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130210106001 II. 130210106002 III. 130210106003 IV. 130210106004 V. 130210106005 VI. 130210106006 VII. 130210106007 VIII.130210106008 IX. 140213106011 X. 140213106012 I. Introduction to primary and secondary geological structures Study of geological faults, folds, joints and active faulting. Glinometer compass and its use, Primary and Secondary structures, Dip and strike and their representation Folds, faults, joints and unconformitiestheir description, classification, recognition in the field and effects on outstrop patterns. Criteria for the recognition of the top and bottom of sedimentary strata. Preliminary knowledge of foliation, Schistosity and lineatio elementary ideas about geosyncline progenesis, isostasy, continental drift, Island arcs, Structural features of India Primary and secondary structures. Primary: depositional contacts, cross-bedding, ripple markes, Ropy textures in lavas, mud-cracks; Secondary: these are the real structures we’re after- and are due to rock regional deformation. Examples: Folds, faults, shear zones, etc. QuickTime™ and a Photo - JPEG decompressor are needed to see this picture. Folds in Rock A fold is a bent structure that originally was planar, such as a sedimentary bed. Folds may be produced by either horizontal compression or vertical forces in the crust, just as pushing in on opposite sides of a paper or up from below. Terms used to describe the parts of a fold: limb: The two sides of a fold are called limbs. axis: A line drawn along the points of maximum curvature of a layer of a fold. More strictly, it is called hinge line. axial plane: an imaginary plane surface that divides a fold as symmetrically as possible. plunge: If the fold axis is not horizontal, the angle of the axis with the horizontal plane is called plunge. Terms describing a fold. (Tarbuck and Lutgents) Types of folds anticline: upfolds or arches of rock layers syncline: downfolds or troughs of rock layers. monocline: only one direction of dip prevails in a fold system. symmetrical fold: the axial plane is vertical with the limbs dipping symmetrically from the axis asymmetrical fold: the axial plane is tilted from the vertical with one limb dipping more steeply than the other. overturned fold: one limb is tilted beyond the vertical recumbent fold: this is an overturned fold "lying on its side" so that the axial plane is nearly horizontal. An illustration of principle types of folds. Anticlines and synclines in the Calico Hills near Barstow, California. (Hamblin and Christiansen) Folds of deformed sedimentary strata near Palmdale, California. The dashed-line indicates a fault also present. (E.J. Tarbuck) (Top) The San Rafael monocline, Utah. (S. Trimble) (Bottom) Illustration of monocline consisting of bent sedimentary beds caused by faulting in the bedrock below. A recumbent fold in Precambrian rocks of the Umanak area, Greenland. (T.C.R. Pulvertaft) Outcrop (map) view of folds Anticline: the oldest beds are in the center and the beds become progressively younger in each direction. Synclines: the youngest bed is in the center and the beds get progressively older in each direction. Symmetrical folds have equal bed widths on opposite sides of the axial plane, but asymmetrical folds will have different bed widths on the opposite sides. For a plunging anticline, the nose (formed by the intersection of the fold system with a horizontal plane) points in the same direction as the plunge. For a plunging syncline, the nose points in the direction opposite to that of the plunge. The diagram shows the surface of eroded remnants of a syncline and the characteristic core of younger rocks flanked on both sides by older rocks dipping toward the core. (Press and Siever) Anticlines and synclines. The numbers 1 through 6 indicate strata of progressively younger ages. (West, p.203) Symmetrical and asymmetrical anticlines and synclines. Symmetrical folds have equal bed widths on opposite sides of the axial plane, but asymmetrical folds will have different bed widths on the opposite sides. (West, p.203) Plunging folds. Note the nose of a plunging anticline in outcrop points in the direction of the plunge, while the opposite is true of plunging synclines. (Tarbuck and Lutgents) A plunging anticline forms a a V-shape pattern pointing in the direction of plunge. This example is from near St. George, Utah. (Hamblin and Christiansen) Rock fractures: Joints and Faults Joints A joint is a crack along which no appreciable movement has occurred. Most joints are produced when rocks are deformed by tectonic forces, with some exceptions. Eroded joints, Arches National Park, Utah. (W. Clay) Devil’s Tower, Wyoming. The columnar joints form when igneous rocks cool and develop shrinkage fractures producing elongated columns. (Thomason/Stone Images) Joints in granitic rocks near the top of Lembert Dome, Yosemite National Park. The joints were enhanced by weathering. (E.J. Tarbuck) Faults A fault is a fracture with relative movement of the rocks on both sides of it, parallel to the fracture. Fault terminology: strike, dip of fault plane, hanging wall, footwall. A fresh fault scarp after an earthquake in Nevada. (S. Marshak) (a) (b) (a) Slip lineations on a fault surface. (b) Breccia, broken-up rocks along this fault. (S. Marshak) Types of faults: dip-slip fault: normal fault, reverse fault, thrust fault strike-slip fault: left lateral, right lateral oblique-slip fault: has both strike-slip and dip-slip component. Note: The textbook calls it "translation fault", which is rarely used. Types of faults. a) Normal faults, caused by tensional forces, result in extension. b) Reverse faults, caused by compressional forces, result in shortening. c) Strike-slip faults associated with shearing forces. d) Oblique slip suggests a combination of shearing and compression/tension. (Press and Siever) A normal fault. (Tarbuck and Lutgents) A small normal fault along the road to Kolob Terraces just north of Toquerville, Utah. Normal faulting in the Basin and Range Province. Tensional stresses elongated and fractured the crust into numerous blocks. Movement along the fractures tilted the blocks producing parallel mountain ranges. (Tarbuck and Lutgents) The relative movement of a reverse fault The Keystone thrust fault of southern Nevada. Dark-colored limestone (Cambrian) has been thrust over light-colored Jurassic sandstone, younger by some 350 million years. (J.S. Shelton) Diagram for a strike-slip fault (right-lateral). Note how the stream channels have been offset by fault movement. (after R.L. Wesson et al.) Strike-slip faults are commonly expressed by a series of straight linear ridges and troughs that can be traced for long distances. Here the San Andreas fault in southern California offsets a drainage system. the geologic and seismologic challenge is to determine whether such faults are likely to rupture during the life of the structure(i.e., are they "active"?) and, if so, with what displacements, with what geometries, with what magnitudes, and with what likelihoods Over the years, many authors have discussed various definitions of "active" and "inactive" faults. Suffice it is to say that modern geologic studies, together with vastly improved age-dating capabilities, have demonstrated unequivocally that there are all degrees of fault activity, and any categorization into active and inactive features is necessarily arbitrary. In worldwide damdesign practice, repeat times on faults of significant earthquakes of a few thousand years, or a few tens of thousands of years, are often used to distinguish between faults one wishes to worry about and those of no concern.