Geology Exam 2
ion
an atom where Z (number of protons) does not equal the number of electrons
most polymerization minerals
crystallize at ~700 degrees Celsius
least polymerized minerals
crystallize first starting at ~1200 degrees Celsius
deformation of the ground surface
occur in hours or years, hard to detect
P-waves
primary waves, pressure or push-pull waves
Polymerization
linking of silica tetrahedra
deep focus
occur between ~300 &~670km depth
Augite (pyroxene)
(Ca,Mg,Fe)2Si2O6
olivine
(Mg,Fe)2SiO4
Hornblende (Amphibole)
(Na,Ca)2(Mg,Al,Fe)5Si8O22(OH)2
plagioclase feldspar
(Na,Ca)Al(Si,Al)Si2O8
lowest earthquake recorded
-2
fault formation
1. stress forms in earth's crust 2. crust deforms to accommodate stress 3. rock faults in response to excess stress
highest earthquake recorded
9.5
how much of the crust is oxygen
94%
how much of the crust is composed of silicate minerals
95%
anorthite (dark)
CaAl2Si2O8
biotite (dark)
K(Mg,Fe)3AlSi3O10(OH)2
muscovite (colorless)
KAl(AlSi3)O10(OH)2
potassium feldspar
KAlSi3O8
albite (light)
NaAlSi8O8
Quartz
SiO2, one of the most abundant minerals
element
a pure substance that cannot be separated into other components, defined by atomic number
convergent plate boundaries
all focuses of earthquakes, subduction zone, cascade mtn and japan
silica tetrahedron
basic unit of all silicates
biotite mineral
black, green-black or brown-black. Breaks easily along one plane forming thin, flexible sheets
ancient faults
can reactivate, do not need to form a new fault to get an earthquake
definite chemical composition
can write a formula, may be substitutions in the formula
naturally occurring
cannot be anthropogenic in origin
inorganic
cannot be produced by biological processes
muscovite mineral
colorless to silvery, and breaks easily along one plane forming thin, flexible sheets that may be transparent
hornblende mineral
dark gray to black with small-scale breaking at 56 degrees and 124 degrees. may appear splintery
augite mineral
dark green to brown or black. May form stubby crystals, Breaks at angles of 87 degrees and 93 degrees
foreshocks (cont)
development of smaller cracks eventually connect to form a major fault, do not always occur
independent tetrahedra
do not share any oxygens, bonded by cations, olivine
anomalous animal behavior
dogs barking, chickens not laying, rats on power lines, not scientific
short-term prediction
few hours to a week, relies of foreshocks
smallest earthquakes
few millimeters to centimeters
fault
fracture in rock along which sliding occurs; occurs above 15km depth
normal fault
hanging wall slips down the slope, result of tension(extension) in the crust
reverse fault
hanging wall slips up the slope, result of compression in crust
teeth
if not produced by living organisms, would be mineral apatite
New Madrid Fault
in early 1800s, four earthquakes with magnitudes over 7 in 2 months, 10,000 years old
places which straddle mid-ocean ridges
ireland, azores
collision (continent-continent)
large reverse and thrust faults, shallow and intermediate focus earthquakes, Himalayas
greater the slip
larger the earthquake
stages of earthquake cycle
long period of seismic inactivity, foreshocks, major earthquakes, aftershocks
love wave (l-wave)
make the ground surface tipple side-to-side like a snake
Rayleigh wave (r-wave)
make the ground surface to ripple up and down
homogenous solid
mineral is the same throughout, cannot be broken into simpler compounds, not a mineral if liquid or gas
seismic gaps
more time without earthquake, greater risk and magnitude of future earthquake
mineral
naturally occurring, homogenous solid, definite chemical composition, inorganic, ordered arrangement of the atoms (crystalline)
divergent plate boundaries composed of
normal faults which form at ridges axis transform faults which segment the axis
interplate earthquakes
occur at plate boundaries most common and intense occur at all types of plate boundaries form "seismic zone"
shallow-focus
occur at top ~15km of the Earth, most destructive
intermediate focus
occur between ~15km & ~300km depth
intraplate earthquakes
occur within plate may be intense but generally small result of movement along previously formed faults result of stress built in the plate
potassium feldspar mineral
orange to orange-pink color, and breaks at right angles
Bowen's Reaction Series
order in which minerals will crystallize from a magma
crystalline
orderly and regular repeating geometric pattern of atoms
composition of earth's crust
oxygen, sodium. magnesium, aluminum, silicon, potassium, calcium, iron
olivine mineral
pale or dark olive-green, with short crystals that appear granular (like sand). no distinct breaking surfaces
lower temperature
permits extensive polymerization
epicenter
point on the Earth's surface directly above the focus
high temperatures
reflect higher vibrational energy that prevents extensive polymerization
aftershock (cont)
result of rock slip as the crust responds to new stresses created by the major earthquake
major earthquake
result of slip along a major rupture surface
thrust fault
reverse fault in which the fault is less than 30 degrees from horizontal
at depths over ~670 km
rock is too hot and plastic for earthquakes
hanging wall
rock mass above the fault plane
footwall
rock mass below the fault plane
emission of radon
rocks expand and fracture, water seeps in and radon is pushed out
s-waves
secondary waves, shake or shear waves
body wave
seismic wave that pass through the interior of the Earth
surface waves
seismic waves that travel along the Earth's surface, most are destructive
divergent interplate earthquakes
shallow-focus earthquakes, continental rifts, mid-ocean ridges
earthquake prediction
short term prediction, deformation of the ground surface, seismic gaps, emission of radon gas, anomalous animal behavior
crystal
single, continuous piece of crystal material bounded by flat surfaces (=crystal faces)
strike-slip fault
slip is horizontal, result of shearing in the crust
large earthquakes
slip ranging from 0.5m to 13m
foreshocks
small to moderate earthquakes occurring hours or days before the next earthquake
aftershocks
smaller earthquakes that occur up to a year after the main earthquake
plagioclase feldspar mineral
sodium-rich samples are light in color, and calcium-rich samples are dark in color. Calcium-rich samples may exhibit a purple-blue iridescence. May exhibit fine-scale stripes or bands. Breaks at right angles.
Richter scale
specifies the amplitude of the largest ground motion at a seismograph 100km from the epicenter, logarithmic scale
focus (hypocenter)
spot in the crust where the fault begins to slip
transform plate boundaries
strike-slip faults, shallow-focus, San Andreas fault, Anatolian fault
double chain
tetrahedra share 2 or 3 oxygens, bonded by cations, hornblende
single chains
tetrahedra share 2 oxygens, bonded by cations, augite
sheet silicate
tetrahedra share 3 oxygens, bonded by cations, micas: muscovite and biotite
framework silicates
tetrahedra share all 4 oxygens, feldspars and quarts
intraplate earthquakes rock
transmit seismic waves efficiently, very damaging earthquakes
quartz mineral
usually colorless, white, or gray. May form hexagonal crystals. No distinct breaking surfaces and may appear massive
quartz composes grains of sand
very hard, does not dissolve easily, lack weak atomic bonds