0% found this document useful (0 votes)
44 views4 pages

What Is Apparent Dip?: Not Perpendicular To The Strike of The Geologic Beds

Apparent dip is the inclination of geologic beds as seen from any vertical cross section not perpendicular to the strike of the beds. It can never be greater than the true dip. If the cross section and bedding strike are parallel, the apparent dip will be 0. The apparent dip is calculated using formulas that factor in the true dip, strike, true dip direction and cross section bearing.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
44 views4 pages

What Is Apparent Dip?: Not Perpendicular To The Strike of The Geologic Beds

Apparent dip is the inclination of geologic beds as seen from any vertical cross section not perpendicular to the strike of the beds. It can never be greater than the true dip. If the cross section and bedding strike are parallel, the apparent dip will be 0. The apparent dip is calculated using formulas that factor in the true dip, strike, true dip direction and cross section bearing.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 4

Log in

Apparent Dip

What is Apparent Dip?


Apparent dip is the inclination of geologic beds as seen from any vertical cross section
not perpendicular to the strike of the geologic beds.

Note: When a vertical cross-section is perpendicular to the strike of the beds, the
inclination seen in the cross section is called the true dip.

open in browser PRO version Are you a developer? Try out the HTML to PDF API pdfcrowd.com
Apparent Dip: 00° Apparent Dip

Strike (S):

000

Dip (d_t):

45

Cross-Section Bearing (S_xs):

000

Update

Apparent Dip Feedback

Full Screen

open in browser PRO version Are you a developer? Try out the HTML to PDF API pdfcrowd.com
A Real World Example
Imagine you are skiing down a slope. If you went straight down the hill (the “fall-line”) you would be skiing in the true
dip direction. Choose any other line, and you would be skiing in an apparent dip direction.

Notice that by choosing an apparent dip direction, you decrease the apparent steepness of the slope.

The apparent steepness in the direction of travel is the apparent dip in that direction (the cross-section direction). The
hill is of course the geologic bedding plane.

Important Things to Keep in Mind


You can never have an apparent dip that is greater than the true dip.

If your cross section and bedding-strike are parallel, the apparent dip will be zero.

If you get a negative apparent dip, that means your cross-section is bearing in the up-dip instead of the down-dip
direction; just take the absolute value.

Calculating Apparent Dip


To calculate apparent dip, use the following formulas:

or

open in browser PRO version Are you a developer? Try out the HTML to PDF API pdfcrowd.com
Where

is the apparent dip,


is the true-dip of the beds,
is the strike of the beds,
is the true dip direction , and
is the bearing of your cross-section.

Visible Geology About Support


Home The Story FAQ
Visualize Donate Technology
Stereonet Contact Us
Features Twitter
Extras

open in browser PRO version Are you a developer? Try out the HTML to PDF API pdfcrowd.com

You might also like