Stressing and Straining
Rocks
Stress - defined as force per unit area
Strain - a change in size, shape, or volume relative to initial
conditions
Three types of stress
Compression: stresses are directed inward - produces thrust faults,
reverse
faults, or folding
Tension: stresses directed outward - produces normal faults
Shearing: stresses are lateral (horizontal) - produce strike-slip faults
Types of deformation
Elastic deformation: materials return to original state after
deformation
Brittle deformation: materials are permanently deformed (ruptured)
after
reaching their yield points
Plastic deformation: materials are deformed and do not return to
original
shape, but have not ruptured
Orientation of the rocks
Strike - horizontal line along the rock.
Dip - angle that the rock is inclined relative to the horizontal.
Using strike and dip we can uniquely define any rock outcrop
orientation
that we find.
Factors affecting rock deformation
Intensity of applied stress
Lithostatic pressure: pressure due to overlying rock (confining vs.
directed);
increased pressure allows for plastic rather then brittle failure
Temperature: higher T allows increased deformation and a more plastic
behavior
Time: stress rate affects strain. If material is subjected to a high
stress
rate then it experience brittle failure rather than plastic or elastic
failure.
Deformed rocks in the field
-
Most apparent in sedimentary rocks
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Importance of deformation
-
Determines past plate motions
-
Determines other past geologic events
-
Locates specific natural resources
-
Rock orientation: strike and dip
Folds
-
Synclines: rocks folded into troughs; youngest rocks in the center.
-
Anticlines: rocks folded into ridges; oldest rocks in the center.
-
Parts of a fold
-
Limbs - sides of the folds
-
Axial plane - imaginary plane dividing fold into two symmetrical halves.
-
Anticlines and synclines are structures in rocks, not surface landforms
-
Types of folds
-
Symmetrical or open folds - axial plane is vertical; halves are
symmetric
-
Asymmetrical folds - axial plane is inclined; one limb dips more
steeply
than other limb
-
Recumbent folds - axial plane is close to horizontal
-
Overturned folds - axial plane has rotated more than 90 degrees
-
Plunging folds - folds are themselves tilted
-
Basin - synclinal in cross-section at any orientation
-
Dome - anticlinal in cross-section at any orientation (also known as
pericline
or quaquaversal fold)
-
Plate tectonics and folding
Faults
Fractures: any crack or break in the rock
Joints: fractures with no relative movement
Faults: fractures with relative movement
Fault blocks: the rocks on either side of a fault
Fault plane: plane on which displacement occurred
Evidence of faults
Visible displacement of rocks
Pulverized rock
Slickensides
Discontinuity of rock sequences
Types of faults
Strike-slip faults
Example: San Andreas Fault
Distinctive landforms (linear valleys, chains of
lakes,
sag ponds, topographic saddles)
Dip-slip faults
Hanging wall - block on which a miner would hang their lamp
Footwall - block on which a miner's foot rests
Normal faults
Graben - downdropped block between two normal faults that dip in
opposite
directions
Horst - upthrown block between two normal faults that dip in opposite
directions
Reverse faults - hanging wall moves up; footwall moves down
Thrust faults - a reverse fault which has a very shallow dip (~ <
15°)
Plate tectonics and faulting
Normal faults: mid-ocean ridges and continental rifts
Reverse and thrust faults: convergent plate boundaries
Building mountains
Introduction
Mountain - isolated
Mountain range - a group, usually linear, of mountains
Mountain system - composed of several ranges
Types and process of mountain building (orogenesis)
Volcanic mountains
Fault-block Mountains
The Basin and Range Province
Origin
Fold-and-thrust mountains
Geographic examples
Upwarped mountains
Theories on origin
Adirondack Mountains
Mountain building on our planetary neighbors
Mountains of the Moon: caused by meteoroid impacts over last 4 Ga.
Mountains of Mars: caused by volcanism
Mountains of Venus: caused by Earth-like orogenic process