Earth Sci Reviewer
Earth Sci Reviewer
Earth Sci Reviewer
Asthenosphere
Lower part Chemical Weathering
Plastic Oxidation
It acts as a “lubricant” in plates. Carbonation
What do you think the two division of mantle? Hydrolysis / Hydration - When water interacts
chemically with minerals.
Core
The innermost portion of the Earth Factors controlling weathering
It is believed to be metallic. Carbonation
Composed of iron and nickel (NIFE) Climate
3,400 km. thick Rock Type
Nickel from NI Rock Structure
Iron from FE Topography
Time
Core
TWO PARTS– Climate
inner core – solid about 1,150 km. thick w/ an dictates the type of weathering processes that
extremely high temperature (2,200°C). operate, largely by determining the amount of
water available and the temperature at which the
outer core – made up of molten rock about processes occur. Chemical reactions are faster
2,250 km. thick. at higher temperatures, while frost wedging
occurs in colder climates.
—-------------------------------------------------------------
----------------- Rock Type
EXOGENIC PROCESSES Determines the resistance of the rock to the
● Weathering weathering processes that operate in that
● Mass Wasting particular environment.
● Erosion
Rock Structure
Weathering Highly jointed or faulted rocks present many
Physical planes of weakness along which weathering
Chemical agents (e.g. water) can penetrate into the rock
mass
Physical weathering- Takes place when rock is
split or broken into smaller pieces of the same Topography
material without changing its composition. The slope angle determines the energy of the
weathering system by controlling the rate at
Chemical weathering- takes place when the which water passes through the rock mass.
rock’s minerals are changed into different
substances. Time
Water and water vapor are important agents of The duration of the period that the same type of
chemical weathering. weathering has been operating, uninterrupted by
climatic change, earth movements, and other
factors, determines the degree and depth to 3 Types of Faults Caused by
which the rocks have been weathered. 3 Different Types of Stress
Normal Fault
—------------------------------------------------------------- (Caused by Tension)
-----------------
FRACTURES Reverse Fault
FAULTS (Caused by Compression)
FOLDS
Strike-Slip Fault
What is a fault? (Caused by Shear Stress)
A fault is a fracture or series of fractures in
Earth’s crust that occurs when stress is applied Normal Fault
too quickly or stress is too great. Occurs when tension pulls the fault apart and
Many faults occur along plate boundaries. the Hanging Wall drops.
Faults can also occur anywhere in the crust The fault is an example of tension
where rocks are bent (folded) until they break.
Faults occur as a result of various types of Reverse Fault
stress. Occurs when compression pushes the two parts
Most Faults Have a Hanging Wall & Foot Wall of the fault together and the Hanging Wall
moves up.
The Hanging Wall is the one with the slope on The fault is an example of compression
which you could hang.
The Foot Wall is the one with the slope on Strike-Slip Fault
which you could walk. Shear causes the parts of the fault to slide past
one another.
The type of fault is determined by the motion of This fault is an example of shear.
the Hanging Wall.
The fault line would also be called the fault Folds
plane. Occur when stress is applied to both ends of a
The area around it would be called the fault section of rock or rock layers. Some rocks
zone. would break, but a fold occurs when rocks bend.
An anticline looks like a “rainbow”; a syncline
The FOOTWALL is the one with the slope you looks like a “smile”.
would put your feet on. Examples of Folds
The HANGING WALL is the one with the slope
you would hang from. When compressive forces act on a material
(rocks) but the elastic limit is not reached,
Types of Faults folding occurs. If the elastic limit is exceeded,
There are several different kinds of faults. These the rock will break causing a fracture in the rock
faults are named according to the type of stress to form. If the elastic limit is exceeded and
that acts on the rock and by the nature of the movement occurs along the fracture, the fracture
movement of the rock blocks either side of the becomes a fault.
fault plane.
Stresses can be compressional (push),
tensional (pull) or shear (slide past each
other).
The type of stress determines how the Hanging —-------------------------------------------------------------
Wall moves and therefore the type of fault. -----------------
The Theory of Continental Drift Evidence of Continental Drift
Continental Drift Discovery
The Plates Move…
ALFRED WEGENER So what now?
THEORY OF CONTINENTAL DRIFT Which way?
Found evidence for PANGAEA and proposed 50 million years
the theory of continental drift.
Continental Drift
Theory that continents were once part of a
single landmass that broke apart and have
moved to their present locations.
can drift apart from one another and have done
so in the past
Pangaea —-------------------------------------------------------------
Pangaea is the name given to the single -----------------
landmass that was present 200 million years Crust Deformation
ago
Introduction
Continents
“fit together” The earth’s surface is dynamic. The
like puzzle Himalayas, Rockies, Andes, and Grand
pieces Canyon are all visible reminders that the
WEGENER’S EVIDENCE shape of the earth’s surface is always
changing. These changes are all a result of
Fossil Evidence The deformation of the earth’s crust.
fossils are remains of living things that lived long
ago. Deformation
similar fossils have been discovered in matching The bending, tilting, and breaking of the
coastlines on different continents. earth’s crust. Plate tectonics is the major,
but not only, cause of crustal deformation.
Mountains
Some mountain ranges on different continents Two types of deformation:
seem to match. 1. Plastic — the bending/warping of crust.
Ex: ranges in Canada match Norway and — Happens under high temperatures,
Sweden pressures, and time
Ex: Appalachian Mtn. match UK mtn — Occurs deep under the surface.
2. Brittle — the breaking of crust
Climatic evidence such as glaciers in areas that
are now close to the Equator Stress vs. Strain
Stress — force that causes pressure on
Satellites used to rocks that make up the earth’s crust.
measure the -Stress increases with depth
movement of - Stress causes deformation.
continents
Strain — deforming strata (layers of rocks)
Laser Geodynamics by folding them or faulting (breaking) them
Satellite (LAGEOS)
Strata
All sedimentary rocks are originally
deposited in flat (horizontal) layers called
Strata or beds.
— Stress adds pressure to the strata
— Strain deforms the strata
Types of Stress
Compression — rocks are squeezed
together.
— Strata thickens
— Pushes rocks either higher up or down in
crust
Tension — pulls rocks apart
— Makes rock layers thinner
Shearing — pushes rocks in opposite
horizontal directions