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GL1 III KI 3 SPECIFICATION *The recognition on geological problem maps and description of: (i) Horizontal beds, dipping beds, strike and dip. Folds and faults as products of tectonic stresses Folds: limb, hinge, axis, anticline, syncline, axial plane trace, symmetrical and asymmetrical folds. Faults: (i) dip-slip: normal, reverse, thrust; throw – amount, relative movement of footwall/hanging wall (ii) strike-slip: transcurrent. Fault displacement (=net slip). (ii) Unconformities as hiatuses in the geological record. The formation of unconformities by Earth movements and sea level changes. The use of unconformities in dating Earth movements. Unconformities with or without angular discordance (iii) Intrusive and extrusive bodies (dyke, sill, pluton, lava flow); metamorphic aureoles; mineral veins; superficial deposits (alluvial, glacial). a BED of rock • • • • • A layer Stratum Plural – strata Top and bottom defined by bedding planes Usually represents a minor gap in deposition, allowing the sediment to settle Law of original horizontality • All beds deposited horizontally to start with SEDIMENTARY Superposition • Oldest beds on the base, younger on the top • Which is why way up structures are so useful – so we can work out which way up the rocks are SO WHAT WOULD THAT LOOK LIKE FROM ABOVE? • Concentric shapes • Like contour lines This would be the MAP version Law of SUPERPOSITION (oldest rocks at the base) younger older Trevor Quarry, Llangollen Geological events can be placed in relative time scales…. • OLDER THAN • YOUNGER THAN WAY-UP CRITERIA • Small features on bedding planes which tell us where the surface was • 2 minutes … In pairs … take it in turns to draw a diagram and for the other to name the structure and how it forms and a scale! RAIN IMPRINTS Rain falling onto soft sediment may leave a small CRATER Show sediment was pliable, dry and it rained heavily! But not too much to turn the area to mush. GRADED BEDDING • Heavier fragments fall fastest • In deep marine environments, turbidity currents bring unsorted material in, this settles out, largest particles first MUD CRACKS • Drying out of mud • Curls up at edges • Polygonal pattern LOAD CASTS / SOLE STUCTURES / mud volcanoes / flame structures • Sandy layer of sediment deposited over a muddy layer of sediment • Sand is more dense and pushes downwards into the mud layer • Mud layer “erupts” through WASHOUTS • Older bed eroded as river washes out sediment Cross bedding/dune bedding • Formation of a sand dune ….. • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yRRl3HyR 3mc (NB: note animal adaptions to living in such climates) • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iMCY9W Mnzaw&feature=channel (Namibian desert) Ripples • Symmetrical – bi-directional current – tidal area, waves • Asymmetrical – uni-directional current – river • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KYvWwbEi0A0&feature=r elated • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-sSh_EjCwg&feature=related • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bVSH1q2vhI&feature=related http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DdIUuUY0L9c PILLOW LAVA • Underwater eruption • Pillow shapes – rapid solidification in contact with cold water • Convex upper surface • Sag on lower surface Revision: • • • • Use GeoScience: Page 191 – superposition Page 192 – way up structures Page 193 – included fragments What is the name given to this structure which could tell you an age relationship and the way up of the beds? INCLUDED FRAGMENTS Older rock INCLUDED FRAGMENTS • PEBBLES – are fragments from an OLDER bed of rock which has been eroded • Conglomerate • Breccia Included fragments – older than the bed they are contained in Fragments of Rock A younger Rock A older They can also be cut by igneous dykes but more later! BGS map of Kirby Stephen How do you know that the beds are horizontal? BGS map of Kirby Stephen How do you know that the beds are horizontal? Bedding is parallel to the contours Rocks ORIGINALLY DEPOSITED HORIZONTALLY can get DEFORMED • Tilting (FROM THE HORIZONTAL) we call DIPPING • And the wavy patterns we call FOLDING • Push the edges of the page in front of you together …. You’ll notice it buckles up into wavy patterns Geologists MEASURE the dip of the rock from the horizontal = the ANGLE OF DIP and we also record which direction that points = DIP DIRECTION Dip, strike and apparent dip. • The strike is a horizontal line drawn on a bedding plane. – Can be measured by using a compass to give a direction. • The Dip is the maximum amount that the bed is inclined from the horizontal. – It can be measured by using a clinometer to measure the angle and a compass to give the direction. MARKER BED • We tend to use a MARKER BED to see where the layer is Wenlock Edge BGS map shows gently dipping rocks. Which way are the rocks dipping? Ordovician Silurian diagram of an escarpment Dip slope Scarp slope More resistant rock Less resistant rock Escarpments have a dip of 5-10o Escarpments are formed by gently dipping rocks. The angle of dip is usually 5o – 10o. Limestone dips away from the viewer Eglwyseg limestone escarpment, Llangollen, N. Wales Rocks can also be tilted to be nearly vertical Vertical beds exposed on coast. Three Chimneys, Marloes Bay, Dyfed Natural arch produced by tough limestones which are near vertical. Durdle Door, Dorset Postcard from BGS Remind yourself ….. • What have you learned so far today? • Revision here …. http://www.geologyin.com/2014/11/terminology-of-brittle- deformation.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+AmazingGeologist+%28Amazing+Geologist%29