1 / 63

GEOS 251 — Physical Geology

GEOS 251 — Physical Geology. 24 April 2014 Handouts Lecture Summary 25: Energy Resources Final Thurs 15 May 2014, 10:30am-12:30pm Class evaluation Who will please take charge with returning the forms?. Last time: Landscapes. Overall form of continents Landforms

tuwa
Download Presentation

GEOS 251 — Physical Geology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. GEOS 251 — Physical Geology 24 April 2014 • Handouts • Lecture Summary 25: Energy Resources • Final • Thurs 15 May 2014, 10:30am-12:30pm • Class evaluation • Who will please take charge with returning the forms?

  2. Last time: Landscapes • Overall form of continents • Landforms • Mountains, hills, mountain ranges • Plateaus, tablelands, mesas • Structurally controlled ridges and valleys • River valleys and bedrock erosion • Structurally controlled cliffs: Cuestas, hogbacks, fault scarps • Landscape evolution • Feedback between uplift and erosion • Feedback between climate and topography • Active research: Do regions of rapid uplift and coincide with areas of positive feedback between climate and topography? • Models of landscape evolution • Historical: Davis, Penck, and Hack • Modern view

  3. Geomorphology and landforms • Geomorphology • The study of landscapes and their evolution • Faculty member in Geosciences: Jon Pelletier • Landforms • Mountains, hills, mountain ranges • Plateaus • Tablelands, mesas • Structurally controlled ridges and valleys • River valleys and bedrock erosion • Structurally controlled cliffs • Cuestas, hogbacks, fault scarps

  4. Mountains, hills, mountain ranges • Hill • Large mass of rock that projects above its surroundings • Mountain • Large mass of rock that projects well above its surroundings • Mountain ranges • Clusters and alignments of mountains and hills Glacially sculpted mountains in southern Argentina; peaks are sharp arêtes

  5. Plateaus • Large, broad, flat areas of appreciable elevation above surrounding terrain • Usually <3000 m elevation • But Bolivian Altiplano is ~3600m, and Tibetan Plateau is ~5000m Tibetan Plateau

  6. Tablelands and mesas • Tablelands • Similar but smaller features • Mesa • Small, flat area with steep slopes on all sides • Results from differential weathering of bedrock of varying hardness, especially in deserts • Flat tops held up by erosion-resistant beds A mesa in Monument Valley, Arizona

  7. Structurally controlled ridges and valleys • Young mountains • Topography may be consist of belts of upfolded (anticlines) and downfolded (synclines) rocks defined by the folds Young (Pliocene) folds in Zagros Mountains, Iran

  8. Structurally controlled ridges and valleys • Older mountains • Where climate and weathering predominate over active tectonism • Topography may be inverted (e.g., valleys occurring in anticlines) in areas with rocks of sharply contrasting resistance to weathering

  9. Structurally controlled ridges and valleys • Appalachian Valley and Ridge province • Tectonic controlled topography persists • Reflects resistant beds folded into anticlines and synclines in the Paleozoic

  10. River valleys and bedrock erosion • Stream power (product of river slope and river discharge) determines how bedrock erodes • Generally higher stream power in steeper terrains • Erosion • Little occurs during low discharge • Most occurs during brief periods of high discharge

  11. River valleys and bedrock erosion • Erosion of bedrock occurs principally by three processes • Abrasion by the suspended load and saltating particles • Plucking fragments from bedrock by drag forces on channel • Glacial erosion forming valleys that can be occupied by rivers • Review of profiles • River valleys form V-shaped profiles • Glacial valleys form U-shaped profiles

  12. River valleys and bedrock erosion • Badland • Deeply gullied topography • Produced by rapid erosion of easily erodible lithologies (shales, clays) Badlands of South Dakota, Sage Creek Wilderness, Badlands National Park

  13. Structurally controlled cliffs:Cuestas, hogbacks, fault scarps • Regions with a series of tilted and eroded beds • With strongly contrasting resistances to erosion • Cuestas • Asymmetrical ridges • Hogbacks • Landforms that have steeply dipping or vertical beds of resistant strata, with cliffs on both sides • Steep cliffs • Can be formed by fault scarps • These landforms can develop both in • Extensional tectonic settings (e.g., Rio Grande rift, Basin and Range) • Contractional tectonic settings (e.g., monoclines of Colorado Plateau and Rocky Mountains)

  14. Structurally controlled cliffs:Cuestas, hogbacks, fault scarps • Cuestas • Asymmetrical ridges • Long slope of low to moderate dip, determined by dip of the resistant bed • Cliff formed at another side, where the edge of a resistant bed has been undercut by erosion of an underlying weaker bed Dinosaur National Monument, Colorado

  15. Structurally controlled cliffs:Cuestas, hogbacks, fault scarps • Hogbacks • Landforms that have steeply dipping or vertical beds of resistant strata • Stand out as steep, narrow, more or less symmetrical ridges • Cliffs on both sides Hogback ridges in the Front Range of the Rocky Mountains near Denver, Colorado

