lost to erosion
density of continental crust is about 80% of the density of mantle rock
it floats with 20% sticking up, and 80% forming the root
a 50 year flood occurs this year in a stream near where you live. How likely is it that a 50 year flood will occur next year
just as likely as it was this year
braided stream
localized sediments developed in the channel with obstacles and the localized sediments divide the channel into a complex system of many channels-sediment choked
limited by the available data
long term data sets are hard to come by, limited observations do not indicate what could happen, only what has been seen and recorded
lava flows
low viscosity lava, transported to front of lava flows in long lava tubes, build up in a series of layers
wet melting
melting caused by introducing water into a rock
rocks that are formed by the crystallization of new minerals in the solid state (without melting) due to high heat and/or pressure are
metamorphic
which plate tectonic setting produces partial melting that is due to rock experiencing a reduction in pressure (i.e., decompression)
mid-ocean ridge
uniformititarianism
most features we see are the product of slow, gradual processes, which we can observe today, acting over many millions of years. The present is the key to the past
lahars
mudflows formed when volcanic debris mixes with streams of melting ice
common silicate minerals
muscovite, Biotite, Quartz, Feldspar, Pyroxene, and Olivine
different sizes
note size of trees on volcano slope
isotopes
number of neutrons for an element may not be the same, variable numbers of neutrons possible
faunal succession
observation that assemblages of fossil plants and animals follow or succeed each other in time in a predictable manner, even when found in different places
flood
occurs when input exceeds output. Excess rain or snowmelt or temporary blockages are common causes
cross-cutting relationships
older rocks may be cut by younger rocks or features
where are the oldest rocks on the atlantic seafloor located
on the outer edges of the ocean basin
relative dating key principles
original horizontality, superposition, cross-cutting relationships, inclusions, faunal/fossil succession
The recurrence interval is the time interval we should expect
over the long term between events of a particular size
granite
plutonic (intrusive, phaneritic), felsic (low iron, light toned)
diorite
plutonic (intrusive, phaneritic), intermediate
gabbro
plutonic (intrusive, phaneritic), mafic (high iron, dark toned)
Peridotite
plutonic (intrusive, phaneritic), ultramafic
how does metamorphic rocks form
pre-existing rock or minerals heat, pressure, and chemically active fluids cause changes in rock without melting heat increases pressure increases fluids become heated and circulate
partial melting
produces more silica-rich melt (magma) relative to the rock being melted
relative dating
putting events in order
radiometric dating
radioactive isotopes decay over time, with a particular half life. Measuring the ratio of parent to daughter gives us the number of half lives elapsed
800 meters of change accommodated by
raising the crustal root
storm drains
rapid delivery of storm water to streams causing increase in storm height
asphalt and concrete
reduce infiltration
buildings and land fill
reduced water volume, raises stream height
streams can split up
reducing the ability to rapidly carry water away
sedimentary rocks rock names
reflect grain size
tephra
represents particles blasted into air by eruption, volcanic bombs and ash are found near and far from eruption source
the lettered groups in the figure below show the arrival times of the three main types of seismic waves. Group K represents the second set of waves to arrive at each station. What type of wave does group K correspond to?
s, or shear
sand
sandstone, ranges from sugar to coarse salt
point bar
sediment deposited on the insides of meanders
original horizontality
sedimentary rocks are deposited in nearly horizontal layers
3 main types of rock
sedimentary, metamorphic, igneous
clay
shale, mudstone, smaller than granulated sugar
3 main types of volcanoes
shield, stratovolcano, and cinder cone
how does silica affect magma viscosity
silica is a combination of oxygen and silicon that combines with other elements to form minerals (less silica=low viscosity) (more silica=high viscosity)
silt
siltstone, smaller than granulated sugar
meander
streams don't flow in straight lines and erode old banks and create new banks, and thus bends form in the streams, curves in a stream (or river)
elements
substance composed of atoms with the same number of protons
eruption products
tephra, gases, lava flows, pyroclastic flows, lahars
flood plain
the flat, wide area of land along a river
base level
the lowest elevation to which the stream can erode downward (often lake or sea level elev)
cut bank
the outside and downstream side of the meander, faster water flows
the focus of an earthquake is
the point on the fault surface where seismic energy is first released
if you go out equal distances on either side of a mid-ocean ridge and measure the magnetic polarity, those polarities will be
the same
gradient
the steepness of the stream channel
load
the total quantity of material that a stream transports by all methods (traction, saltation, suspended, and dissolved)
discharge
the volume of water flowing past a given point/cross section in a specified length of time
why are mountains there
thicker crust
Extrusive/volcanic rocks cool quickly at or near Earth's surface
tiny to invisible crystals
flood frequency/flood-recurrence curve
tool to evaluate frequency of flood events
purely statistical
treats floods as purely random events, doesn't capture any understanding of, or change in, cases for flooding
complex impact craters have a central peak unlike simple craters
true
eclogite
ultramafic, volcanic (extrusive, aphanitic)
superposition
undeformed sequence (Stack) of rocks, the younger rocks overlie the older rocks
evenly distributed erosion causes
uniform lowering of mountains
volcano type and eruption style
varies with plate setting
how does temperature content affect magma viscosity
viscosity of materials decreases with increasing temperature
gases
water vapor, sulfur dioxide, carbon dioxide, may affect climate patterns
what type of melting does subduction produce?
wet
two types of melting
wet and decompression
the big island of hawaii is the present day position of a hot spot. Compared to the islands to the northwest, such as Maui, Molokai, Oahu, the big island of Hawaii is
younger
inclusions
younger rocks may incorporate pieces of older rocks