Strike and Dip: Structural Geology
Strike and Dip: Structural Geology
I think that the red bed came first, then green, then yellow, then black, then the whole sequence was tilted 45% to the North.
45 N N S
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Here the strain is more akin to brittle as the cards slide past each other without deforming
GEOLOGIC STRUCTURES
STRAIN STRESS Brittle Ductile Folding Boudinage Monoclinal folds Elastic Compression Reverse faults (Thrust faults) Tension Shear Normal faults Strike-slip (Transform) faults
Precambrian
Cretaceous
GEOLOGIC STRUCTURES
STRAIN STRESS Brittle Ductile Folding Boudinage Monoclinal folds Elastic Compression Reverse and Thrust faults Tension Shear Normal faults Strike-slip (Transform) faults
GEOLOGIC STRUCTURES
STRAIN STRESS Brittle Ductile Folding Boudinage Monoclinal folds Elastic Compression Reverse and Thrust faults Tension Shear Normal faults Strike-slip (Transform) faults
U D
Slickensides
GEOLOGIC STRUCTURES
STRAIN STRESS Brittle Ductile Folding Boudinage Monoclinal folds Elastic Compression Reverse and Thrust faults Tension Shear Normal faults Strike-slip (Transform) faults
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GEOLOGIC STRUCTURES
STRAIN STRESS Brittle Ductile Folding Boudinage Monoclinal folds Elastic Compression Reverse and Thrust faults Tension Shear Normal faults Strike-slip (Transform) faults
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GEOLOGIC STRUCTURES
STRAIN STRESS Brittle Ductile Elastic Compression Joints Tension Shear Joints Joints
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Shield or Craton is the stable interior of a continent characteristically composed of ancient crystalline basement rock
Platform is the relatively horizontal undeformed sedimentary rocks onlapping the basement rock.
Figure 14.3
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Plutonic igneous
Volcanic igneous
Sedimentary
Metamorphic
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ISOSTACY
The floating of the Earths crust on the denser mantle so that vertical motions take place to achieve a balance between upward buoyancy and downward gravity.
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Figure 14.C
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Figure 14.12AB
Appalachian Orogeny
Figure 14.12CD
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Figure 14.12DE
Figure 14.12F
Figure 14.13
Figure 14.15AB
Cordilleran Orogney
Figure 14.16
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Terranes are foreign pieces of land pasted on to the edge of a continent. Usually start of as ocean islands.
Figure 14.11
Figure 14.18
Fault-block mountains
Mountains can also be formed by the extension of the Earths crust. Produces Horst and Graben topography in which the higher Horsts become mountains. Grand Teton mountains in Wyoming are a prime example of this type of mountain.
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Can still produce spectacular landforms when uplift occurs due to downcutting of stream systems and differential weathering.
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Cuestas
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Mass Wasting
Shear stress vs. Shear strength
Shear stress created by gravity pulling on a slope
Controlled by mass and slope
Shear strength provided by the internal friction within the slope material
Slope Stabililty
Mass and slope Climate, Vegetation Water (groundwater) Materials
Rock type, sediment (fine vs. coarse), soil.
S.F.=1
Shear stress=Shear strength --> slope failure
MATERIAL IN MOTION
Bedrock Debris- (soil, sediment)
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Controlling Factors
Slope angle Local relief Thickness of debris over bedrock Planes of weakness ( in bedrock)
bedding planes; foliation; joints parallel to slope most dangerous
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Controlling Factors
Climatic controls
Ice Water Precipitation Vegetation
Gravity
Shear force Normal force Shear strength
Controlling Factors
Water
adds weight increased pore pressure in saturated debris decreases shear strength water lubricates the material
Mass Wasting
Triggers: Natural/transient
Climate/Weather changes
Sudden increase in moisture
Earthquakes
Triggering Mechanisms
Overloading Undercutting Earthquakes
Anthropogenic
Loading Slope perturbation (excavation or filling) Changes in water content
Addition of water through irrigation, septic systems, artificial ponds or leaky in-ground pools, etc., loosens up slope material and adds weight, promoting slope failure
irrigation
Preventing Landslides
Preventing mass wasting of debris Preventing rockfalls and rockslides on highways
Devegetation concentrates surface runoff and enhances erosion, resulting in steeper slopes. Reduced interception and evaporation increases amount of water in ground. (Also, construction of logging roads result in oversteepening.)
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Drains and trenches keep water from infiltrating the top of a slump
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