Module 1 - Week 1
Module 1 - Week 1
Week 1
Module 1: Introduction to ERSC 1P92
Alternative Facts
"Alternative Facts" is an expression used in the courts to describe various interpretations
of something that are all plausible given the available evidence at the time.
Presumably, this definition could also apply to "facts" derived from different systems of
knowledge when different perceptions of "proof" lead to different conclusions of what is
true.
What is geology?
Geology is the science that deals with:
o Processes acting within the Earth and at its surface.
o The materials that make up the Earth (rocks and minerals).
o The history of the Earth.
Geology may be divided into two broad subdivisions of Physical Geology and Historical
Geology.
Physical Geology: involved with the processes that act to form the Earth and the
products of those processes.
Historical Geology: involved with the interpretation of the history of the Earth.
Age of Rocks
Younger rocks on top
Older rocks on the bottom
o For example, the mineral Halite, which is what table salt is made of, always has
the same chemical composition; it is made up of equal parts of the elements
sodium and chlorine.
Approximately 3,500 minerals are known; only about 20 make up over 95% of the crust
of the Earth.
Rock
A rock is defined as a naturally occurring solid material that is made up of minerals. The
minerals may occur as interlocking crystals or cemented “grains”.
1. Igneous Rock:
o An igneous rock is any natural rock that forms by cooling of a magma (magma is
molten rock within the Earth's crust) into a crystalline solid.
o Igneous rocks are made up of interlocking mineral crystals.
o Granite is a common igneous rock. In the section on volcanoes we will look at
igneous rocks in some detail.
o Igneous rocks commonly occur as large bodies such called plutons. A pluton
forms as a mass of magma is pushed into the Earth’s crust from deeper within the
Earth where it cools and crystallizes to form a large body of igneous rock.
o Smaller igneous bodies include dykes (oblique to vertical) and sills (horizontal),
linear bodies of igneous rock that form when magma is injected into cracks in pre-
existing rocks.
2. Sedimentary Rock
o A sedimentary rock is a natural rock that forms from the products of broken
down pre-existing rocks that have become “cemented” together.
o Sedimentary rocks are made up of discrete particles (called a clastic sediment) or
interlocking crystals (called a chemical sediment) if the rock material crystallizes
by precipitation from water.
o The individual particles are "sand grains" rather than crystals and these grains are
held together by minerals that precipitated in the pore spaces between grains. The
precipitated material acts as a cement.
o Sedimentary rocks normally occur in more-or-less laterally continuous, horizontal
layers or strata.
o Where sedimentary rocks are deformed by tectonic processes their layering may
vary from horizontal to vertical. Deformation of any rock can vary from simple
tilting to complex folding of originally horizontally layered rocks.
3. Metamorphic Rock
o A metamorphic rock is any natural rock formed by the modification of a pre-
existing rock by heat and/or pressure associated with burial deep within the Earth
and/or tectonic forces. Gneiss is a common metamorphic rock that is
characterized by bands of alternating light and dark colored minerals.
ERSC 1P92 (Extreme Earth)
Fossils
Fossils are a very important component of many sedimentary rocks because organisms
commonly lived in the environments in which sediment is deposited. When the
organisms die, they may be preserved for billions of years trapped within a sedimentary
rock.
Geologists define the term Fossil to refer to any evidence of past life that is preserved in
sediment or sedimentary rocks.
There are two major types of fossils: body fossils and trace fossils.
Body fossils are fossils of all or part of the body of a once living organism.
o Often only part of the body, most often the hardest parts, are preserved such as
teeth and bones.
Trace Fossil: preserving evidence that organisms were present in the environment in
which sedimentary rocks were deposited without preserving any body fossils.
o Most often trace fossils preserve evidence of an activity or behavior that the
organism conducted while it was alive.
o These behaviors might include burrowing to find food in the sediment, footprints
formed as they walked over a sediment surface or even shallow hollows on a
sediment surface where an organism rested.
Coprolite: it is the fossil remains of an organism’s excrement. Sometimes coprolites are
well enough preserved to allow the identification of the food that the organism ate.
ERSC 1P92 (Extreme Earth)
Geologic Time
The Geologic Time Scale divides time since Earth formation into the following units of
decreasing duration: Eons, Eras, Periods, Epochs and Ages (“Ages” are not shown in
accompanying image of the Geologic Time Scale).
Note that the three oldest Eons are often collectively, referred to as the “Precambrian
Era”, a practice that is not consistent with the hierarchy of units.
The three Eons that are older than the Phanerozoic Eon are also divided into Periods, but
these are not shown in the table.
The Phanerozoic Eon is divided into three Eras based on the evolution of complex life
that is known from the fossils that are preserved in the Geological record.
The meaning of the Era names refers to the nature of life on Earth over the time of each
Era:
o Paleozoic refers to “early life”
o Mesozoic refers to “middle life”
o Cenozoic refers to “new life”