  16. Landscape evolution • Competition between tectonic forces and erosion • Landscape controlled by Earth’s interacting geosystems • Erosion • Responds to changes in base level and profile, as well as continental position

  17. Feedbacks between processes • One action produces an effect (the feedback) that tends either • To speed up the original action (positive feedback), or • To slow the original action, perhaps stabilizing the process at a slower rate (negative feedback) • Landscape evolution shows examples of both positive and negative feedbacks

  18. Uplift stimulates erosion • Negative feedback between uplift and erosion

  19. Isostatic mantle rebound raises mountain elevation • Positive feedback between climate and topography

  20. Evaluating landscape evolution • Defining geologic surfaces, modern and ancient • Geologic mapping of surfaces and structures • Measuring active deformation of modern surface • GPS geodetic measurements (time scale of years to tens of years) • Constraining magnitude and timing of earlier deformation • Geologic mapping • Thermochronology (time scale of thousands to millions of years) • Dating absolute age of a weathered surfaces and landscapes • Radiogenic isotopic methods (e.g., C-14, U-Th) • Cosmogenic isotopic methods (e.g., Be-10: cosmic rays produce radioactive isotopes) • Tephrochronology (correlate and date volcanic ash beds) • Paleomagnetic (reversals and secular variations in strata) • Dendrochronology (tree rings)

  21. Example of how topography determines local climate and, in turn, controls erosion and landscape development • Arabian Sea at Yemen-Oman border • Steep escarpment of the Qara Mountains • Wrings moisture from monsoons • Which allows vegetation to grow (green along mountain fronts and canyons) and soil to develop (dark brown)

  22. Topic of active research • Do regions of rapid uplift and erosion (i.e., where deeper levels of crust exhumed) coincide with areas of positive feedback between climate and topography? • Being tested in Patagonia (Chile and Argentina)

  23. Models of landscape evolution: Historical views • William Morris Davis • Cycle of uplift and erosion • Walther Penck • Erosion competes with uplift • John Hack • Landscapes achieve dynamic equilibrium

  24. William Morris Davis • Cycle of uplift and erosion • Cycle initiated by strong, rapid uplift over geologically short periods of time • High, rugged, mountains of youth • Rounded forms of maturity • Plains of old age; mountains then stay tectonically fixed • Uplift and erosion largely separated in time • Early uplift and late erosion • Davis’ view dominated during his lifetime • Prestigious position (Harvard professor) • Effectively promoted ideas by traveling widely; was a prolific author

  25. Walther Penck • Erosion competes with uplift • Uplift rate gradually increases then gradually decreases • Surface processes attack uplifting mountains throughout interval of uplift • Results in gradual decrease in both relief and mean elevation • Competition between uplift and erosion • Rather than temporal separation • Contemporary of Davis; challenged Davis’ view • Ideas not well recognized until after his death

  26. John Hack • Landscapes achieve dynamic equilibrium • Moderate but constant uplift rate • Landscape undergoes minor adjustments during a period of equilibrium, but overall landscape will remain more or less the same • Elaboration on Penck’s model that erosion competes with uplift • That there will be periods of dynamic equilibrium

  27. Implications of this historical overview • Science advances by questioning earlier hypotheses • Old views are overturned • New prevailing views or paradigms take over • Some ideas, later found to be incorrect, may persist for a long time before being overturned • Especially if they have forceful proponents • Unpopular, minority interpretations may take decades to be widely recognized as a better interpretation • Nonetheless, few unpopular ideas ever become the prevailing view--crackpots exist alongside the mavericks! • New ideas will also have to be tested and supported by evidence • In a decade or two from now • Some of what you have been taught in this class undoubtedly will be judged at that time to be incorrect Prof. Spence Titley, senior faculty member in Dept of Geosciences: I’ve been teaching here for more than 50 years; some of my exam questions stay the same, but the acceptable answers are what keep changing

  28. Modern view of landscape evolution • Many combinations of tectonic forces and erosion are possible • Hence, there is no simple set of predictions • Relatively short intervals • Probably dominated by variations in climate • Much longer time intervals • Probably dominated by tectonically-driven uplift

  29. Summary • Topography • Elevation and relief • Results from the interplay between tectonic forces (compression, extension), the amount of crust, and the removal of material by erosion • Continents consist of active and inactive parts • Areas can become passive or active with time • Landforms • Mountains, plateaus, structurally controlled ridges and valleys, river valleys, structurally controlled cliffs • Landscape evolution • Competition between tectonic forces and erosion • Type of feedback between uplift and erosion depends upon time scale • Type of feedback between climate and topography depends upon relative importance of isostasy • Modern view of landscape evolution • Many combinations of tectonic forces and erosion are possible; hence, there is no simple set of predictions • Relatively short intervals probably dominated by variations in climate; much longer time intervals probably dominated by tectonically-driven uplift Next: Energy Resources

  30. Lecture 25: Energy Resources • Overview — Energy, population, and environment • Fossil fuels (sedimentary origin and distribution) • Petroleum and natural gas (mainly marine sources) • Coal (terrestrial sources) • Distribution reflects geology, climate, preservation • Other energy sources (origins and distribution) • Geothermal, nuclear (internal sources -- originally from??) • Solar, wind, hydropower (solar sources) • Environmental and economic consequences • Of production, utilization, distribution

