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CHATPER 4

CHATPER 4. LESSON 2 THE RELATIVE AGE OF ROCKS. http://xeontribe.com/weird-and-breathtaking-rock-formation/weird-rocks-formation-01 /. HOW OLD ARE FOCK LAYERS?. Most of the stone that is mined in Florida is used for road construction.  .

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CHATPER 4

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  1. CHATPER 4 LESSON 2 THE RELATIVE AGE OF ROCKS http://xeontribe.com/weird-and-breathtaking-rock-formation/weird-rocks-formation-01/

  2. HOW OLD ARE FOCK LAYERS? Most of the stone that is mined in Florida is used for road construction.  http://www.dep.state.fl.us/geology/geologictopics/minerals.htm RELATIVE AGE A ROCK’S AGE COMPARED TO THE AGE OF OTHER ROCKS. ABSOLUTE AGE THE NUMBER OF YEARS THAT HAVE PASSED SINCE THE ROCK FORMED. (ROCK CYCLE 3:16)

  3. LAW OF SUPERPOSITION(Good animation on DE – law of superposition) According to the law of superposition ,undisturbed horizontal sedimentary rock layers the oldest layer is at the bottom. Each higher layer is younger than the layers below it. Ordering the Grand Canyon’s HistoryThe law of superposition can be applied to the layers exposed in the Grand Canyon.Interpreting IllustrationsWhich layer is the oldest? youngest?

  4. Clues from Igneous Rock Extrusion Lava that hardens on the surface and forms igneous rock. Intrusive Magma may push into bodies of rock below the surface. There the magma cools and hardens in to a mass of igneous rock called intrusive. An intrusion is always younger than the rock layers around and beneath it. Fault A break in Earth’s crust. Forces inside the Earth cause movement of the rock on opposite sides of a fault.

  5. http://www.nps.gov/history/history/online_books/geology/publications/state/tx/1968-7/sec1.htmhttp://www.nps.gov/history/history/online_books/geology/publications/state/tx/1968-7/sec1.htm FIG. 24. Sketch showing intrusions and extrusions in cross section and plan views. A, Volcanic neck, the feeder pipe for a volcano. B, Volcanic neck after erosion has removed the cone. C, Sill, sheet of igneous rock that has spread laterally along the beds. D, A sill exposed by erosion. E, Intrusive plug that forced its way upward through bedded rocks. F, The top of a plug uncovered by erosion with upturned beds exposed on the flank. G, Laccolith, a tackhead-shaped intrusion that spread laterally along the bedding and arched the overlying rocks. H, Eroded laccolith exposed at the surface. The dip of the flanking hogbacks is less than in the plug (E, F) that cuts across the bedding. J, Dike, intrusive rock that fills a fissure that cuts across bedded rocks. This fissure filling cuts across the bedding and thereby differs from a sill (C). K, Lava flow that came from a dike feeder fracture, which is the source of most lava in the Big Bend.

  6. San Andreas fault. Aerial photograph of the San Andreas fault crossing the Carrizo Plain of California, USA. The San Andreas fault is one of the world's great seismic faults, forming the boundary between the Pacific and North American tectonic plates. It is marked by the valley-like depression running from top to bottom of the picture. Ridges and rifts line either side. This fractured landscape is formed by the pressures created by the opposing, lateral movements of the two tectonic plates. The San Andreas fault extends almost the full length of California and is responsible for major earthquakes. DE – fault animation http://www.sciencephoto.com/media/167148/enlarge

  7. How do fossils show age? Index Fossil These fossils help geologists match rock layers. A fossil must be widely distributed and represent an organism that existed for a geologically short period of time. Index fossils are useful because they tell the relative ages of the rock layers in which they occur. How did you layer location 2, 3, and 4. What did you infer about the history of location 4? (Click and find out) Layer B must have eroded over time.

  8. Gaps in the Geologic Record Unconformity Rock layers erode away, an older rock surface may be exposed. Then deposition begins again, building new rock layers. Unconformity is a gap in the geologic record. It shows where rock layers have been lost due to erosion.

  9. Did you label and circle correctly?

  10. FOLDING Sometimes, forces inside Earth fold rock layers are turned over completely. 1. What does the photo show? (an unconformity/ folding). folding 2. What evidence do you see for your answer to Question 1? The layers are bent at an angle. 3.What can you infer about the history of this area? After the rock layers formed, forces inside Earth raised and folded them.

  11. The Relative Age of Rocks  1.What is the youngest rock layer? Explain.   2.Is the extrusion older or younger than rock layer B? Explain.   3.Is the fault older or younger than rock layer A? Explain.   4.How could a geologist use the fossil in rock layer B to date a rock layer in another location? N

  12. Answer Key 1.Layer C is the youngest because the law ofsuperposition says that a layer is younger thanthe layers below it.   2.The extrusion is younger because extrusionsare always younger than the rock layers belowthem.   3.The fault is younger than layer a because rocklayers are always older than the faults theycontain.  4.The fossil might be an index fossil. Geologistscan use index fossils to match rock layers atlocations that are far apart.

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