Earth Structure and Rock Cycle
Earth Structure and Rock Cycle
Earth Structure and Rock Cycle
and Composition
Layers, Rocks, Minerals and the Rock Cycle
The Layers of the Earth
The Earth is an oblate spheroid – the Solid Earth.
It is composed of a number of different layers as determined
by deep drilling and seismic evidence.
The Four Basic Layers
The crust is the layer that you live on, and it is the most widely
studied and understood.
The mantle is much hotter, has the largest mass, and several layers
(uppermost/rigid mantle, asthenosphere, lower mantle).
The outer core and inner core are even hotter with pressures so
great you would be squeezed into a ball smaller than a marble if you
were able to go to the center of the Earth!
A More Detailed View of Earth’s Structure
The Crust
The Earth's Crust is
like the skin of an
apple. It is very thin in
comparison to the
other three layers.
Basalt is much denser than granite. Because of this the less dense
continents ride on the denser oceanic plates.
The Mantle
The Mantle is the largest layer of the Earth (1800 miles thick – 2/3 of
earth’s mass), it is hot (5100 - 3300◦ F), and the source of most magma →
(lava)
The uppermost part of
the mantle is rigid,
and together with
the crust, forms the
Lithosphere
The middle part of the
upper mantle is
composed of very
hot dense rock that
flows like asphalt,
and it is called –
asthenosphere
The lower mantle is
hot and dense.
The Lithosphere
The crust and the uppermost layer of
the mantle together make up a zone of rigid,
brittle rock called the Lithosphere.
The Lithospheric Plates
• Sedimentary Rocks
form through lithification of
sediments from other rocks
• Metamorphic Rocks
form via recrystallization of
other rocks due to heat,
pressure, and chemical
alteration
IGNEOUS ROCKS
Igneous Rocks Are Subdivided into Two Classes:
Volcanic (Extrusive) Igneous Rocks
Volcanic extrusive igneous rocks form on earth's surface as lava cools
Basalt
Basalt is the most widespread volcanic rock
It is a dark, fine-grained rock
Basalt is the rock of the sea floor
Plutonic (or Intrusive) Igneous Rocks
Plutonic igneous rocks form deep underground where magma cools
slowly; these rocks have a coarse crystalline texture
Granite
Granite is the most widespread of plutonic igneous rocks.
It underlies much of the continental crust.
Igneous Rocks
SEDIMENTARY ROCKS
Most sedimentary rocks are formed of layers of materials
that have washed into lakes, rivers and oceans –
• Sedimentary rocks form strata
• Often layers are tilted by earth movements
• Sedimentary rocks contain fossils
Cementation
Crystallization
Subclasses of Sedimentary Rocks:
FOLIATED NONFOLIATED
Slate Marble
Schist Quartzite
Gneiss
Slate: forms when shale is compressed by heat and pressure; splits easily
Schist: dominated by platy or needle-like minerals that form shiny layers
Gneiss: under pressure the minerals in granite recrystallize to form bands of
light and dark minerals
Marble: Limestone recrystallizes into marble – a denser and more
crystalline form of calcite
Quartzite: Sandstone changes into quartzite; Sand grains recrystallize to
form a hard mass of quartz
Metamorphic Rocks
HOW ROCKS RECYCLE ?
The rock cycle is a general model that describes how
various geological processes create, modify, and
influence rocks
Geologic processes like tectonic folding and faulting exert heat and
pressure on both igneous and sedimentary rocks, altering them physically or
chemically – rocks modified in this way are termed metamorphic rocks
Once in Earth's interior, extreme pressures and temperatures melt the rock
back into magma to begin the rock cycle again