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Primary Structures

Primary Structures. The value of measuring section.

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Primary Structures

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  1. Primary Structures The value of measuring section Measuring section is the process of making detailed notes about each of the layers/intrusions found in an outcrop. The process really forces you to LOOK. We work up or down section as appropriate. Note rock/sediment type, primary and secondary structures, fossils, note color, orient surfaces and lineations with the brunton, etc.

  2. Munsell Rock Color Charts To note colors, I use one of these, but they are expensive. In your notes, just use your own judgment. Also note whether the sample is wet or dry

  3. Graded Beds Flysch: old [Alpine] name for thick sequences of turbidites “laid down in a deep trench marking an active plate boundary (like a subduction zone).” PM p17

  4. Graded Bedding (2) Discuss “Younging direction”.

  5. Cross Beds Ripples, dunes and deltas in cross section, usually truncated tops (younging direction) and current direction indicated Notice the lens in the photo to give scale. Use whatever is the right size and is a known size, coin, a pencil, a ruler, your notebook, etc.

  6. Surface Markings: Load Casts Sand layer over mud, blobs of sand sink into mud.

  7. Flute Casts Vortices dig into the unconsolidated sediment. Shallower and wider downstream.

  8. They curl up when they form, and give the younging direction Mudcracks

  9. Asymmetrical Ripples Steep face on downstream side.

  10. Pillow Lavas Lava erupted under water (MOR, rift valley lakes), or flowed into water (Hawaii)

  11. Basalt is hot when is solidifies, and it shrinks (of course) when it cools Columnar Jointing

  12. Unconformities Angular Unconformity Nonconformity Disconformity

  13. Recognizing Unconformities and erosional surfaces: Channeling

  14. Recognizing Unconformities:Basal Conglomerate

  15. Recognizing Unconformities:Age discordance Givetian 392-385 Mya Unc ~30My Ludlow 423-419 Mya http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1631071308002800

  16. Recognizing Unconformities:Soil Horizons – Root Casts

  17. Halokinesis: Salt layer movementsBuoyancy Salt density about 2200 kg/m3 Sedimentary Rock average density 2500 kg/m3 “When the positive buoyancy [dense sediment over light salt] is sufficient to upwarp” the sediment above, the salt will rise. PM p 26 http://search.datapages.com/data/open/offer.do?target=%2Fspecpubs%2Fmemoir65%2Fch20%2F0413.htm

  18. Halokinesis: Differential loading “This may occur when the downward force on the salt layer varies laterally.” PM p.26

  19. Oil traps – Salt Diapir Diapir, pierces overlying strata Dome, upward bulge

  20. The remaining slides are for home review of Igneous Rocks. If you didn’t feel comfortable with the review check last time, all of the PowerPoints and Homeworks are in the Geology folder accessible from my home pagewww.kean.edu/~csmart

  21. 3 ways of making primary magma, all basaltic Igneous Rocks

  22. Plutonic and Volcanic Igneous Structures Laccolith like a sill , but bows up overlying strata to make a dome

  23. Bowen’s Reaction Series Molten- VERY Hot No solids First mineral to crystallize out Molten- Not so hot 100% Solid

  24. Fine crystals Need a microscope Low silica, HOT, fluid Intermediate High silica, warm, viscous Course crystals Easily seen

  25. A size comparison of the three types of volcanoes

  26. A Pahoehoe lava flow

  27. Typical a’a’ flow Broken, often further from vent

  28. Fluid basalt forms lava tubes Checking Bowens Reaction Series

  29. Materials extruded from a volcano • Pyroclastic materials – “Tephra” Propelled through the Air Types of pyroclastic debris • Dust 0.001 mm and Ash < rice sized • Cinders or Lapilli - pea to walnut-sized material Particles larger than lapilli • Bombs - > 64 mm ejected as hot lava -Surtsey Is. Bombs the size of busses

  30. A nueé ardente on Mt. St. Helens

  31. A volcanic bomb Bomb is approximately 10 cm long Some the size of a Bus

  32. Tephra forms Tuff St. Lucia Anecdote Source:Gerald & Buff Corsi/Visuals Unlimited, Inc.

  33. Tephra layers fine away from source

  34. Pumice • Felsic magmas with high water content may bubble out of a vent as a froth of lava. • Quickly solidifies into the glassy volcanic rock known as Pumice. http://volcanoes.usgs.gov/Products/Pglossary/pumice.html

  35. 4700 BC S Oregon Mt Mazama Eruption and Caldera Collapse Ngorongoro Crater in Tanzania similar 2 mya

  36. Volcanism on a tectonic plate moving over a hot spot

  37. Flood Basalts Hot Spot currently forming Hawaii Hey, the plate changed direction !

  38. Flood Basalts • Fluid basaltic lava extruded from crustal fractures called fissures • e.g., Columbia River Plateau, • Deccan Traps in India • Cover huge areas • Plumes from Mantle

  39. Flood Basalt erupted from fissures - Snake River Plain, southern Idaho Plume Activity

  40. Lava Plateau Formation

  41. Formation of a volcanic neck

  42. Spanish Peaks and Radiating Dikes (southern CO)

  43. Plutonic igneous activity • Types of intrusive igneous features • Dike– a sheetlike injection into a fracture Discordant - cuts across pre-existing • Sill– a sheetlike injection into a bedding plane Concordant - lies parallel to bedding • Laccolith – A mushroom-shaped concordant

  44. A sill in the Salt River Canyon, AZ Sill: Sediments above and below sill are baked. Lava Flow, just baked below.

  45. Why No C-C collisions

  46. Plate tectonics and igneous activity • Igneous activity along plate margins • Mid-Ocean Ridges – Basaltic Pillow Lavas • Great volumes of volcanic rock produced along oceanic ridges – New ocean floor • Mechanism of spreading or “rifting” • Lithosphere pulls apart and thins • Less pressure results in partial melting in mantle http://www.archipelago.nu/SKARGARD/ENGELSKA/ICELAND/surtsey.htm

  47. http://volcanoes.usgs.gov/Products/Pglossary/ancientseq.html Basaltic Pillow Lavas

  48. Plate tectonics and igneous activity • Igneous activity along Subduction zones • Descending plate partially melts • Magma slowly moves upward • Rising magma can form either • A Volcanic Island Arc if ocean-ocean plate collision (Aleutians, Japan, etc.) • A Continental Volcanic Arc if ocean-continent plate collision (Sierra Nevada)

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