  31. Renewable vs. non-renewable resources • Renewable resources • Continuously regenerate on a human time scale • Fuel examples: Animal, wood, wind, hydroelectric • Non-renewable resources • May continue to form, but only on geologic time scales • Fuel examples: Coal, petroleum, natural gas, uranium, geothermal; also virtually all mineral commodities

  32. World energy consumption • Increased exponentially in the last 200 years • Even faster than the exponential increase in population • Reflects • Industrialization • Mechanization of many processes • Ubiquity of powered transportation • During same time, sources have changed • From renewable resources • To a mix that is dominated by non-renewable resources

  33. World energy demand and production

  34. U. S. consumption history by type of energy • Virtually all from fossil fuels • Similar to global pattern • Resource base and sustainability

  35. Important distinctions • Resources • Economic vs. sub-economic • Discovered vs. hypothetical • Underlie much debate about • Future supplies • Land use • Geopolitical concerns

  36. World energy resources

  37. Fossil fuels • Product of trapping a small fraction of the sun’s energy • In biological (organic) material • Preserved in the sedimentary record • Hence, fossil fuels are • Fossilized products of photosynthesis • Burning • Releases carbon dioxide and water from which they were made

  38. Fossil fuels (hydrocarbons) • Oil and coal • Complex organic molecules with C, H, N, and S • In general, their combustion releases more CO2 (greenhouse gas) and more pollutants, such as S (acid rain) and metal-bearing ash, than does the burning of natural gas per unit of energy • Natural gas • Mostly methane (CH4) • Cleaner burning than coal and oil • CH4 + 2O2  CO2 + 2H2O

  39. Formation of oil and natural gas:A complicated process • Deposition of marine and lake sediments (“source rocks”) • Contain abundant organic debris (generally plankton) • More produced than destroyed by scavengers and decay (high productivity areas with low oxygen) • Sedimentary environments: Deltas, reefs, deeper basin fills, etc. • Preservation of organic matter in sediments • With modification by biological activity near the surface • Maturation during burial and diagenesis (heat, pressure, time) • Oil and natural gas form, generally between 75-150˚C • Trapped organic material breaks down • Analogy: During cooking of a burger (of decayed plankton), the lighter, more hydrogen-rich, components given off are oil and gas • Leaving behind the less reactive, C-rich material, which becomes closer to graphite, in the source rock (e.g., black shale), • Fluids generated during diagenesis (water, oils, gases) migrate hydraulically • To be trapped in a “reservoir” or to be destroyed

  40. Hydrology and global distribution of oil and natural gas • Source  Migration  Trap • Types of traps • Structural (anticlines, faults) • Stratigraphic • Salt domes • Reservoir — What are the major ones (rock types)? • Porosity (aquifers) • Seals (aquacludes) • Global distribution in space and time • Reflects climate, geography, preservation… (i.e., geology!)

  41. Traps — Structural • Anticlines, faults, etc. • Why in the sequence gas / oil / water? • Oil reservoirs (aquifers): e.g., permeable sandstones, carbonate rocks • Seals (aquacludes): e.g., shales

  42. Traps — Stratigraphic and salt domes • Stratigraphic pinch outs in transgressive sequences • Channel and sand bar deposits • Salt domes • Many geological challenges in exploration and production

  43. World oil reserves • Mainly in rocks <200 m.y. old (why?) • Localized in space by tectonics and paleoclimate (why?)

  44. Global oil production(past-present-future) • Demand accelerates • Geologic limits • US example

  45. Can't we just discover/produce more? • Yes, but the opportunities (prospective basins) are limited and many (most) have been explored

  46. Basins have been thoroughly tested • All of these downwarps produce significant oil and/or gas • Each has been explored to the crystalline basement • Historical context?

  47. Can't we just discover/produce more? • Then what about getting more out of existing fields? • Production is lengthy and technology continually improves • Commonly less than half the oil present is produced • This helps, but at best may double/triple supply • The best technology is widely used

  48. Alternative hydrocarbonsOil (tar) sands and oil shales • Very large resource • Comparable to all petroleum (1-3 trillion bbl) • Major resources in Alberta, Venezuela, Colorado-Utah • Produced by mining, not pumping • Higher cost and energy-intensive to produce • Bigger impact on emissions than oil (similar to coal) • Large production from Athabasca oil sands in Alberta • Each particle coated with a layer of water and a thin film of bitumen (“tar”) • Supplying much energy to US

  49. Formation of coal:A comparatively simple process • Woody material (terrestrial plants) • Accumulates in estuaries, swamps, and bogs • Burial by continued sedimentation • Leads to diagenetic and metamorphic changes • These increase “rank” (or “grade”) of the coal • Residual part of the coal is preserved • Analogy: Coal is the cooked burger (made from decayed plants), after loosing the oils (grease) and vapors • Composition of coal • Much higher in C but lower in H than oil and gas

More Related